Big Ten Network
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Big Ten Network is a planned television station in the United States set to be launched in August 2007. The network is a joint project of the Big Ten Conference, a college athletic conference, and Fox Entertainment Group and is a national channel devoted to Big Ten athletic and academic programs. It will be headquartered in the former Montgomery Ward & Co. catalog building at 600 W. Chicago Ave in Chicago, Illinois.[1] The Big Ten Network represents a 20-year partnership between the Big Ten and Fox. It will be majority-owned (51%) by the Big Ten Conference, with Fox holding a minority interest (49%).[2] Fox will handle the administration and daily operations of the channel. The conference officially announced the formation of the network on June 21, 2006.
Mark Silverman has been announced as the first president of the network. He was formerly a general manager and senior vice president of ABC Cable Networks Group.[3] Leon Schweir has been named the Big Ten Network's Executive Producer/Vice President of Production. He previously had spent 26 years working at Madison Square Garden Networks in New York City.[4]
The station is planned to broadcast 35+ football games per season (including at least two per conference team). For men's basketball, there will be at least 105 regular-season games and three Big Ten Tournament games. For women's basketball, there will be at least 55 regular-season games and nine Big Ten Tournament games. Also planned are 170 Olympic sporting events per year as well as 660 hours per year of institutional programming and coverage from the conference's vast library of historic sporting events, including bowl games. Many events will be produced in High-Definition television (HDTV).
The channel will be available nationally, with the first affiliate, DirecTV, having already signed up to carry the channel and planning on delivering the channel to its Total Choice Package. The station will be made available to other cable and satellite companies. Although it is planned to be available for broadcast nationally, it is unclear whether other cable or satellite systems will do so or whether they will simply carry the channel within the Midwest region.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Official Announcement of the creation of the network
- Big Ten Channel FAQ
- Press release announcing official name and logo
Brands: NFL on Fox • Major League Baseball on Fox • NASCAR on Fox • Bowl Championship Series • Cotton Bowl • Formula One
American cable/satellite networks: Big Ten Network (debuting August 2007) • Fox College Sports • Fox Sports Net • Fox Sports en Espanol • Fuel TV • Speed Channel
Owned and operated regional sports networks: Arizona • Bay Area (40-percent stake) • Detroit • Florida • Houston (separate subfeed of FSN Southwest for the Houston/Southeast Texas markets) • Indiana • Midwest • North • Ohio • Prime Ticket • South • SportsSouth • Sun Sports (split ownership with Comcast) • Southwest • West
Affiliated regional sports networks: New England • New York • Northwest • Pittsburgh • Rocky Mountain • Utah (separate subfeed of FSN Rocky Mountain for the Salt Lake City market) • Comcast SportsNet (Chicago, Mid-Atlantic, and Philadelphia networks) • MSG Network • New England Sports Network (partial programming)
International sports networks: Australia • Canada • Latinoamerica
Others: Fox Sports Radio
Defunct brands/networks: FSN Chicago • Fox Footy Channel • NHL on Fox • NFL Europe on Fox • Prime Network • SportsChannel America
Broadcast sports divisions: ESPN on ABC • CBS Sports • Fox Sports • NBC Sports
National cable/satellite networks: ESPN • ESPN2 • ESPN Classic • ESPNEWS • Fox Sports Net • Versus
Specialty networks: Big Ten Network (launches Aug. 2007) • CSTV • ESPNU • Fox College Sports • Fox Soccer Channel • Fuel TV • GOL TV • Horse Racing TV • Men's Outdoor and Recreation • MountainWest Sports Network • NBA TV • NFL Network • Setanta Sports • SPEED Channel • The Golf Channel • The Outdoor Channel • The Tennis Channel • TVG
Occasional broadcasts: HBO • Showtime • Spike TV • Superstation WGN • TBS • TNT • USA Network • Sci Fi Channel • The CW • ION Television • MyNetworkTV
Regional sports networks: Fox Sports Net • 4SD • Altitude • Comcast SportsNet • CSS • CST • MASN • MSG • NESN • SportSouth • SNY • STO • Sun Sports • YES
Syndicators: ESPN Plus • LF Sports • Raycom Sports
Spanish language: ESPN Deportes • Fox Sports en Español
Broadband services: ESPN360 • WCSN
Defunct networks: C-SET • CNNSI • Empire • Mizlou • OnTV • SCORE • SportsChannel America • SportsChannel Los Angeles • Sports Time • TVS • Victory Sports