Timeline of other British sports channels

This is a timeline of sports channels in the UK other than Sky Sports and BT Sport. The timeline also includes sports events which were shown on non-sports non-terrestrial channels.

1980s

  • 1984
    • 29 March – Screensport launches.[1] It is the UK’s first sports television channel, broadcast on a pan-European basis. Initially all coverage of pre-recorded.
    • 31 August – Screensport shows its first live event - greyhound racing.
  • 1987
    • July – Screensport signs a deal with Thames Television, who were the Football League's agent for international distribution, to transmit 34 recorded matches via cable and satellite.[2] Thames produced its programme, called the Big League Soccer.[3] This resulted in Screensport being the only place where viewers could get extended highlights of the league during the 1987/88 season.
  • 1988
    • S4C brings Serie A to British screens for the first time. It shows Italy’s top league for the next two seasons when the rights transfer to BSB.
  • 1989
    • 5 February – Sky Television launches at 6 pm and among the new channels is a pan-European sports channel, Eurosport which Sky co-founds with the European Broadcasting Union. The channel’s first night is dominated by winter sports, which Eurosport has broadcast live and in depth ever since.

1990s

  • 1990
  • 1991
    • 20 April – Following the merger between Sky TV and BSB, BSB’s Sport Channel closes and is replaced the next day by Sky Sports.
    • 6–22 May – Eurosport briefly closes after the competing Screensport channel had filed a complaint to the European Commission over its corporate structure.[4] TF1 Group subsequently steps in and replaces BSkyB as Eurosport's joint owners.
  • 1992
    • No events.
  • 1993
    • 1 March – Screensport closes following its merger with Eurosport in the hope that one would become financially profitable.
  • 1994
    • A deal with Chrysalis Sport[5] sees cable station Wire TV make a push into sports broadcasting and Wire launches an evening sports programming block called Sportswire. Sport shown includes Vauxhall Conference football and Lennox Lewis's WBC title fights.
  • 1995
    • June – TCI (owners of Telewest) and NYNEX do a deal with BSkyB which includes a clause that the cable operators do not launch any rival channels to those already operated by Sky. This causes the collapse of Sportswire, days before its launch as a full time channel.
    • 7–28 October – L!VE TV broadcasts many of the matches from the 1995 Rugby League World Cup. It shows many of them exclusively as the main broadcaster, BBC Sport, only shows four matches live form the entire tournament.
    • L!VE TV also shows coverage of that year's World Masters darts tournament - its predecessor Wire TV had shown the event for the previous two years. However, L!VE would only show the event once as from the following year, the event moved to Eurosport where it stayed until 2000.
    • The Racing Channel launches, thereby becoming the UK's first channel devoted to a single sport.
  • 1996
    • 13 October – Formula One coverage on Eurosport ends. It had shown full race weekend coverage of the event since the early days of the channel and had been the only place to see the practice and qualifying sessions as the BBC had only shown the actual race prior to the 1996 Formula One World Championship.
  • 1997
    • No events.
  • 1998
    • 10 September – MUTV launches, becoming the first football club channel to start broadcasting in the UK.[6]

2000s

  • 2000
    • September – ONsport launches. It replaces Champions on 28 and Champions on 99, which had reflected the channel numbers these were broadcast on. These channels were re-branded respectively as ONsport 1 and ONsport 2, after ONdigital had purchased rights to the ATP Masters Series tennis. Whilst ONsport 1 broadcast 24 hours a day, ONsport 2 timeshared with Carlton Cinema and was only on air to provide coverage of an alternate Champions League match.
  • 2002
    • 1 March – F1 Digital+ launches. It offers enhanced multi-screen coverage of Formula One on a pay-per-view basis.
    • 1 May – At The Races launches.[9]
    • 13 August – Chelsea TV launches.
    • 5 December – NASN launches to show live and recorded coverage of North American sports.
    • 12 December – After just one season, F1 Digital+ closes.[10]
  • 2003
    • January –
      • Eurosport takes over as broadcaster of Serie A, opting to show a match at peak-time whereas Channel 4 had shown its live coverage in the afternoon.
      • The Racing Channel closes. It had been on air since 1995.[11]
  • 2006
    • 8 March – Racing TV launches an international racing channel Racing World. Consequently, racing TV concentrates on UK horse racing.[17]
    • 13 March –
    • 25 August – Setanta Sports brings regular non league football to television when it acquires the rights to the Football Conference. The deal also sees the Conference Cup renamed the Setanta Cup.[19]
    • 4 December – The Wrestling Channel relaunches as TWC Fight!
    • 23 December – Bravo decides to drop its coverage of Serie A due to poor viewing figures. The league does continue to be shown by Setanta Sports.
  • 2007
    • 11 January – Following Setanta Sports’ purchase of rights to the PGA Tour,[20] the company launches a dedicated golf channel Setanta Golf.
    • 11 August – Setanta Sports shows the first of its 46 matches from the Premier League.[21]
    • 20 September – LFC TV, a dedicated official channel for English football club Liverpool F.C., launches.[22]
    • 29 November – Setanta Sports News launches. The channel launches following a dispute which saw Sky Sports News and the other Sky basics channels removed from Virgin Media and this launch is seen by the cable company as a replacement sports news channel. The channel is jointly owned by both companies with ITN producing the channel's content.[23]
    • 31 December – The Golf Channel UK closes due to it not being able to attract a viable audience due to not broadcasting enough live tournaments.
  • 2008
    • 14 January – Arsenal TV launches.[24]
    • January – TWC Fight! Is relaunched as The Fight Network (UK & Ireland) following the purchase of the channel by Canadian company The Fight Network.
    • 18 May – Setanta Sports shows full live coverage of the first cricket Indian Premier League.[25]
    • August – Setanta Sports begins showing the England football team and the FA Cup following ITV becoming the primary rights holder of both in its new deal with the FA. Setanta shows 17 FA Cup games, including one semi-final exclusively and shared coverage with ITV of the final.[26] Consequently, the BBC has no rights to any form of coverage of the FA Cup for the very first time.
    • 1 December – The Fight Network (UK & Ireland) closes.
  • 2009
    • 1 February – NASN is renamed ESPN America following the sale in late 2006 of the channel to ESPN.[27]
    • 22 June – It is announced that ESPN will take over the 46 games per season that were shown on Setanta Sports[28] after Setanta failed to make a £10m payment to the rights holder which meant that the rights returned to the Premier League which allowed it to sell those rights to another broadcaster.[29]
    • 23 June – Setanta Sports ceases broadcasting in the UK after going into administration.[30] The closure means that sister channels Setanta Golf and Setanta Sports News also stop broadcasting and from this date, football club channels Celtic TV and Rangers TV, which were sold as part of the Setanta package, close although both later relaunch as online only channels. Arsenal TV does continue but closes just over a month later.
    • 25 June – Eurosport picks up the television rights to golf's PGA Tour for the remainder of the 2009 season.[31] However the coverage only lasts for six months as the rights return to Sky Sports at the start of 2010.[32]
    • 3 August – ESPN launches in the UK, picking up many of the rights previously held by Setanta Sports. These include the rights to the Premier League that Setanta had held.[33][34] It later adds many other football rights to its portfolio, including the Scottish Premier League, FA Cup,[35] European club football and the Europa League[36]
    • 8 August – ESPN becomes the exclusive broadcaster of the Ultimate Fighting Championship.[37]
    • 24 August – Racing World closes after just over three years on air.
    • 25 September –
      • MSK launches, initially to broadcast events which had not been available in Great Britain since the collapse of Setanta Sports as they had not been picked up by rival sports broadcasters but are available through Setanta in Ireland.
      • ESPN beings National Rugby League to the UK when it broadcasts the first Preliminary Final live on 25 September, the second Preliminary Final and on 4 October it shows the Grand Final.[38]

2010s

  • 2010
    • 1 March – A European edition of SportsCenter starts to be broadcast five nights a week on ESPN America.[39]
    • 10–12 March – ESPN shows the first ever Winter X Games Europe.[40]
    • 12–14 March – ESPN broadcasts the 2010 World Indoor Athletic Championships.[41]
    • 22–31 July – ESPN shows the inaugural Caribbean Twenty20 tournament.[42]
    • 29 July – MSK and MSK Extra are renamed Premier Sports and Premier Sports Extra.
    • 19 August – Premier Sports announces that it has bought the live and exclusive television rights to thirty matches per season from the Conference National for the next three seasons.[43] The thirty matches selected for broadcast included all five Conference National play-offs.[44]
    • September – ESPN starts broadcasting live coverage of 43 matches per season from the English Premiership.[45] The agreement also provides highlight rights for use on ESPN digital media such as ESPNScrum.com. Sky Sports will continue to show 26 live games per season plus the other semi-final.[46]
  • 2012
    • 7 January – ESPN breaks the BBC’s monopoly on covering the BDO World Darts Championship. This begins a pattern which continues with BT Sport from 2014 whereby two broadcasters share the rights with ESPN (and from 2014 BT Sport) showing the weeknight evening coverage exclusively live with all other coverage shared between both broadcasters.[55]
    • March – Premier Sports begins broadcasting up to 32 games from the Rugby Football League Championship, Championship 1 and Championship Cup in the 2012 season.[56]
    • April – ESPN America stops broadcasting a European version of SportsCentre, instead opting to broadcast an edited version of the 2am show produced in Los Angeles.
    • 12 June – The announcement of the rights to the Premier League for the next three seasons reveals that BT has won the rights to 38 matches each season. These rights are currently held by ESPN UK.[57] The news followed speculation that ESPN was reconsidering its position in the UK.[58]
    • 5 July – Premier Sports announces that NHL will continue for a further 4 years on the channel with appropriately 400 games per season being broadcast and complemented by a daily broadcast of Hockey Tonight.[59] Premier later further extends its coverage of NHL which now runs until 2021.
    • 11-31 August – ESPN shows the first edition of cricket's Sri Lanka Premier League.
    • 17 August – Premier Sports buys the rights to the French Top 14 league, usually broadcasting two live games per round.[60] It shows the league for just a single season.
    • September – ESPN starts showing one game per round from the UEFA Europa League after it acquired secondary rights to the competition with ITV being the primary rights holder.[61]
    • 20–23 September – ESPN shows the 2012 Darts European Championship.,[62] thereby becoming the first broadcaster in Britain to show both BDO and PDC tournaments at the same time.
  • 2013
    • 25 February – BT agrees to acquire ESPN's UK and Ireland TV channels business, consisting of ESPN and ESPN America. BT will continue to broadcast at least one ESPN branded channel as part of its BT Sport package of services.[63]
    • May – Premier Sports broadcasts the Football Conference for the final time.[64]
    • 13 June – Premier Sports Extra closes.
    • 1 August – At midnight, and ahead of the launch of BT Sport, ESPN UK, ESPN America and ESPN Classic close - the latter was not part of the BT/ESPN deal.
    • 26 October – The British Basketball League decides to create its own internet-based channel to show its matches rather than selling the rights to traditional television stations although it does do a deal with British Eurosport to show weekly highlights.[65]
    • 26 October-30 November – Premier Sports broadcasts its first major international sporting event when it is joint broadcaster with the BBC of the 2013 Rugby League World Cup.[66] The channel also covered live coverage of the 2017 event.
  • 2015
    • 9 June – ESPN is rebranded as BT Sport ESPN.
    • 11 June – Premier Sports begins covering Copa América.[68]
    • 29 June – Discovery, Inc., which had bought shares in Eurosport in 2012 and by 2015 fully owned the channel, wins the rights to broadcast the Olympic Games from 2018 for most of Europe and 2022 for the UK and France in a deal worth €1.3 billion (£922 million).[69] It subsequently sublets some of the rights to the BBC.
    • 13 November – British Eurosport changes its names to Eurosport 1.
    • 10 December – Bike launches in the UK.
  • 2016
    • Premier Sports begins showing all 201 games of rugby league from the Australian National Rugby League alongside the NRL Footy Show, State of Origin series, NRL Full Time and Rugby League Back Chat.
    • 27 June – Eurosport shows live and recoded coverage of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships for the first time, thereby becoming the first commercial pay-TV broadcaster to air live UK coverage from the All England Club. Its live coverage is restricted to the finals weekend. This is the first time since 1968 that the BBC has not been the exclusive broadcaster of Wimbledon in the UK.[70]
    • 2 August – Premier Sports becomes one of the rights holders to the newly expanded Scottish Challenge Cup. It broadcasts games alongside other rights holders BBC Alba and S4C. Previously, BBC Alba had been the sole broadcaster of the competition.[71]
    • 31 December – Extreme Sports Channel stops broadcasting in the UK after 14 years on air.
  • 2017
    • 28 August-10 September – Eurosport shows the US Open for the final time. It had held exclusive rights to the past two tournaments and prior to this it had obtained secondary rights to the event with Sky Sports being the main rights holder.
    • 31 August – Premier Sports launches free-to-air sports channel FreeSports.[72]
    • September – After less than two years on air, Bike closes.
  • 2018
    • 7 June – It is announced that Amazon Prime has been awarded the rights to livestream 20 Premier League matches a season for the next three seasons.[73]
    • 18 June – Amazon Prime shows its first live sport in the UK when it broadcasts live coverage of the Queen's Club tennis tournament.[74]
    • August – Eleven Sports UK and Ireland launches following deals with European football leagues, including Serie A[75] and La Liga.[76] The platform is a streaming service rather than a television channel.
    • 8 August – EFL on Quest is broadcast for the first time following the transfer of the highlights right to the English Football League to Quest.
    • 27 August – Amazon Prime broadcasts the US Open for the first time. This is the first time that a major sporting event has only been available via a streaming-only platform.[77]
    • 31 August – Premier Sports takes over as broadcaster of the PRO14 Rugby.[78] The agreement sees all 152 games per season broadcast live, with no less than 21 games (one per round) shown live free-to-air on FreeSports.[79] Sky Sports and the BBC had been the previous broadcasters - the BBC had shown the tournament since its inception in 2001. The start of the contract sees Premier Sports launch a second channel - Premier Sports 2.[80]
    • 30 September – After more than 17 years on air, Motorsport.tv, previously known as Motors TV, closes its linear channel, switching to online-streaming only.[81]
    • November – Premier Sports announces a six-year deal with the SFA starting in 2019 to show the Scottish Cup. Its live rights include the first 2 picks from rounds 4, last 16 and quarter-finals and first pick of a semi-final. There are also options to show matches in rounds 1-3 and the final and other semi-final non-exclusively with the BBC.[82]
    • 17 December – Racing UK rebrands itself as Racing TV.
  • 2019
    • 1 January – At The Races closes when it is rebranded as Sky Sports Racing.[83]
    • January –
      • Just four months after going on air, Eleven Sports relinquishes most of its football rights, passing many of them onto Premier Sports.
      • Eurosport is the exclusive broadcaster of the 2019 BDO World Darts Championship. It shows some of the games on sister free-to-air channel QUEST.
    • February – Amazon Prime takes over as the UK broadcaster of the tennis ATP World Tour.[84]
    • 30 June – After 18 seasons on air, Chelsea TV closes as a linear channel It continues as an on-line only service.
    • 3 December – Amazon Prime shows its first set of live Premier League football matches.

2020s

  • 2020
    • 6 January – Amazon Prime Video expands its coverage of tennis when it takes over as the UK broadcaster of the WTA, showing 49 tournaments a year.[85]
    • 13 January – Premier Sports launches La Liga TV, a full time channel showing Spain’s La Liga.
    • February – FreeSports begins showing the Japanese J-league.[86]
    • 31 May – FreeSports begins showing the Polish Ekstraklasa and Danish Superliga.[87]
    • 16 June – Eurosport begins showing Norway’s premier domestic football competition Eliteserien.[88]
    • 8 September – It is announced that all of September's Premier League fixtures will be shown on TV due to fans not being into stadiums due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This includes a weekly 3pm Saturday afternoon match, shown on TV in the UK for the first time, one of which is shown on Amazon Prime.[89]
    • 6 October – Premier Sports takes over from BT Sport as broadcaster of the Scottish League Cup.[90]
    • 14 November – Amazon Prime Video broadcasts rugby union for the first time when it begins showing the Autumn Nations Cup.[91] Ireland's matches are shown on Channel 4 and Wales' games are broadcast on S4C.[92]
  • 2021
    • 1 February – Coverage of UK greyhound racing moves to a new channel called Sporty Stuff HD, which broadcasts on satellite. The sport had previously been shown on Live 360 - an offshoot of Nigerian news channel Arise News - since the closure of Front Runner TV. Sporty Stuff also shows lesser-known motorsport events.[93]

See also

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