It’s another Sunday morning NFL game as quarterback Bo Nix and the 3-2 Denver Broncos go up against quarterback Justin Fields and the 0-5 New York Jets at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London. Kickoff is set for 9:30 a.m. ET.
With the Jets looking to get on track and the Broncos looking to keep on winning, it’s bound to be a pretty exciting game for those who watch it. If you’re wondering, the game will be shown on NFL Network and, if you have it, also streaming on NFL+.
But the game also needs to have some announcers in the booth and on the sidelines, too.
Who Will Guide Fans Through Jets-Broncos on NFL Network?
NFL Network will have a few familiar faces for its viewers calling the game.
Rich Eisen, who usually hosts “NFL GameDay Morning” from the network’s home base in Los Angeles, will handle the play-by-play call for the Jets-Broncos showdown. Eisen is quite familiar to sports fans as he’s been around a bit, first with ESPN and now with NFL Network.
Eisen also hosts a daily radio talk show, “The Rich Eisen Show,” where athletes, reporters, and celebrities find their way either to a chair next to Eisen or are brought up on camera.
When ESPN and NFL Network merged, that brought Eisen back to ESPN. He’s hosted a “SportsCenter” broadcast since returning, and ESPN’s main radio network airs his show Mondays through Fridays.
Alongside Eisen in the booth will be analyst Kurt Warner, who knows a thing or two about the NFL. Warner helped quarterback the then-St. Louis Rams to a Super Bowl XXXIV victory over the Tennessee Titans, and his story of going from bag filler at a grocery store to NFL stardom is a warm one to remember.
Warner, a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, can also be seen on “NFL GameDay Morning,” but that’s not the only place he appears. He regularly works with Kevin Harlan, one of the best play-by-play voices in the league, on Westwood One’s weekly coverage of “Monday Night Football.”
Sara Walsh will be working the sidelines as the Jets and Broncos go at it on the field. Walsh also previously worked for ESPN between 2010 and 2017, where she was a “SportsCenter” anchor and hosted “NFL Live” during her tenure there. Walsh is a regular contributor on NFL Network, including on NFL Draft coverage.
Walt Anderson will not be in London himself, but Eisen and Warner will call on him as the go-to rules analyst. Anderson is a former NFL referee who also served as the league’s officiating chief until 2024. He now serves as a club communications liaison for NFL teams.
According to the PFSN NFL Offense Impact metrics, the Jets have a 72.2 Offense Impact Score and grade out at C-. As for the Broncos, they have a 78.5 Offense Impact Score and grade out at C+.
This game sets up as one that can go one of two ways: Denver might totally dominate New York all over the field, or the Jets might find a way to stop Nix and the Broncos’ offense.

