Jim Rome's top 10 neighbors are a tight mix of sports-media subcategories — journalists, TV personalities, athletes-turned-analysts, and a pair of football-focused content brands — with scores spanning just 0.88 to 0.90 and no single dominant pull.
The shape is flat: Trey Wingo leads at 0.90, but the gap to tenth-place Mel Kiper Jr. at 0.88 is narrow enough that no one neighbor defines the cluster. Three of the ten are fellow journalists — Jay Glazer (0.89), Chris Mortensen (0.88), and Rich Eisen (0.88) — while three are TV personalities: Wingo, Kay Adams (0.88), and Kiper. Two are athletes-turned-analysts: Trent Dilfer (0.89) and Mark Schlereth (0.88). The remaining two are content brands — ProFootballTalk (0.88) and PFF (0.88) — both rooted in football coverage. The cluster is almost entirely NFL-media ecosystem, with no crossover into general sports, entertainment, or non-sports journalism in the top 10.
The flat distribution suggests an audience that is broadly at home across the professional football media landscape rather than anchored to any single format or personality type.