Comcast SportsNet
Comcast SportsNet | |
---|---|
Launched | October 1, 1997 |
Owned by | NBC Sports Group |
Picture format |
1080i (HDTV) Downgraded to letterboxed 480i for SDTV feed |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Broadcast area | Nationwide (through regional affiliates) |
Headquarters | New York City, New York |
Sister channel(s) |
NBC NBCSN Golf Channel Comcast Deportes |
Website |
www |
Availability | |
Satellite | |
DirecTV | Consult channel lineup or program listings source for channel availability |
Dish Network | Consult channel lineup or program listings source for channel availability |
Cable | |
Available on some U.S. cable systems | Consult your local cable provider or program listings source for channel availability |
Verizon FiOS | Consult channel lineup or program listings source for channel availability |
IPTV | |
AT&T U-verse | Consult channel lineup or program listings source for channel availability |
Sling TV | Internet Protocol television |
PlayStation Vue | Internet Protocol television |
Comcast SportsNet (CSN), also known under the corporate names NBC Sports Regional Networks or Comcast Sports Group, is the collective name for a group of regional sports networks in the United States that are primarily owned and operated by Comcast, and operated through the NBC Sports Group unit of NBCUniversal.
Each of the networks carry regional broadcasts of sporting events from various professional, collegiate and high school sports teams (with broadcasts typically exclusive to each individual network, although some are shown on more than one CSN network within a particular team's designated market area), along with regional and national sports discussion, documentary and analysis programs. In addition to the seven Comcast SportsNet-branded networks, Comcast also has a partial ownership interest in SportsNet New York (co-owned with Charter Communications and the New York Mets).
Depending on their individual team rights, some Comcast SportsNet outlets maintain overflow feeds available via digital cable, telco and satellite providers in their home markets, which may provide alternate programming when not used to carry game broadcasts that the main feed cannot carry due to scheduling conflicts. Comcast SportsNet's business and master control operations are based in New York City, New York.
History
Origins
The origins of Comcast SportsNet are traced to Comcast's March 19, 1996 purchase of a 66% interest in Spectacor and its primary assets – the Philadelphia Flyers, The Spectrum and the then-recently completed CoreStates Center – for $240 million and the assumption of a collective $170 million in debt; the new Comcast Spectacor (which appointed the company's previous majority owner, Edward M. Snider, as its chairman) also immediately purchased a 66% interest in the Philadelphia 76ers.[1][2]
Immediately after the purchase was announced, there was speculation that Comcast would let Spectacor's television contracts with two local premium services that had long been carrying their games – PRISM (which carried movies and specials, in addition to sports events) and the all-sports network SportsChannel Philadelphia (both owned by Rainbow Media) – run out and create a sports network of its own, buy the existing networks or reach a complex deal with Rainbow to have PRISM and SportsChannel Philadelphia retain the broadcast rights to the 76ers and Flyers.[3][4] Comcast immediately approached the Philadelphia Phillies – whose contract with PRISM and Sports Channel Philadelphia ended after the 1997 season – about entering into a broadcast deal, indicating it would launch an RSN.[1]
After short-lived discussions between Rainbow Media and Comcast about the latter possibly becoming a part-owner in PRISM and SportsChannel Philadelphia,[5] on April 25, 1996, Comcast Spectacor formally announced plans to create a new Philadelphia-centric basic cable channel, which would carry sports events from the Flyers (whose contract with PRISM and SportsChannel was set to end that fall and was extended by one year on October 4, 1996, the day before its season home opener, after strained contract negotiations) and the Phillies.[6][7][8] On July 21, 1997, Comcast acquired the local television rights to the Philadelphia 76ers, with the team opting out of its contract with PRISM and SportsChannel that was set to run until the 1999-2000 season.[9]
The launch of the new network, Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia, effectively shuttered PRISM and SportsChannel Philadelphia when it launched on October 1, 1997, with the network directly replacing the latter on Philadelphia area local cable systems;[10]
Expansion into other markets
CSN began to expand with a series of acquisitions and new establishments: on July 11, 2000, Comcast acquired a 75% majority interest in Baltimore-area regional sports network Home Team Sports and Minneapolis-based network Midwest Sports Channel from Viacom for approximately $150 million.[11][12] Minority owner News Corporation, which wanted to acquire full ownership of both networks to make them part of its Fox Sports Net group, sued Comcast and Viacom on July 21 in an attempt to block the sale.[13]
On September 7, 2000, as part of a settlement between the two companies, Comcast traded its equity interest in Midwest Sports Channel to News Corporation in exchange for sole ownership of Home Team Sports.[14] HTS was later relaunched as Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic on April 4, 2001.[15][16]
On October 1, 2004, Comcast SportsNet Chicago was launched to replace FSN Chicago, as the local teams wanted to have editorial control over their broadcasts. Also in October 2004, Comcast SportsNet West was launched conjunction with Maloof Sports & Entertainment, owners of the Sacramento Kings. The channel was renamed Comcast SportsNet California in 2008.
On April 30, 2007, Cablevision Systems Corporation sold its 50% ownership interests in FSN Bay Area and FSN New England to Comcast for $570 million (the San Francisco Giants were added as a partner in FSN Bay Area, when the team acquired a 30% stake in the network on December 10);[17][18][19] subsequently, FSN New England rebranded as Comcast SportsNet New England in July 2007,[19] while FSN Bay Area was rebranded as Comcast SportsNet Bay Area on March 31 of that year.
As the result of the acquisition of NBC Universal by Comcast in February 2011, the operations of CSN, along with sister national sports networks Versus and Golf Channel, were integrated into the NBC Sports division. Plans called for NBC-related branding to be eventually incorporated by the Comcast SportsNet outlets, although plans to drop the brand entirely in favor of renaming the collective networks under the NBC Sports brand were shelved in favor of retaining the CSN brand.[20][21] In September 2012, the CSN networks began adopting the NBC Sports graphics package designed by Troika Design Group (introduced as part of a rebranding of the division's on-air presentation in January of that year) for live game coverage and studio shows; the CSN logo was also updated to incorporate the NBC peacock.[22] The networks' flagship program, "SportsNet Central", later adopted the NBC Sports logo and graphics in April 2014.[23]
In April 2012, NBC Owned Television Stations took over responsibilities of selling national advertising on behalf of four CSN networks (New England, Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic, Comcast SportsNet Northwest and Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia). For "unwired sales", the Group will be continue to be represented by Home Team Sports. The arrangement is an extension of one that it had established with New England Cable News in 2011.[24]
In early 2012, Comcast signed a contract worth $1 billion with the Houston Astros and Houston Rockets, which formed a new joint venture in which the two teams would own a 77.307% ownership interest in a new Houston-based sports network (with Comcast holding the remaining 22.693% interest); Comcast SportsNet Houston launched on October 1, 2012, assuming the rights to the Rockets and Astros from Fox Sports Houston,[25] which shut down three days later.[26] After filing an involuntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition for the network on September 27, 2013, to "resolve structural issues affecting CSN Houston's partnership,"[27] DirecTV Sports Networks and AT&T acquired Comcast SportsNet Houston on August 6, 2014 as part of a reorganization plan (with DirecTV as majority owner at 60%).[28] The network was then integrated into DirecTV-operated Root Sports group, which relaunched it as Root Sports Southwest on November 14, 2014.[29]
In markets that did not have an affiliate of that group, Comcast SportsNet also carried national programming distributed by competing regional sports network chain FSN (which included various college sports and UEFA Champions League soccer), a relationship that traced back to the launch of Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia (which took over the FSN programming rights from SportsChannel Philadelphia).[30] CSN quietly dropped all FSN-supplied programming on August 1, 2012, after failing to reach an agreement to continue carrying FSN's nationally distributed programs.[31] In the Philadelphia, Boston, San Francisco and Washington, D.C./Baltimore markets, programming from Fox Sports Networks airs on local broadcast stations.
Channels
Owned-and-operated outlets
Channel | Region served | Team rights | Year established | Formerly operated as | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SportsNets | |||||
Comcast SportsNet Bay Area | San Francisco Bay Area Northern and central California parts of Southern Oregon northwestern Nevada (including the Lake Tahoe-Reno-Carson City region) |
|
2008 |
|
Owned as a joint venture between CSN Bay Area Holdings the NBC Sports Group and San Francisco Giants.[19] Comcast acquired a majority interest in the network from Cablevision in April 2007. While previously branded as an FSN affiliate, it switched to the Comcast SportsNet branding in March 2008.[18] |
Comcast SportsNet California | Northern and central California parts of Oregon parts of Nevada |
|
2004 | Comcast SportsNet West (2004–2008) | Created in conjunction with Maloof Sports & Entertainment, owners of the Sacramento Kings and Sacramento Monarchs, after the company opted not to renew its previous contract with FSN Bay Area. Originally launching as Comcast SportsNet West, the channel was renamed Comcast SportsNet California on September 4, 2008. |
Comcast SportsNet Chicago | Chicago metropolitan area Illinois, Indiana (except areas near Cincinnati, Evansville and Louisville), Iowa, non-Milwaukee market areas of southern Wisconsin |
Chicago Cubs (MLB) Chicago White Sox (MLB) Chicago Blackhawks (NHL) Chicago Bulls (NBA) Chicago Sky (WNBA) Chicago Fire S.C. (MLS) Chicago Rush (AFL) Chicago Bandits (NPF) Northern Illinois Huskies football (NCAA) Illinois State Redbirds basketball (NCAA) |
2004 | Owned by Comcast subsidiary NBCUniversal (20%), the family of Chicago Cubs owner J. Joseph Ricketts (20%), Chicago Bulls and White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf (40%), and Chicago Blackhawks owner Rocky Wirtz (20%). Created in conjunction with the four teams, in order to effectively replace FSN Chicago by giving them better editorial control over their broadcasts. | |
Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic | Maryland Virginia Washington, D.C. southern Pennsylvania eastern West Virginia southern Delaware Hampton Roads Outer Banks |
Washington Capitals (NHL) Washington Wizards (NBA) Washington Redskins (NFL) (preseason games only) D.C. United (MLS) Washington Mystics (WNBA) Chesapeake Bayhawks (MLL) Atlantic Coast Conference football and basketball (NCAA) Colonial Athletic Association sports (NCAA) |
2001 | Home Team Sports (1984–2001) | Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic carried the Baltimore Orioles until 2006, when it lost the rights to the team-owned Mid-Atlantic Sports Network. In 2010, Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic split its main website into two regional websites, rebranding them as "Comcast SportsNet Baltimore" and "Comcast SportsNet Washington" to provide individualized coverage of sports events relevant to the two cities. |
Comcast SportsNet New England | Massachusetts eastern and central Connecticut (except Fairfield County) Vermont Maine New Hampshire Rhode Island |
Boston Celtics (NBA) New England Revolution (MLS) Boston Cannons (MLL) Maine Red Claws (D-League) |
2007 | PRISM New England (1981–1983) SportsChannel New England (1983–1998) Fox Sports New England (1998–2000) Fox Sports Net New England (2000–2004) FSN New England (2004–2007) |
Comcast acquired a majority share from Cablevision in April 2007. The network was renamed Comcast SportsNet New England in October 2007.[32] It does not air programming from the Atlantic Coast Conference, as rights to ACC games are sold on a regional basis within its market territory. |
Comcast SportsNet Northwest | Washington Oregon |
Portland Trail Blazers (NBA) Portland Winterhawks (WHL) Vancouver Canucks (NHL) (through Sportsnet Pacific) Portland Thunder (AFL) Tacoma Rainiers (PCL) University of Oregon Ducks sports (NCAA) |
2007 | Created in conjunction with the Trail Blazers after the team was unable to reach an agreement to keep its game broadcasts on FSN Northwest (now Root Sports Northwest). The network is currently available mainly on Comcast systems, and is not carried by Dish Network nor DirecTV. Canby Telcom has accused Comcast of being inflexible in carriage negotiations for the network pertaining to its subscriber rates,[33] with The Oregonian reporting that CSN Northwest was seeking a rate of $2 per month per subscriber, more than what was being paid to the established FSN Northwest.[34] | |
Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia | Philadelphia metropolitan area eastern Pennsylvania southern and central New Jersey Delaware |
Philadelphia Phillies (MLB) Philadelphia 76ers (NBA) Philadelphia Flyers (NHL) Philadelphia Union (MLS) Philadelphia Big 5 basketball (NCAA) Atlantic 10 Conference football and basketball (NCAA) Colonial Athletic Association sports (NCAA) |
1997 | Owned by NBC Sports Group (75%) and the Philadelphia Phillies (25%).[35] The flagship of the Comcast regional sports networks, it was the first Comcast SportsNet channel to launch, effectively replacing SportsChannel Philadelphia and PRISM in 1997, and (through its ownership by Phillies and 76ers parent Comcast Spectacor) was a pioneer in team-owned sports networks.[36] Due to its re-use of the infrastructure from PRISM (which does not use any satellite uplinks to distribute programming to providers), it was legally exempt from requirements to offer its programming to satellite provideers. Despite FCC regulation closing the terrestrial loophole in March 2010, CSN Philadelphia remains exclusive to Comcast and Verizon FiOS in the market, and is still unavailable via DirecTV or Dish Network.[37] The approval of Comcast's majority shareholder purchase of NBCUniversal by the FCC in 2011 contained provisions requiring Comcast to make regional sports programming available to competing satellite providers. Comcast blacked out NBC-branded nationally televised first-round playoff games between the Philadelphia Flyers and Pittsburgh Penguins for Philadelphia area DirecTV and Dish Network subscribers (in lieu of the game being broadcast on the [unavailable] CSN Philadelphia) during the 2012 Stanley Cup Playoffs. | |
Other networks | |||||
SportsNet New York (SNY) | New York metropolitan area New York state Connecticut northern and central New Jersey northeastern Pennsylvania |
New York Mets (MLB) New York Jets (NFL) (team-related programs only) Big East Conference sports (NCAA) Sun Belt Conference sports (NCAA) University of Connecticut Huskies sports (NCAA) |
2006 | Owned by the Sterling Entertainment Enterprises New York Mets (65%), Charter Communications (27%) and Comcast (8%). | |
The Comcast Network | Mid-Atlantic states southern Pennsylvania |
Eastern League baseball Colonial Athletic Association football (NCAA) |
1996 | CN8 (1996–2009) | Based in Philadelphia and the Baltimore–Washington metropolitan area. The network is carried on most Comcast systems along the East Coast (from Philadelphia to Richmond, Virginia), and is also carried on other cable providers. The Comcast Network feeds served primarily as local news/information channels, but carry some regional sports programming, including Eastern League baseball and CAA football, as well as select Phillies games within that team's designated market. Originally expanded into the Boston market, the New England operations ceased in 2009. |
Former networks
Channel | Region served | Team rights | Formerly operated as | Tenure with CSN | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Comcast/Charter Sports Southeast | Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, Tennessee and South Carolina | Atlanta Dream (WNBA) Southeastern Conference and Atlantic Coast Conference sports (NCAA) |
Sun Belt Network (1999–2004) | 1999–2014 | Launched as a joint venture with Charter Communications; available only on cable providers, CSS primarily carried collegiate and high school sporting events. Although it never used the Comcast SportsNet brand, CSS was treated as a sister network to the CSN outlets. |
Root Sports Southwest | Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma and New Mexico[38] | Houston Rockets (NBA) Houston Astros (MLB) Houston Dynamo (MLS) regional college football and basketball |
2012–2014 | DirecTV and AT&T acquired Comcast SportsNet Houston in November 2014, rebranding it as part of DirecTV's Root Sports group as Root Sports Southwest; the network reached 40% of cable television homes in the Houston market prior to the network's bankruptcy and sale. | |
Comcast Sports Southwest | Houston area | Select games from Sun Belt Conference, Southeastern Conference, and Conference USA (particularly those of the University of Houston and Rice University; all NCAA) | 2009–2014 | The network shut down in October 2012, following the launch of Comcast SportsNet Houston. The network carried events from the Houston Cougars and Rice Owls as well as Houston-area high school sports.[39] | |
MountainWest Sports Network (The Mtn.) | National (based in Denver, Colorado) | Air Force Falcons (NCAA) Boise State Broncos (NCAA) Colorado State Rams (NCAA) New Mexico Lobos (NCAA) SDSU Aztecs (NCAA) TCU Horned Frogs (NCAA) UNLV Rebels (NCAA) Wyoming Cowboys (NCAA) |
2006–2012 | Launched on September 1, 2006 as a joint venture between the Mountain West Conference, CBS Sports (through the former CSTV) and Comcast. The network was shut down on June 1, 2012 as a result of the Mountain West Conference's team realignment. | |
Other channels
New England Cable News, a regional news channel owned by Comcast, was operated as a part of Comcast Sports Group and CSN prior to Comcast's purchase of NBC Universal. In July 2013, as part of a corporate reorganization, NECN had its operations transferred to NBC Owned Television Stations (the unit of NBCUniversal Television Group responsible for running NBC and Telemundo's owned-and-operated stations).[40]
Comcast also owned Comcast Local (CL), a Detroit-based sports network that was distributed throughout Michigan and central Indiana. The network provided coverage of local collegiate and high school sports events, as well as minor league sports throughout its broadcast area. Comcast Local ceased operations in February 2008, as every major professional or college team in the region had its programming tied to FSN Detroit and/or the Big Ten Network.[41][42]
Related services
Comcast SportsNet HD
Comcast SportsNet HD is a high definition simulcast feed of select programs from Comcast SportsNet including live sports and series. Each regional channel (and in some cases, their alternate feed) has its own separate high-definition feed, with their own set schedules of programming – including live sports events as well as locally produced and CSN-distributed national programs and live studio shows – available in HD. Comcast SportsNet Northwest currently does not maintain a high-definition simulcast in the Seattle market.
Comcast SportsNet Plus
Most Comcast SportsNet outlets maintain alternate (or overflow) feeds under the Comcast SportsNet Plus brand (with the network's regional name suffixed preceding the "Plus" title) for the broadcast of two or more events involving teams the respective network holds the broadcast rights to carry. Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia maintains a different arrangement, using sister channel The Comcast Network to serve as a de facto overflow network in the event that two local games are scheduled to air simultaneously on CSN Philadelphia.
National programs
Programming strategy
Each of the Comcast SportsNet outlets have acquired the play-by-play broadcast rights to major sports teams in their regional market (exempting NFL regular season or playoff games, since the league's contracts require all games to be aired on broadcast television in each participating team's local markets). In addition to local play-by-play coverage, the CSN networks also produce and broadcast pre-game and post-game shows, and broadcasts weekly "magazine" shows centered on the teams that maintain rights with the individual network. In some markets, CSN competes directly with other regional sports networks for the broadcast rights to team-specific programming.
National sports programming
Live national play-by-play
- Premier League select games (through NBC Sports)
Other sports
- NASCAR Sprint Cup Series & NASCAR Xfinity Series live practice & qualifying coverage when NBCSN & CNBC are unable to broadcast due to other programming. Started in 2015.
See also
References and footnotes
- 1 2 Michael Sokolove; Jayson Stark and Michael L. Rozansky (March 20, 1996). "Comcast Buying 76ers And Flyers Phils Also May Get Involved With Firm". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Knight Ridder. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ Edward Moran (December 4, 1996). "Picture Starts To Clear Sports Deal Gets Comcast's Foot In Door For New Channel". Philadelphia Daily News. Knight Ridder. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ Sam Donnellon (March 20, 1996). "Prism, Sportschannel On Way Out?". Philadelphia Daily News. Knight Ridder. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ Michael L. Rozansky; Michael Sokolove (March 24, 1996). "Comcast Deal Isn't The End Of Prism It Could Benefit Both Firms To Leave The TV Rights As They Are". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Knight Ridder. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ "COMCAST WELCOME AS AN INVESTOR IN PHILADELPHIA RSNS". Sports Business Journal. Advance Publications. March 28, 1996. Retrieved April 13, 2015.
- ↑ Edward Moran; Bill Fleischman (April 26, 1996). "Comcast Puts Prism On Ropes Phils Agree To Join Flyers, Sixers In Fledgling All-sports Cable Channel". Philadelphia Daily News. Knight Ridder. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ James McConville (April 29, 1996). "Comcast launching Philly sports channel". Broadcasting & Cable. Cathers Business Information. Retrieved April 18, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
- ↑ Bill Fleischman (October 5, 1996). "Flyers And Prism Ink Last-minute TV Deal". Philadelphia Daily News. Knight Ridder. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ Bill Fleischman (July 22, 1997). "New Sportsnet Reels In Sixers". Philadelphia Daily News. Knight Ridder. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ Michael L. Rozansky (July 27, 1997). "Local TV Sports Fans To See A Change, In Cost Sportschannel And Prism Are Going, Going. . . . A New Basic Cable Channel Takes Over". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Knight Ridder. Retrieved September 5, 2012.
- ↑ Mark Guidera (July 12, 2000). "Comcast to buy HTS sports channel". Baltimore Sun. Tribune Publishing.
- ↑ Eric Fisher (July 12, 2000). "Purchase of HTS Continues Comcast's Foray into Area Sports". The Washington Times. News World Communications. Retrieved April 9, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
- ↑ Linda Moss; R. Thomas Umstead (July 24, 2000). "Fox Sports Net Suing to Block HTS Sell-Off". Multichannel News. Cathers Business Information. Retrieved April 9, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
- ↑ Judd Zulgad (September 8, 2000). "BROADCAST SPORTS; Fox Sports' agreement to acquire MSC now final". Star Tribune. The Star Tribune Company. Retrieved April 9, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
- ↑ Kristine Henry (March 3, 2001). "Nevins leaves PR post for presidency of HTS". Baltimore Sun. Tribune Publishing.
- ↑ "HTS now Comcast SportsNet, adding sports news coverage". Baltimore Sun. Tribune Publishing. April 4, 2001.
- ↑ Cynthia Littleton (April 30, 2007). "Comcast sports new cable networks". Variety. Reed Business Information. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- 1 2 Tom FitzGerald (August 20, 2010). "Same channel, but new name for local telecasts / Comcast SportsNet BA replaces FSNBA". San Francisco Chronicle. Hearst Corporation.
- 1 2 3 John Dempsey (December 10, 2007). "SF Giants take stake in FSN". Variety. Reed Business Information. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ David Goetzl (May 4, 2011). "NBC Sports Brand Going Local". MediaPost. MediaPost Publications. Retrieved May 6, 2011.
- ↑ Wayne Friedman (May 9, 2011). "NBC Steps Up Branding For Comcast Sports Nets". MediaPost. MediaPost Communications. Retrieved May 10, 2011.
- ↑ John Ourand (August 1, 2011). "SBJ: Exit Versus, enter the NBC Sports Network". Sporting News. Advance Publications. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
- ↑ "SportsNet Central Rebrand". Troika Sports Group. Retrieved June 12, 2014.
- ↑ Lindsay Rubino (April 16, 2012). "NBC Owned Stations, Comcast Sports Group Strike Ad Sales Partnership". Broadcasting & Cable. NewBay Media. Retrieved August 21, 2012.
- ↑ David Barron (March 7, 2012). "Comcast SportsNet Houston plans October launch". Houston Chronicle. Hearst Corporation.
- ↑ David Barron (October 2, 2012). "Fox Sports Houston signs off with familiar face". Houston Chronicle. Hearst Corporation.
- ↑ David Barron (September 27, 2013). "CSN Houston bankruptcy filing surprises Astros". Houston Chronicle. Hearst Corporation. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ David Barron (August 6, 2014). "AT&T, DirecTV to take over Comcast SportsNet Houston". Houston Chronicle. Hearst Corporation. Retrieved August 7, 2014.
- ↑ David Barron (November 14, 2014). "Root Sports Houston to make Rockets debut on Monday". Houston Chronicle (Ultimate Rockets). Hearst Corporation.
- ↑ "COMCAST SPORTSNET LAUNCHES OCTOBER 1, LANDS 76ERS' RIGHTS". Sports Business Journal. Advance Publications. July 22, 1997. Retrieved April 13, 2015.
- ↑ John Ourand (August 14, 2012). "NBC Sports Group Drops FSN Programming From Comcast RSNs". Sports Business Journal. Advance Publications. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ Bill Doyle (September 20, 2007). "Several TV voices take it to Belichick". Telegram & Gazette. The New York Times Company. (must scroll down about half a page for citation)
- ↑ "Comcast Sportsnet and NFL Network". Canby Telcom. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013.
- ↑ Mike Rogoway (May 29, 2007). "Comcast's sports channels fuel bidding war". The Oregonian. Advance Publications.
- ↑ Matt Gelb; Bob Fernandez (January 5, 2014). "Phillies get $2.5 billion, equity stake in Comcast SportsNet". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia Media Holdings. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ Rose DeWolf (August 25, 1997). "Starz On The Horizon Goodbye Prism & Sports Channel; What's Next Depends On Where You Hang The Clicker". Philadelphia Daily News. Knight Ridder. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ John Eggerton (January 20, 2010). "FCC Votes To Close Terrestrial RSN Exemption". Multichannel News. NewBay Media.
- ↑ David Barron (July 5, 2012). "TV-radio notebook: CSN Houston lands C-USA football games". Houston Chronicle. Hearst Corporation. Retrieved April 14, 2013.
- ↑ "Comcast adds more Houston-area sports programming". Houston Business Journal. American City Business Journals. August 31, 2009.
- ↑ Michael Malone (July 24, 2013). "NBC's Owned Stations Reorganize". Broadcasting & Cable. NewBay Media. Retrieved August 5, 2013.
- ↑ "Comcast Local Going Off The Air". WILX-TV. Gray Television. January 10, 2008. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
- ↑ Steven Rosso (January 10, 2008). "CMU and Comcast Local". The Grand Rapids Press. Advance Publications. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
External links
- NBC Sports Website
- NBC Sports Regional Networks Website
- CSN Bay Area
- CSN California
- CSN Chicago
- CSN New England
- CSN Northwest
- CSN Philadelphia
- CSN Washington
- CSS (Comcast
/Charter Sports Southeast) - Comcast Network Philadelphia
- SportsNet New York