Exhibit 99.1

[SPRINT LOGO]

                                                                    News Release

                                                                   Sprint Nextel
                                                        2001 Edmund Halley Drive
                                                               Reston, Va. 20191

                                                                       Contacts:
                                                                 Media Relations
                                                      Leigh Horner, 703-433-3044
                                                         leigh.horner@sprint.com

                                                              Investor Relations
                                                       Kurt Fawkes, 800-259-3755
                                                   investor.relations@sprint.com



              FORSEE STEPS DOWN AS CHAIRMAN, CEO OF SPRINT NEXTEL

  -James Hance, Jr. to serve as acting chairman; Paul Saleh named acting CEO -
               - Company conducting outside search for new CEO -
                  - Company updates 2007 financial guidance -


RESTON, Va. - Oct. 8, 2007 - Sprint Nextel announced today that Gary Forsee is
stepping down as the company's chairman, president and chief executive officer
(CEO), effective immediately. A committee of the Sprint Nextel Board of
Directors has been formed and is conducting the search for a new CEO.

James Hance, Jr., a member of the Board of Directors, will assume the role of
acting non-executive chairman of the Board. Paul Saleh, current chief financial
officer of Sprint Nextel, will serve as acting CEO until a permanent replacement
for Forsee is named. With Hance serving in the position of non-executive
chairman, the position of lead independent director, held by Irvine Hockaday,
will be combined with that role. Hockaday will remain a member of the Board.

"On behalf of the entire board and the Sprint Nextel employees, we want to thank
Gary for his dedication and leadership and all of the contributions he has made
since becoming chief executive of Sprint in 2003," said Hockaday.

According to Hockaday, the decision to seek a new CEO was based on the Board's
belief that it is the right time to put in place new leadership to move the
company forward in improving its performance and realizing corporate objectives.

"The Board's search for selecting its next chief executive will focus on
candidates outside the company," said Hockaday. "We fully expect that the search
will be concluded in a timely manner and we are focused on selecting the right
candidate to guide the company to achieve its full potential. Sprint Nextel has
the assets, spectrum, customer base and technology to be the leader in wireless
mobility services."

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Updated Operational Metrics and Financial Guidance

The company announced today that it expects to report a net loss of
approximately 337,000 post-paid subscribers in the third quarter. In addition,
both adjusted OIBDA* and consolidated operating revenue for 2007 are expected to
be slightly below the range of previously provided guidance of $11.0 to $11.5
billion of adjusted OIBDA and $41 to $42 billion of consolidated operating
revenue.

Sprint Nextel will release its third-quarter financial results on Thursday,
Nov. 1, 2007.

Additional Background on Hance and Saleh

Hance, 63, a senior advisor to The Carlyle Group, is retired vice chairman and
former member of the Board of Directors of Bank of America Corporation, where he
served as vice chairman from 1993 until January 2005 and as the chief financial
officer of Bank of America Corporation from 1988 until April 2004. He is a
director of Cousins Properties Incorporated, Duke Energy Corporation and
Rayonier Corporation. He has been a member of the Sprint Nextel Board since
February 2005.

Saleh, 50, has served as chief financial officer since the merger of Sprint and
Nextel. Prior to the merger he had been executive vice president and chief
financial officer for Nextel since joining the company in 2001.  Before
joining Nextel, Saleh was senior vice president and chief financial officer at
Walt Disney International from 1997 to 2001, and also served as senior vice
president and treasurer for The Walt Disney Company. Prior to Disney, Saleh
served as treasurer of Honeywell, where he spent 12 years in various leadership
positions in finance, treasury, investor relations, strategic planning and
operations.

                               *FINANCIAL MEASURES

Sprint Nextel provides financial measures generated using generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP) and using adjustments to GAAP (non-GAAP). The
non-GAAP financial measures reflect industry conventions, or standard measures
of liquidity, profitability or performance commonly used by the investment
community for comparability purposes. These non-GAAP measures are not
measurements under accounting principles generally accepted in the United
States. These measurements should be considered in addition to, but not as a
substitute for, the information contained in our financial statements prepared
in accordance with GAAP. We have defined below each of the non-GAAP measures we
use, but these measures may not be synonymous to similar measurement terms used
by other companies.

Because Sprint Nextel does not predict special items that might occur in the
future, and our forecasts are developed at a level of detail different than that
used to prepare GAAP-based financial measures, Sprint Nextel does not provide
reconciliations to GAAP of its forward-looking financial measures.

The measure used in this release includes the following:

Adjusted OIBDA is defined as operating income before depreciation, amortization,
restructuring and asset impairments, and special items. This non-GAAP measure
should be used in addition to, but not as a substitute for, the analysis
provided in the statement of operations. We believe that Adjusted OIBDA provide
useful information to investors because they are an indicator of the strength
and performance of our ongoing business operations, including our ability to
fund discretionary spending such as capital expenditures, spectrum acquisitions
and other investments and our ability to incur and service debt.


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While depreciation and amortization are considered operating costs under
generally accepted accounting principles, these expenses primarily represent
non-cash current period allocation of costs associated with long-lived assets
acquired or constructed in prior periods. Adjusted OIBDA is a calculation
commonly used as a basis for investors, analysts and credit rating agencies to
evaluate and compare the periodic and future operating performance and value of
companies within the telecommunications industry.


              Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

This news release includes "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of
the securities laws. The statements in this news release regarding
forward-looking guidance, as well as other statements that are not historical
facts, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are estimates
and projections reflecting management's judgment based on currently available
information and involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause
actual results to differ materially from those suggested by the forward-looking
statements. With respect to these forward-looking statements, management has
made assumptions regarding, among other things, customer and network usage,
customer growth and retention, pricing, operating costs, the timing of various
events and the economic environment.

     Future performance cannot be assured. Actual results may differ materially
from those in the forward-looking statements. Some factors that could cause
actual results to differ include:

     *    the effects of vigorous competition, including the impact of
          competition on the price we are able to charge customers for services
          we provide and our ability to attract new customers and retain
          existing customers; the overall demand for our service offerings,
          including the impact of decisions of new subscribers between our
          post-paid and prepaid services offerings and between our two network
          platforms; and the impact of new, emerging and competing technologies
          on our business;

     *    the impact of overall wireless market penetration on our ability
          to attract and retain customers with good credit standing and the
          intensified competition among wireless carriers for those customers;

     *    the uncertainties related to the benefits of our merger with Nextel
          Communications, Inc., including anticipated synergies and cost
          savings and the timing thereof;

     *    the potential impact of difficulties we may encounter in connection
          with the integration of the pre-merger Sprint and Nextel businesses,
          and the integration of the businesses and assets of certain of the
          third party affiliates, or PCS Affiliates, that provide wireless
          personal communications services, or PCS, under the Sprint(R) brand
          that we have acquired, and Nextel Partners, Inc., including the risk
          that these difficulties could prevent or delay our realization of the
          cost savings and other benefits we expect to achieve as a result of
          these integration efforts and the risk that we will be unable to
          continue to retain key employees;

      *   the uncertainties related to the implementation of our business
          strategies, investments in our networks, our systems, and other
          businesses, including investments required in connection with our
          planned deployment of a next generation broadband wireless network;

      *   the costs and business risks associated with providing new services
          and entering new geographic markets, including with respect to our
          development of new services expected to be provided using the next
          generation broadband wireless network that we plan to deploy;


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      *   the impact of potential adverse changes in the ratings afforded our
          debt securities by ratings agencies;

      *   the ability of our wireless segment to continue to grow and improve
          profitability;

      *   the ability of our long distance segment to achieve expected revenues;

      *   the effects of mergers and consolidations and new entrants in the
          communications industry and unexpected announcements or developments
          from others in the communications industry;

      *   unexpected results of litigation filed against us;

      *   the inability of third parties to perform to our requirements under
          agreements related to our business operations;

      *   no significant adverse change in Motorola, Inc.'s ability or
          willingness to provide handsets and related equipment and software
          applications or to develop new technologies or features for our
          integrated Digital Enhanced Network, or iDEN(R), network;

      *   the impact of adverse network performance, including, but not limited
          to, any performance issues resulting from reduced network capacity
          and other adverse impacts resulting from the reconfiguration of the
          800 megahertz, or MHz, band used to operate our iDEN network, as
          contemplated by the Federal Communications Commission's, or FCC's,
          Report and Order, released in August 2004 as supplemented thereafter;

      *   the costs of compliance with regulatory mandates, particularly
          requirements related to the FCC's Report and Order, deployment of
          enhanced 911, or E911, services on the iDEN network and
          privacy-related matters;

      *   equipment failure, natural disasters, terrorist acts, or other
          breaches of network or information technology security;

      *   one or more of the markets in which we compete being impacted by
          changes in political or other factors such as monetary policy, legal
          and regulatory changes or other external factors over which we have
          no control; and

      *   other risks referenced from time to time in our filings with the SEC,
          including our Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2006, in
          Part I, Item 1A, "Risk Factors," and our quarterly reports on
          Form 10-Q filed in 2007.

Sprint Nextel believes these forward-looking statements are reasonable; however,
you should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which are
based on current expectations and speak only as of the date of this release.
Sprint Nextel is not obligated to publicly release any revisions to
forward-looking statements to reflect events after the date of this release.

About Sprint Nextel

Sprint Nextel offers a comprehensive range of wireless and wireline
communications services bringing the freedom of mobility to consumers,
businesses and government users. Sprint Nextel is widely recognized for
developing, engineering and deploying innovative technologies, including two
robust wireless networks serving 54 million customers at the end of the second
quarter 2007; industry-leading mobile data services; instant national and
international walkie-talkie capabilities; and a global Tier 1 Internet backbone.
For more information, visit www.sprint.com.


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