feature-image

Imago

feature-image

Imago

There are plenty of father-son duos in NFL history. Howie Long saw both his sons, Chris and Kyle Long, have successful careers. Deion Sanders also looks on proudly when Cleveland Browns QB Shedeur Sanders lines up on the field. But not every similar last name makes two people related. Veteran broadcaster Mike Greenberg connected two unrelated people in the 2026 draft, putting ESPN’s draft coverage in a pickle.

Watch What’s Trending Now!

“That’s another player who you were waiting to hear his name called,” Greenberg said about former Washington Huskies wide receiver Denzel Boston, who was drafted by the Browns at No. 39. “You remember his dad, David Boston, first-round pick out of Ohio State in 1999.” Little did he know that David and Denzel aren’t related despite sharing the same last name.

ADVERTISEMENT

Texas native David Boston was also a wide receiver who played college football at Ohio State University before being drafted into the NFL in 1999. He had a six-year NFL career with the Arizona Cardinals (1999-2002), San Diego Chargers (2003), and Miami Dolphins (2005). He has three children: a daughter, Alaia, and sons Jaylen and Brayden.

The younger Boston, who is native to Idaho and grew up in Washington, was born to Chris and Rochelle Boston. Chris Boston is a football coach. Both parents were seated beside Denzel when he was picked, which makes this more embarrassing for ESPN. The man hugging Denzel was very much not David Boston.

ADVERTISEMENT

Denzel has no connection to Ohio State, except that he faced them as an opponent in the 2025 season. But after getting drafted by the Browns, Ohio will ironically become his base. He comes to the team as a great fit at wide receiver, joining KC Concepcion, who was drafted earlier. Boston is the tallest wide receiver in the room.

The ESPN crew caught on to Mike Greenberg’s mistake. The broadcaster issued an apology in the third round for the goof-up, nearly an hour and a half after he mixed up the two Bostons. He said that he was waiting for the Browns to pick again to address the mistake, and admitted that it was a “terrible” one. However, this was not the first time Greenberg slipped during the 2026 draft coverage.

ADVERTISEMENT

Mike Greenberg makes a massive draft pick blunder on Day 1 of the NFL draft

On the first day of the 2026 NFL draft, ESPN’s Mike Greenberg made a major blunder towards the end of the event. Greenberg was leading the coverage and made a mistake regarding the 27th overall pick between the Miami Dolphins and the San Francisco 49ers as both teams were involved in a big-ticket trade.

ADVERTISEMENT

At first, the 49ers had the pick, but the Dolphins traded up from the 30th spot to select San Diego State cornerback Chris Johnson. However, the veteran broadcaster was unaware of this trade, leading to a significant mistake.

ADVERTISEMENT

“And the commissioner making his way to the podium here for the 49ers’ selection at 27,” Greenberg said on ESPN. “Alright, so the California kid stays in California.”

ESPN’s coverage drew a lot of flak this year. People are still tipping picks on social media, while the broadcast is catching on later. The gap between the Dolphins’ trading and selecting Johnson is one example of this. The California kid now has to travel to the other side of the country to suit up for Miami. It sure is a big blunder. Mike Greenberg may secretly be wishing for a do-over on these gaffes.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Share this with a friend:

Link Copied!

ADVERTISEMENT

Written by

author-image

Abhishek Sachin Sandikar

623 Articles

Abhishek Sandikar is the NFL Editor at EssentiallySports, where he leads coverage of America’s most dynamic football stories with sharp editorial judgment and creative insight. A Journalism graduate from Christ University and a postgraduate in Broadcast Journalism, University of London, Abhishek brings narrative precision and a storyteller’s instinct to every piece he edits. His mornings begin with NFL and NBA highlights, his days are spent tracking evolving storylines, and his nights often end with a final dose of football.

Know more

Edited by

editor-image

Afreen Kabir

ADVERTISEMENT