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History of ESPN on ABC

Sports programming on the American Broadcasting Company is provided on occasion, primarily on weekend afternoons; since 2006, the ABC Sports division has been defunct, with all sports telecasts on ABC being produced in association with sister cable network ESPN under the branding ESPN on ABC. While ABC has, in the past, aired notable sporting events such as the NFL's Monday Night Football, and various college football bowl games (including, most prominently for a period, the Bowl Championship Series), general industry trends and changes in rights have prompted reductions in sports broadcasts on broadcast television (the BCS's successor, the College Football Playoff and national championship, air exclusively on ESPN).[1][2]

ABC is the broadcast television rightsholder of the National Basketball Association (NBA), with its package (under the NBA on ESPN branding) traditionally beginning with its Christmas Day games, followed by a series of Sunday afternoon games through the remainder of the season, weekend playoff games, and all games of the NBA Finals. ABC is the broadcast television rightsholder of the National Hockey League (NHL), with its package (under the NHL on ESPN branding). In this deal, ABC broadcasts up to 10 regular season games (mostly afternoon), the NHL All-Star Game and four Stanley Cup Finals. During college football season, ABC typically carries an afternoon doubleheader on Saturdays, along with the primetime Saturday Night Football. ABC also airs coverage of selected bowl games. The Saturday afternoon lineup outside of football season typically features airings of ESPN Films documentaries or other studio programs under the banner ESPN Sports Saturday, while Sunday afternoons usually feature either brokered programming, or encore and burn-off airings of ABC programs.

1950s edit

Early beginnings as Sports Programs, Inc. edit

Widely credited as a pioneer in network sports broadcasting, Edgar Scherick created the television program ABC's Wide World of Sports at his company Sports Programs, Inc. which he started in 1956 with $600.00.[3] Scherick had formed this company after leaving CBS when the network would not make him the head of sports programming, choosing instead Bill MacPhail, a former baseball public-relations agent. Before ABC Sports even became a formal division of the network, Scherick and ABC programming chief Tom Moore pulled off many programming deals involving the most popular American sporting events.

While Scherick wasn't interested in "For Men Only," he recognized the talent Roone Arledge had. Arledge realized ABC was the organization he was looking to join. The lack of a formal organization would offer him the opportunity to claim real power when the network matured. So, he signed on with Scherick as an assistant producer.

Several months before ABC began broadcasting NCAA college football games, Arledge sent Scherick a remarkable memo, filled with youthful exuberance, and television production concepts which sports broadcasts have adhered to since.[citation needed] Previously, network sporting broadcasts had consisted of simple set-ups and focused on the game itself. The genius of Arledge in this memo was not that he offered another way to broadcast the game to the sports fan. Arledge recognized television had to take the sports fan to the game. In addition, Arledge realized that the broadcasts needed to attract, and hold the attention of women viewers. At age 29 on September 17, 1960, he put his vision into reality with ABC's first NCAA college football broadcast from Birmingham, Alabama, between Alabama Crimson Tide and the Georgia Bulldogs won by Alabama, 21–6. That same year, ABC began broadcasting games of the fledgling American Football League and used the same innovative techniques in their broadcasts. Sports broadcasting has not been the same since.[citation needed]

Earliest coverage of the National Football League edit

In 1948 and 1950, ABC televised the National Football League Championship Game. Harry Wismer[4] provided commentary for the game in 1948 game and the game in 1955 joined by Red Grange and Joe Hasel. Since the game was played in Los Angeles, there was no network telecast of the 1951 NFL Championship Game because at that time there was no way to send live TV programs from the West Coast to the East Coast and vice versa.

ABC first broadcast regular season National Football League games in 1953. At the time, they only broadcast Chicago Bears home games and Chicago Cardinals home games. Beginning in 1954, ABC added Washington Redskins home games. In ABC's final year of their initial go around with the National Football League, they added Los Angeles Rams and San Francisco 49ers games (for the Pacific Time Zone affiliates) to go along with their coverage of the Bears and Cardinals. Wire accounts found in newspaperarchive.com indicated that the Washington-Philadelphia game in Week 2 of the 1953 season, was to have been regionally televised by ABC, but the cables needed for the telecast never arrived. The articles said that NFL Commissioner Bert Bell was "fuming" over the incident.

ABC's relationship with the NFL at this point pretty much ended when CBS began carrying regular season games across its network nationwide in 1956. This came off the heels of the NFL's previous principal network TV partner, the DuMont Network suspending its operations. Less than five years later however, ABC became the initial network television partner for the American Football League. The deal called for ABC to broadcast approximately 37 regular season games, the AFL Championship Game and the AFL All-Star Game. These games were typically broadcast regionally on 15 consecutive Sundays and on Thanksgiving Day. This became the first ever cooperative television plan for professional football, in which the proceeds of the contract were divided equally among member clubs; the National Football League would follow suit in 1961, a move that required Congress to pass the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 to accommodate such collective broadcasting contracts.

Creating the Major League Baseball Game of the Week edit

In 1953,[5] Scherick broached a Saturday Game of the Week,[6] TV sport's first network series. At the time, ABC was labeled a "nothing network" that had fewer outlets than CBS or NBC. ABC also needed paid programming or "anything for bills" as Scherick put it. At first, ABC hesitated at the idea of a nationally televised regular season baseball program. ABC wondered how exactly the Game of the Week would reach television in the first place and who would notice if it did? Also, Major League Baseball barred the Game of the Week from airing within 50 miles of any ballpark.[7] Major League Baseball according to Scherick, insisted on protecting local coverage and didn't care about national appeal. ABC, though, did care about the national appeal and claimed that "most of America was still up for grabs."

In April 1953, Edgar Scherick set out to sell teams rights but instead, only got the Philadelphia Athletics, Cleveland Indians,[8] and Chicago White Sox[9][10] to sign on.[11] These were not "national" broadcast contracts since they were assembled through negotiations with individual teams to telecast games from their home parks. It was until the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961, that antitrust laws barred "pooled rights" TV contracts negotiated with a central league broadcasting authority.

In 1953, ABC earned an 11.4 rating for their Game of the Week telecasts. Blacked-out cities had 32% of households. In the rest of the United States, 3 in 4 TV sets in use watched Dizzy Dean[12] and Buddy Blattner[13] (or backup announcers Bill McColgan and Bob Finnegan) call the games for ABC. CBS took over the Saturday Game in 1955 (the rights were actually set up through the Falstaff Brewing Corporation[14]) retaining Dean/Blattner and McColgan/Finnegan as the announcing crews (as well as Gene Kirby, who produced the Dean/Blattner games and alternated with them on play-by-play) and adding Sunday coverage in 1957. As Edgar Scherick said, "In '53, no one wanted us. Now teams begged for "Game"'s cash."

In 1959, ABC broadcast the best-of-three playoff series[15][16][17] (to decide the National League pennant) between the Milwaukee Braves and Los Angeles Dodgers. The cigarette company L&M was in charge of all of the telecasts. George Kell[18] and Bob DeLaney were the announcers.

1960s edit

Becoming ABC Sports and the birth of Wide World of Sports edit

In February 1960, Scherick sold Sports Programs to the American Broadcasting Company for $500,000 in ABC stock, where it became ABC Sports, the sports division of the network. With the acquisition, Scherick was appointed head of the ABC Sports division, then Vice President in charge of Network Sales.

Despite the production values he brought to NCAA college football, Scherick wanted low-budget (as in inexpensive broadcasting rights) sports programming that could attract and retain an audience. He hit upon the idea of broadcasting track and field events sponsored by the Amateur Athletic Union. While Americans were not exactly fans of track and field events, Scherick figured Americans understood games.

So in January 1961, Scherick called Arledge into his office, and asked him to attend the annual AAU board of governors meeting. While he was shaking hands, Scherick said, if the mood seemed right, might he cut a deal to broadcast AAU events on ABC? It seemed a tall assignment, but as Scherick said years later, "Roone was a gentile and I was not." Arledge came back with a deal for ABC to broadcast all AAU events for $50,000 a year.

Next, Scherick and Arledge divided up their NCAA college football sponsor list. They then telephoned their sponsors and said in so many words, "Advertise on our new sports show coming up in April, or forget about buying commercials on NCAA college football this fall." The two persuaded enough sponsors to advertise, though it took them to the last day of a deadline imposed by ABC programming to do it.

Wide World of Sports suited Scherick's plans exactly. By exploiting the speed of jet transportation and flexibility of videotape, Scherick was able to undercut NBC and CBS's advantages in broadcasting live sporting events. In that era, with communications nowhere near as universal as they are today, ABC was able to safely record events on videotape for later broadcast without worrying about an audience finding out the results.

Arledge, his colleague Chuck Howard, and Jim McKay (who left CBS for this opportunity) made up the show on a week-by-week basis the first year it was broadcast. Arledge had a genius for the dramatic story line that unfolded in the course of a game or event. McKay's honest curiosity and reporter's bluntness gave the show an emotional appeal which attracted viewers who might not otherwise watch a sporting event.

But more importantly from Arledge's perspective, Wide World of Sports allowed him to demonstrate his ability as an administrator as well as producer. Arledge did not gain a formal title as president of ABC Sports until 1968, even though Scherick left his position to assume a position of vice president for programming at ABC in 1964.

During its initial season in the spring and summer of 1961, Wide World of Sports was initially broadcast from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Eastern Time on Saturdays. Beginning in 1962, it was pushed to 5 to 6:30 pm, and later to 4:30 to 6 pm. Eastern Time to allow ABC affiliates in the Eastern and Central Time Zones to carry local early-evening newscasts.

Broadcasting the American Football League and MLB (again) edit

On June 9, 1960, the league signed a five-year television contract with ABC, which brought in revenues of approximately $2,125,000 per year for the entire league. The deal called for ABC to broadcast approximately 37 regular season games, the AFL Championship Game and the AFL All-Star Game. These games were typically broadcast regionally on 15 consecutive Sundays and on Thanksgiving Day. This became the first ever cooperative television plan for professional football, in which the proceeds of the contract were divided equally among member clubs; the National Football League would follow suit in 1961, a move that required Congress to pass the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 to accommodate such collective broadcasting contracts.

ABC would broadcast AFL games from the league's very first season in 1960[19] until the 1964 season, when NBC took over as the league's primary network television broadcaster.

Also in 1960, ABC returned to baseball broadcasting with a series of late-afternoon Saturday games. Jack Buck[20] and Carl Erskine[21][22] were the lead announcing crew for this series, which lasted one season.[23] ABC typically did three games a week. Two of the games were always from the Eastern or Central Time Zone. The late games (no doubleheaders) were usually San Francisco Giants[24] or Los Angeles Dodgers' home games. However, the Milwaukee Braves[25] used to start many of their Saturday home games late in the afternoon. So if the Giants and Dodgers were both the road at the same time, ABC still would be able to show a late game.

In 1965, ABC provided the first-ever nationwide baseball coverage with weekly Saturday broadcasts[26] on a regional basis. ABC paid $5.7 million for the rights to the 28 Saturday/holiday Games of the Week. ABC's deal[27][28] covered all of the teams except the New York Yankees and Philadelphia Phillies[29] (who had their own television deals) and called for two regionalized games on Saturdays, Independence Day, and Labor Day.[30] Each Saturday, ABC broadcast two 2 p.m. games and one 5 p.m. game for the Pacific Time Zone. ABC blacked out the games in the home cities of the clubs playing those games.[31] Major League Baseball however, had a TV deal with NBC for the All-Star Game and World Series. At the end of the season, ABC declined to exercise its $6.5 million option for 1966, citing poor ratings,[32][33] especially in New York.

According to ABC announcer Merle Harmon's profile in Curt Smith's book Voices of Summer, in 1965, CBS' Yankee Game of the Week beat ABC in the ratings in at least Dallas and Des Moines. To make matters worse, local television split the big-city audience. Therefore, ABC could show the Cubs vs. the Cardinals in the New York market, yet the Mets would still kill them in terms of viewership. Harmon, Chris Schenkel, Keith Jackson,[34] and (on occasion) Ken Coleman[35] served as ABC's principal play-by-play voices for this series. Also on the network's announcing team were pregame host Howard Cosell and color commentators Leo Durocher, Tommy Henrich, Warren Spahn (who worked with Chris Schenkel on a July 17 Baltimore-Detroit contest), and Hall of Fame Brooklyn Dodger great Jackie Robinson (who, on April 17, 1965, became the first black network broadcaster for Major League Baseball[36]). According to ABC Sports producer Chuck Howard, "(Robinson) had a high, stabbing voice, great presence, and sharp mind. All he lacked was time."

Early forays with college basketball edit

ABC first broadcast college basketball games in 1962, when the network aired the NCAA Championship Game on a day-behind delayed basis, as part of its Wide World of Sports anthology series. On December 15, 1973, ABC aired what is considered to be the first[37] telecast of a regular season college basketball game by a major broadcast network (between UCLA and North Carolina State in St. Louis). ABC (which had recently lost the NBA rights to CBS) televised this game using its former NBA announcing crew of Keith Jackson and Bill Russell.

In the 1977–78 season, C.D. Chesley (who controlled the rights to the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) at the time) wanted NBC to televise select ACC games as part of its national package as it had done the previous few years. However, NBC wanted to feature intersectional games. This action greatly upset Chesley, who wound up selling the rights to the ACC Tournament final to ABC. ABC would televise the 1978 ACC Tournament final as part of Wide World of Sports. The game, called by Jim Lampley and Bill Russell, marked the first time Duke University's Blue Devils basketball team played on national television.

The debut of the Pro Bowlers Tour edit

Prior to the debut of the PBA on ABC television in 1962, most tournaments were organized where, once the cut was established after qualifying rounds, a set number of match-play games were bowled, and bonus pins were given to the winner of each match. The champion was then decided based on the final overall total pinfall.

From 1962 to 1965, ABC started televising the PBA Tour, starting with a limited number of tournaments on ABC's Wide World of Sports, and later having its own timeslot. Therefore, a round-robin tournament format was implemented to determine the champion. The televised finals would be cut to the top four bowlers after match-play, and then three round-robin matches between the fourth, third and second-seeded bowlers would determine the final two bowlers. If any bowler were to win both of his matches in the round-robin, he would go on to face the tournament leader. If the three bowlers each split their matches to go 1 and 1 in the round-robin, total pinfall would decide which man would advance to the final match to face the tournament leader. The winner of the final match would win the tournament.

The first-ever telecast was actually taped and aired at a later date. The original commentators were Chris Schenkel and bowling star Billy Welu. On May 16, 1974, Welu died suddenly of a heart attack.

The search for his replacement included bowling legends Dick Weber and Dave Davis, but it was the young Nelson Burton Jr. who was ultimately selected for the analyst job in 1975. He remained Schenkel's broadcasting partner until the end of the series.

ABC's original coverage of the NBA edit

Meanwhile, ABC first signed a deal with the National Basketball Association to become the league's primary television[38] partner in 1964;[39] the network's first game telecast aired on January 3, 1965[40] (a game between the Boston Celtics and Cincinnati Royals).[41] ABC's initial alliance with the NBA first came about due to ABC Sports head Roone Arledge's search for live programming that could diminish the ratings of CBS Sports Spectacular, and ABC's own analogy program, Wide World of Sports a boost with sponsors. ABC initially paid the NBA only $650,000 for the rights annually.

For much of the 1960s, ABC only televised Sunday afternoon games, including during the NBA Playoffs. This meant that ABC did not have to televise a potential NBA Finals deciding game if it were played on a weeknight. In 1969, ABC did televise Game 7 of the Los Angeles LakersBoston Celtics series in prime time on a weeknight. The following season, ABC aired the 1970 NBA Finals in its entirety, making it the first Finals series to have all games televised nationally.

By 1969, ABC's NBA contract worth only $3 million. To put things into proper perspective, in 1969, Major League Baseball's television contract with NBC was worth $16.5 million while the National Football League cost CBS about $22 million. What that meant is that ABC had made a bargain in purchasing the television rights to the NBA, considering the league's steady ratings. To give you a better idea, ABC's ratings for the NBA rose from a 6.0 in 1965 to an 8.2 in 1968.

ABC lost the broadcast rights to the NBA to CBS[42] after the 1972–73 season,[43][44][45] with the network's initial tenure with the league ending with its last NBA Finals game on May 10, 1973. ABC filled the void left by losing the NBA by counterprogramming Wide World of Sports on Sundays against CBS' NBA coverage.

The premiere of The American Sportsman edit

The show has its roots in a 20-minute segment depicting Curt Gowdy and Joe Brooks fly fishing in the Andes Mountains in Argentina in 1964. The segment appeared on Wide World of Sports and immediately was spun off into its own series airing at 3 PM EST on Sundays January through March on ABC.[46] The show's first episode was on January 31, 1965, and ran through 1986.[47] ABC would present filmed highlights involving the program's hosts and celebrities participating in hunting and/or fishing trips along with outdoor recreational activities such as whitewater kayaking, hang gliding and free climbing.

Winning the NCAA football contract edit

ABC won the NCAA contract from the 1966 season onwards. This was essentially the television plan that stayed in place until the University of Oklahoma and the University of Georgia filed a lawsuit against the NCAA in 1981, alleging antitrust violations. The lawsuit, NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, made it all the way to the Supreme Court, who in 1984 ruled in favor of Oklahoma and Georgia and declared the NCAA's forced collective contract a violation of antitrust law. ABC then negotiated with the College Football Association for its game package.

ABC announced the entire 1966 TV schedule in June with 8 national games and 24 regional games for a total of 15 broadcast windows. In 1966, the NCAA allowed each school to appear on ABC for at most one national telecast and one regional telecast. On November 19, 1966, ABC showed a regional doubleheader. The main early game was Notre Dame-Michigan State (ranked 1 and 2). This was the famous 10–10 tie. ABC was unable to televise this game live nationally due to the above restriction. However, ABC got approval from the NCAA to show this game on tape delay in the late timeslot in the regions of the country which got Kentucky-Tennessee in the early timeslot.

On September 23, 1967, Chris Schenkel and Bud Wilkinson were scheduled to announce the Penn State-Navy game. However, there was an NABET strike of engineers and technicians[48] which AFTRA was supporting and this duo (members of AFTRA) refused to work the game. So ABC Sports producer Chuck Howard did play-by-play on this game. Howard lined up Jim Tarman (Penn State's SID) and Bud Thalman (Navy's SID) to provide color commentary.

The beginning of ABC's two decade relationship with the Olympics edit

While CBS aired both the 1960 Winter and Summer Games (marking the first time that the Olympics were broadcast on American television), by 1964, a different network showed the Winter Games: ABC. Roone Arledge won broadcast rights for his network and began a relationship with the "five rings" that would last over two decades. The program used many of the same production staff from ABC's Wide World of Sports, as well as the same host, Jim McKay, who moved to ABC from CBS in 1961. In 1968, ABC showed both the Winter Games and the Summer Games.

The 1964 Winter Games were in Innsbruck, Austria, and coverage was taped and flown by plane back to the United States. All of it was in black-and-white, but with most Winter Olympic events in the morning (local time), most TV coverage aired the day the events were held. A portion of the Closing Ceremony was televised live via satellite (Telstar, which had to be tracked and allowed about a 15-minute window between the U.S. and Europe when it was zooming over the Atlantic). Everything else was videotaped and flown to the U.S. via a Munich-London-New York route. There was little margin for error. If a flight was canceled, ABC had a tape of a U.S.-Romania hockey game, played the day before the Opening Ceremony and shipped over, ready to play. All went well and it never made the air.

ABC aired 16.5 hours of coverage of the Innsbruck Games, the majority of the coverage occurring outside of primetime.[49]

By 1968, ABC was broadcasting the Olympics in full color, and satellites made possible live coverage of several events at the Winter Games in Grenoble, France and of nearly all of the network's coverage of the Summer Games in Mexico City. In reality, only the Opening Ceremony and the ladies figure skating final were televised live via satellite; most other coverage was sent via satellite to ABC and run off tape from New York. The 1968 Winter Olympics were the first to be televised in color (except for a couple of events the French fed in black-and-white).

Highlighting the 1968 Winter Games was a dramatic sweep in men's alpine skiing by Frenchman Jean-Claude Killy, while the major highlight of the Summer Games was a world-record long jump by Bob Beamon of the United States, which happened to air live in the US.

1970s edit

The birth of Monday Night Football edit

During the early 1960s, NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle envisioned the possibility of playing at least one game weekly during prime time that could be viewed by a greater television audience (while the NFL had scheduled Saturday night games on the DuMont Television Network in 1953 and 1954, poor ratings and the dissolution of DuMont led to those games being eliminated by the time CBS took over the rights in 1956). An early bid by the league in 1964 to play on Friday nights was soundly defeated, with critics charging that such telecasts would damage the attendance at high school football games. Undaunted, Rozelle decided to experiment with the concept of playing on Monday night, scheduling the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions for a game on September 28, 1964. While the game was not televised, it drew a sellout crowd of 59,203 spectators to Tiger Stadium, the largest crowd ever to watch a professional football game in Detroit up to that point.

Two years later, Rozelle would build on this success as the NFL began a four-year experiment of playing on Monday night, scheduling one game in prime time on CBS during the 1966 and 1967 seasons, and two contests during each of the next two years. NBC followed suit in 1968 and 1969 with games involving American Football League teams.

During subsequent negotiations on a new television contract that would begin in 1970 (coinciding with a merger between the NFL and AFL), Rozelle concentrated on signing a weekly Monday night deal with one of the three major networks. After sensing reluctance from both NBC and CBS in disturbing their regular programming schedules, Rozelle spoke with ABC.

Despite the network's status at the time as the lowest-rated of the three major broadcast networks, ABC was also reluctant to enter the risky venture. It was only after Rozelle used the threat of signing a deal with the independent Hughes Sports Network, an entity bankrolled by reclusive businessman Howard Hughes, did ABC sign a contract for the scheduled games. Speculation was that had Rozelle signed with Hughes, many ABC affiliates would have pre-empted the network's Monday lineup in favor of the games, severely damaging potential ratings.

After the final contract for Monday Night Football was signed, ABC Sports producer Roone Arledge immediately saw possibilities for the new program. Setting out to create an entertainment "spectacle" as much as a simple sports broadcast, Arledge hired Chet Forte, who would serve as director of the program for over 22 years. Arledge also ordered twice the usual number of cameras to cover the game, expanded the regular two-man broadcasting booth to three, and used extensive graphic design within the show as well as instant replay.

Looking for a lightning rod to garner attention, Arledge hired controversial New York City sportscaster Howard Cosell as a commentator, along with veteran football play-by-play announcer Keith Jackson. Arledge had tried to draw in Curt Gowdy and then Vin Scully to ABC for the MNF play-by-play role, but settled for Jackson after they proved unable to break their respective existing contracts with NBC Sports and the Los Angeles Dodgers. Jack Buck was also considered, but when Arledge assistant Chuck Howard telephoned Buck with the job offer, Buck refused to respond due to anger at his treatment by ABC during an earlier stint with the network.[50] Arledge's original choice for the third member of the trio, Frank Gifford, was unavailable since he was still under contract to CBS Sports. However, Gifford suggested former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Don Meredith, setting the stage for years of fireworks between the often-pompous Cosell and the laid-back Meredith.

Monday Night Football first aired on ABC on September 21, 1970, with a game between the New York Jets and the Browns in Cleveland. Advertisers were charged US$65,000 per minute by ABC during the clash, a cost that proved to be a bargain when the contest collected 33% of the viewing audience. The Browns defeated the Jets, 31–21 in a game which featured a 94-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by the Browns' Homer Jones to open the second half, and was punctuated when Billy Andrews intercepted Joe Namath late in the fourth quarter and returned it 25 yards for the clinching touchdown. However, Cleveland viewers saw different programming on WEWS-TV, because of the NFL's blackout rules of the time (this would apply for all games through the end of the 1972 season; beginning in 1973, home games could be televised if tickets were sold out 72 hours before kickoff).

In 1971, Frank Gifford became available after his contract with CBS Sports concluded; Arledge brought him to ABC to serve as play-by-play announcer, replacing Jackson (who returned to broadcasting college football for the network, which he continued to do for the next 35 seasons). The former New York Giant had been an NFL analyst for CBS during the 1960s but had never called play-by-play prior to joining Monday Night Football. In that capacity for Monday Night Football from 1971 to 1985, Gifford was often criticized for his see-no-evil approach in regard to discussing the NFL, earning him the dubious nickname "Faultless Frank." Regardless, Gifford would have the longest tenure of any broadcaster on the show, lasting until 1998.

Coverage of the 1972 Munich massacre edit

In 1972, NBC showed the Winter Games from Sapporo, Japan, then ABC returned to carry the Summer Games in Munich, Germany. It was during the Summer Games that Palestinian terrorists attacked the Olympic Village and killed 11 Israeli athletes. Although Chris Schenkel was the actual host of the Games that year, Arledge assigned the story to McKay largely because he was a local news anchor in Baltimore, Maryland prior to joining CBS (and later ABC). McKay was joined on set by ABC news correspondent (and former and future evening news anchor) Peter Jennings, and coverage continued for many hours, until the outcome was known. Howard Cosell went with the film crew to get interviews in the village. McKay later won an Emmy Award for his coverage.[51]

We just got the final word ... you know, when I was a kid, my father used to say "Our greatest hopes and our worst fears are seldom realized." Our worst fears have been realized tonight. They've now said that there were eleven hostages. Two were killed in their rooms yesterday morning, nine were killed at the airport tonight. They're all gone.

— Jim McKay[52]

By the time the 1976 edition of the Winter Games came around, McKay was now installed at the host, a role he would play throughout the 1970s and '80s.

ABC's coverage of NASCAR and the Daytona 500 edit

From 1962 to 1978, the Daytona 500 was shown on ABC's Wide World of Sports.[citation needed] During the 1960s and early 1970s, the race was filmed and an edited highlight package aired the following weekend. In 1974, ABC began the first semi-live coverage (joined-in-progress) of the Daytona 500. Coverage was normally timed to begin when the race was halfway over. Brief taped highlights of the start and early segments were shown, then ABC joined the race live already in progress, picking up approximately the last 90 minutes of the race. This format continued through 1978.

The 1976 race was held on the same day of the final day of competition in the Winter Olympics (also broadcast on ABC). ABC carried 30 minutes of live coverage of the start of the race, then switched to the Olympics for 90 minutes to carry taped coverage of the final two competitive events (a cross-country ski race and the final runs in the bobsled), held earlier that day. Then it was back to Daytona for about an hour-and-a-half for the finish.

ESPN began showing NASCAR races in 1981, with the first event being at North Carolina Speedway. The last of its 265 Cup telecasts (that number includes some on ABC Sports) was the 2000 Atlanta fall race (now the Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500).

ABC launches Monday Night Baseball edit

In 1976, ABC picked up the television rights[53] for Monday Night Baseball[54] games from NBC. For most of its time on ABC, the Monday night games were held on "dead travel days" when few games were scheduled. The team owners liked that arrangement as the national telecasts didn't compete against their stadium box offices. ABC on the other hand, found the arrangement far more complicated. ABC often had only one or two games to pick from for each telecast from a schedule designed by Major League Baseball. While trying to give all of the teams national exposure, ABC ended up with far too many games between sub .500 clubs from small markets. Reviewing the network's first two weeks of coverage for Sports Illustrated, William Leggett opined: "It may be unfair to say that Monday Night Baseball, as it has been presented by ABC so far this season, is the worst television treatment ever given a major sport, because by all odds somebody at sometime must have done something worse. But it is difficult to remember when or where that might have happened."[55]

Just like with Monday Night Football, ABC brought in the concept of the three-man-booth (originally with Bob Prince, Bob Uecker, and Warner Wolf[56] as the primary crew) to their baseball telecasts. Said ABC Sports head Roone Arledge "It'll take something different for it to work - i.e. curb viewership yawns and lulls with Uecker as the real difference", so Arledge reportedly hoped. Prince disclosed to his broadcasting partner Jim Woods about his early worries about calling a network series for the first time. Prince for one, didn't have as much creative control over the broadcasts on ABC as he did calling Pittsburgh Pirates games on KDKA radio. ABC's coverage[57] for such things as its camera work[58][59] (they often followed fly balls like they did golf shots, keeping the focus on the ball) and its choice of announcers: Bob Prince was accused of a National League bias,[60] while Bob Uecker was considered to be just a Don Meredith[61][62][63] clone.

Bob Prince was gone by the fall of 1976, with Keith Jackson, Howard Cosell,[64][65][66] and guest analyst Reggie Jackson calling that year's American League Championship Series. (Warner Wolf, Al Michaels and guest analyst Tom Seaver worked the NLCS.) On the subject of his dismissal from ABC, Bob Prince said "I hated Houston, and ABC never let me be Bob Prince."[67][68] president of abc sports,

In 1979, the start of ABC's Monday Night Baseball coverage was moved back to June, due to poor ratings during the May sweeps period. In place of April and May prime time games, ABC began airing Sunday Afternoon Baseball games in September.[69] The network also aired one Friday night game (Yankees at Angels) on July 13 of that year.

Coverage of the North American Soccer League and the FIFA World Cup edit

In 1979, ABC Sports began covering the NASL in a deal that called for 9 telecasts of league games, including the playoffs and Soccer Bowl. After enduring briefly during the late 1970s, attendances dropped after 1980. The sport's popularity fell and the media lost interest. The deal with ABC to broadcast NASL matches was also lost in 1980, and the 1981 Soccer Bowl[70][71] was only shown on tape delay. All of the franchises quickly became unprofitable, and a salary cap enforced before the 1984 season only delayed the inevitable.

In 1982, PBS and ESPN provided the first thorough American television coverage of the FIFA World Cup. ABC aired the first live telecast of the final. ABC aired commercials during the live action. Meanwhile, PBS aired same day highlights of the top game of the day.

1980s edit

The Miracle on Ice edit

The 1980 Winter Olympics was the setting for the "Miracle on Ice", a medal-round men's ice hockey game in Lake Placid, New York, on February 22. The United States team, made up of amateur and collegiate players and led by coach Herb Brooks, defeated the Soviet team, which consisted of veteran professional players with significant experience in international play. The rest of the United States (except those who watched the game live on Canadian television) had to wait to see the game, as ABC decided to broadcast the late-afternoon game on tape delay in prime time.[72] Sportscaster Al Michaels, who was calling the game on ABC along with former Montreal Canadiens goalie Ken Dryden, picked up on the countdown in his broadcast, and delivered his famous call:[73]

Eleven seconds, you've got ten seconds, the countdown going on right now! Morrow, up to Silk. Five seconds left in the game. Do you believe in miracles? YES!

During the broadcast wrap-up after the game, ABC Olympic sports anchor Jim McKay compared the American victory over the Soviet professionals to a group of Canadian college football players defeating the Pittsburgh Steelers (the recent Super Bowl champions and at the height of their dynasty).

Breaking the news of John Lennon's murder edit

On the evening of December 8, 1980, English musician John Lennon, formerly of the Beatles, was fatally shot in the archway of the Dakota, his residence in New York City. When Roone Arledge, who was presiding over ABC's telecast of Monday Night Football in his capacity as its executive producer, received word of Lennon's death, a game between the New England Patriots and the Miami Dolphins was tied with less than a minute left in the fourth quarter and the Patriots were driving toward the potential winning score. As the Patriots tried to put themselves in position for a field goal, Arledge informed Frank Gifford and Howard Cosell of the shooting and suggested that they be the ones to report on the murder. Cosell, who had interviewed Lennon during a Monday Night Football broadcast in 1974, was chosen to do so but was apprehensive of it at first, as he felt the game should take precedence and that it was not their place to break such a big story. Gifford convinced Cosell otherwise, saying that he should not "hang on to (the news)" as the significance of the event was much greater than the finish of the game.

The following exchange began with thirty seconds left in the fourth quarter, shortly after Gifford and Cosell had been informed of what had transpired:[74]

Cosell: ... but [the game]'s suddenly been placed in total perspective for us. I'll finish this; they're in the hurry-up offense.

Gifford: Third down, four. [Chuck] Foreman ... it'll be fourth down. [Matt] Cavanaugh will let it run down for one final attempt; he'll let the seconds tick off to give Miami no opportunity whatsoever. (Whistle blows.) Timeout is called with three seconds remaining; John Smith is on the line. And I don't care what's on the line, Howard, you have got to say what we know in the booth.

Cosell: Yes, we have to say it. Remember this is just a football game, no matter who wins or loses. An unspeakable tragedy confirmed to us by ABC News in New York City: John Lennon, outside of his apartment building on the West Side of New York City—the most famous, perhaps, of all of the Beatles—shot twice in the back, rushed to Roosevelt Hospital, dead on arrival. Hard to go back to the game after that newsflash, which, in duty bound, we have to take. Frank?

Gifford: (after a pause) Indeed, it is.[75]

Sports journalism and ABC SportsBeat magazine show edit

In the fall of 1981, Cosell debuted a serious investigative 30-minute magazine show, ABC SportsBeat on ABC's weekend schedule. He made news and covered topics that were not part of general sports coverage - including the first story about drugs in professional sports (the story of former Minnesota Viking Carl Eller's cocaine use), an in-depth look at how NFL owners negotiated tax breaks and incentives for building new stadiums, and together with Arthur Ashe, an investigation into apartheid and sports. Though ratings were low, Cosell and his staff earned three Emmy Awards for excellence in reporting, and broke new ground in sports journalism.[76] At the time, ABC SportsBeat was the first and only regularly scheduled network program devoted solely to sports journalism.

To produce this pioneering program, Cosell recruited a number of employees from outside the ranks of those that produced games, who he felt might be too invested in the success of the athletes and leagues to look at the hard news. He brought in Michael Marley, then a sportswriter for The Washington Post, Lawrie Mifflin, a writer for The New York Times, and a 20-year old researcher who quickly rose to an associate producer, Alexis Denny. As a sophomore at Yale University, Ms. Denny had been a student in a seminar that Cosell taught on the "Business of Big-Time Sports in America", and was selected by the Director of Monday Night Football to join their production crew. She took her junior year off to join Cosell's staff at ABC Headquarters in New York City, and produced many segments, including in 1983 a half-hour special report previewing the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.[77] Despite the games being one of ABC's biggest investments, with a record-breaking 225 million dollar rights fee at the time,[78] the 30-minute documentary-style program produced by Denny showed many sides of the questions about the viability of the Games themselves - from concerns about traffic, pollution and terrorism, to a look at how the sponsorship deals were structured.

ABC's coverage of golf edit

ABC broadcast golf events for the first time in 1962 when it began televising the Open Championship as part of its anthology series Wide World of Sports. The network later gained the broadcast rights to the PGA Championship in 1965, and the U.S. Open in 1966. Chris Schenkel and Byron Nelson were the initial hosts of the tournament coverage. In 1975, Jim McKay and Dave Marr became the lead broadcast team, while Bob Rosburg joined the network as the first ever on-course reporter, and Peter Alliss joined as a co-anchor.

Beginning in 1982, ABC adopted its most well-known format of the Wide World of Sports era. The broadcast operated using anchor teams, in which an anchor and an analyst would call all of the action from the tower at the 18th hole, and the teams would be rotated on coverage after about a half-hour. Meanwhile, the three on-course reporters, which included Judy Rankin and Ed Sneed in addition to Rosburg, would be utilized when prompted by the anchor team. McKay and Marr would be the lead team, with Jack Whitaker and Alliss[79] as the second team. Occasionally, Rosburg or Whitaker would host if McKay was unavailable, while Roger Twibell would take over the secondary team. After his 1986 Masters win, Jack Nicklaus would appear on ABC after the end of his round and served as an analyst for the rest of the telecast.

ABC's stint with the USFL edit

On Sunday, March 6, 1983, ABC televised three games. The Los Angeles Express and New Jersey Generals[80] played in the primary regional televised USFL game,[81] with the Express winning, 20–15. ABC also televised the Chicago Blitz at Washington Federals and the Philadelphia Stars at Denver Gold.

According to an ABC spokesman, the network averaged a 6.0 rating[82] for their first USFL season. This was slightly better than the network's coverage of the first American Football League football season back in 1960. In its second year, AFL games on ABC averaged a 6.1 rating, and in 1962, the third year, a 6.5. The coverage was nonetheless quite low for a Big Three television network, with a June 17 prime-time regular season game between Chicago and Birmingham finishing as the lowest-rated prime time broadcast of the week, with a 4.8 rating.[83]

ABC offered the USFL a 4-year, $175 million TV deal to play in the spring in 1986. By this point, the league had driven out most of the owners who would have been willing to accept those terms. The owners in the league walked away from what averaged out to $67 million per year starting in 1986 to pursue their big picture—merger with the NFL.

The deregulation of college football on television begins edit

In June 1984, a US Supreme Court ruling ended the control that the NCAA had exercised on televised college football and allowed individual colleges to make their own TV deals. CBS obtained rights to Big 10 and Pac 10 home games while ABC obtained rights to the College Football Association (essentially home games for all schools other than the B10 and P10). CBS also separately obtained rights to Boston College-Miami and Army-Navy. CBS and ABC typically carried only 1-2 games per time slot rather than the frequent large slates of regional games in prior years. Meanwhile, ESPN carried live CFA games each Saturday typically at noon and 7:30 p.m. WTBS carried SEC games. USA Network also carried games (primarily the Big 8).

The end of Howard Cosell's tenure on Monday Night Football and later ABC edit

Cosell continued to draw criticism during Monday Night Football with one of his offhand comments during the September 5, 1983 game, igniting a controversy and laying the groundwork for his departure at the end of that season. In a game between the Washington Redskins and Dallas Cowboys, Cosell referred to Alvin Garrett, an African American wide receiver for the Redskins, as a "little monkey." Cosell noted that Garrett's small stature, and not his race, was the basis for his comment, citing the fact that he had used the term to describe his grandchildren. Later, a special on Howard Cosell showed him calling Mike Adamle (a white player) a "little monkey." Stung by the unrelenting barrage of remarks, Cosell claimed upon his departure from Monday Night Football that the NFL had become "a stagnant bore." In Cosell's book, I Never Played the Game, he devoted an entire chapter ("Monkey Business") to the Garrett episode. In the book, Cosell also said that ABC should have had the right to choose its own Monday Night schedule. In his mind, Monday Night Football is what elevated the NFL in popularity over Major League Baseball. He felt that this should have been ABC's reward for raising the league's profile.

After Cosell's memoir I Never Played the Game, which, among other things, chronicled his disenchantment with fellow ABC commentators, was published in September 1985, Cosell was taken off scheduled announcing duties for that year's World Series and was dismissed by ABC television shortly thereafter. Cosell's book was seen by many as a bitter "hate rant" against those who had offended him. TV Guide published excerpts of his memoirs and reported that they had never had as many viewers' responses and they were overwhelmingly negative towards Cosell. The magazine reported some of the "printable" ones saying things such as "Will Rogers never met Howard Cosell".

In I Never Played the Game, Cosell popularized the word "jockocracy" (originally coined by author Robert Lipsyte), describing how athletes were given announcing jobs that they had not earned. Coincidentally, he was replaced for the 1985 World Series broadcast by Tim McCarver, himself a former baseball player, to join Al Michaels and Jim Palmer. (The title of the book is a double entendre, meaning that Cosell never actually played the game of football or any other professional sport he broadcast as well as implying that he never played the "game" of corporate politics.) Cosell is notably absent from the Pro Football Hall of Fame.[84][85]

ABC airs its very first Super Bowl edit

As a result of the 1982 television contract signed by the NFL with the three networks, this game was the first Super Bowl to be televised in the United States by ABC, as they earned their first turn at the Super Bowl, with a new alternation process started for the 1983 game. Previously, the Super Bowl telecast alternated between CBS and NBC, while the networks simulcast the first AFL-NFL World Championship Game.

Frank Gifford was the play-by-play announcer, while then-ABC Sports analyst Don Meredith and then-Washington Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann served as color commentators. Al Michaels and Jim Lampley hosted the pregame (2 hours), halftime, and postgame (Lampley presided over the Vince Lombardi Trophy presentation ceremony) coverage for ABC. Michaels and Lampley were joined by analysts O. J. Simpson (who would normally have been the second color commentator; when interviewed as to why Theismann would join Gifford and Meredith in the booth instead of Simpson; director Chet Forte was quoted in the January 14, 1985 edition of Broadcasting Magazine as saying that Theismann could contribute more due to having played both teams in the regular-season as well as having played in the two previous Super Bowls.[86]) and Tom Landry (in a separate booth during the game). Also helping out with ABC's coverage were Jack Whitaker, Dick Schaap, Donna de Varona, Ray Gandolf, and ABC News reporters Stone Phillips, Jeff Greenfield, Judd Rose, and Bill Redeker.

This would be the only ABC Super Bowl for Gifford as play-by-play announcer, the final game for Don Meredith and the second (and last) time a commentator for the Super Bowl (Theismann) was an active player (Jack Kemp in Super Bowl II was the only other active player to provide commentary). Michaels would call ABC's next six Super Bowls, until the network lost their NFL rights in 2006.

ABC airs the Indianapolis 500 live for the first time edit

From 1965 to 1970, ABC televised a combination of filmed and/or taped recorded highlights of the race the following weekend on Wide World of Sports. The 1965 and 1966 presentations were in black-and-white, while all subsequent presentations have been in color.

From 1971 to 1985, the Indianapolis 500 was shown on a same-day tape delay basis. Races were edited down to a between two and three hour broadcast, and shown in prime time. It was also blacked out in the Indianapolis market until a later date. The broadcasts would typically open with the rendition of "Back Home Again in Indiana", and the starting command, but no other pre-race ceremonies. In addition, the broadcast was supplemented with some pre-recorded, in-depth featurettes, aired during down times. Later telecasts included live introductions at the top and bottom of the broadcast, with the closing segment sometimes an interview with the race winner, which by that time, had been revealed to the viewers. During this period, the announcers' commentary at both the start and finish of the race were recorded as those events transpired. However, the commentary of the middle parts of the race was semi-scripted, and recorded in post-production, and edited into the broadcast as it was being aired.

Starting in 1986, the race has been shown live in "flag-to-flag" coverage. In the Indianapolis market, as well as other parts of Indiana, the live telecast is blacked out and shown tape delayed to encourage live attendance.

On March 21, 2018, NBC Sports announced that it had acquired the television rights to the IndyCar Series (after previously serving as cable rightsholder through NBCSN or CNBC for races not aired by ABC), replacing the package of races on ABC with a package of eight races on NBC, including the Indianapolis 500 (ending ABC's 54-year tenure as broadcaster of the event).[87][88]

ABC's final IndyCar telecast was the second race of the Detroit Grand Prix on June 3, 2018.

ABC finally centralizes the Triple Crown of thoroughbred racing edit

In 1977, ABC was awarded the contract to televise the Preakness. Triple Crown Productions was formed in 1985 after CBS terminated its contract with NYRA. ABC Sports won the rights to broadcast all three races, as well as many prep races. Ratings went up after the package was centralized. Other than the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes and Belmont Stakes were considered the two "other" races. ABC Sports, which had broadcast the Derby since 1975, wanted to televise all the races as a three race package. CBS Sports, which showed the other two races, had much lower ratings for them, with the possible exceptions of years in which the Crown was at stake like 1973, 1977, and 1978.

Combined broadcast arrangements with ABC continued until 2001, when NBC Sports took over.

Al Michaels joins Monday Night Football edit

Michaels served as the play-by-play announcer, teaming with Frank Gifford for a two-man booth in 1986. During that season, the Miami Dolphins again made records with the biggest blowout in Monday Night Football history in a 45–3 rout of the then 10-1 New York Jets (the record was later tied and subsequently broken in 2005; see below). Also in 1986, when Al Michaels became unavailable because he was calling Major League Baseball's League Championship Series, Frank Gifford moved up into the play-by-play spot while Lynn Swann or O. J. Simpson filled-in as the color commentator. Gifford would once again call the play-by-play when Michaels was busy calling the World Series in 1987 and 1989 and the National League Championship Series in 1988.

In 1987, Gifford and Michaels were joined by Dan Dierdorf, returning the series to its original concept of three announcers in the booth. The trio would last for 11 seasons through the conclusion of the 1997 season. In 1989, television composer Edd Kalehoff created a new arrangement of Johnny Pearson's "Heavy Action", by that time fully synonymous with the series. This more or less replaced an original composition by Charles Fox. Also debuting in 1989 was Hank Williams, Jr. performing "All My Rowdy Friends Are Here on Monday Night", sung to the music of his 1984 hit "All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight."

The beginning of ABC's regular college basketball package edit

When ABC's coverage[89][90] began in 1987,[91][92][93] the network primarily covered[94][95] the Big Ten, Big 8[96] and Pac-10 Conferences. By 1991 (around the time NBC was phasing out their own college basketball coverage), ABC ramped up its basketball coverage in an effort to fill the void.[97][98] As a result, the network also started to cover games focusing on teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) and Southeastern Conference (SEC). Otherwise, it was essentially, a considerable hodge-podge with an ACC game one week, or a Pac-10 or Big 10 game the next. The games that were broadcast were a hodge-podge of conference matchups even after the ESPN on ABC brand change, with SEC and Big East match-ups occasionally being shown alongside frequent ACC, Big 12 and Pac-10 match-ups.

ABC's early regular season broadcasts were, for the most part, technically time buys from organizations such as Raycom[99][100][101][102] (particularly, around 1990–91) or sister network ESPN. This in return, was a way to avoid union contracts which require that 100% of network shows had to use crew staff who were network union members.[103] During the early 1990s, Raycom paid ABC US$1.8 million for six weeks of network airtime of 26 regional games. The format allowed Raycom to control the games and sell the advertising.[104]

In the 1987–88 season, ABC did not air any college basketball games during the last three weekends of February due to the network's coverage of the Winter Olympics. As previously mentioned, coverage by ABC steadily increased during the early 1990s;[105] by the 1991–92 season, ABC was carrying regional games in many timeslots on Saturday and Sunday afternoons. By 1997, ABC's presenting sponsor was Paine Webber.[106]

ABC broadcasts its final Olympic Games edit

The Calgary Winter Olympics were the first winter games to earn a significant television revenue base; where the 1980 Lake Placid Games generated only US$20.7 million worldwide, OCO'88 generated $324.9 million in broadcast rights.[107] The overwhelming majority of television revenues came from the American Broadcasting Company (ABC), which agreed in 1984 to pay $309 million for American television rights, over three times the $91.5 million it paid for the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo.[108] The deal, at the time the highest amount ever paid for a sporting event, allowed organizers to announce the Games would be debt-free.[109] The CTV Television Network paid C$4.5 million for Canadian rights and to act as the host broadcaster.[110] The games were also televised on CBC. While western European nations paid US$5.7 million combined.[111]

OCO'88 made several alterations to the Olympic program as part of efforts to ensure value for its broadcast partners. Premier events, including ice hockey and figure skating, were scheduled for prime time and the Games were lengthened to 16 days from the previous 12 to ensure three weekends of coverage.[112] However, a significant downturn in advertising revenue for sporting events resulted in ABC forecasting significant financial losses on the Games. Calgary organizers appreciated their fortunate timing in signing the deal. King described the timing of the contract with ABC as "the passing of the sun and the moon at the right time for Calgary."[111] ABC lost an estimated $60 million, and broadcast rights to the 1992 Winter Olympics were later sold to the CBS network for $243 million, a 20% reduction compared to Calgary.[113]

The network, at the insistence of new owner Capital Cities Communications (much to the chagrin of Roone Arledge's successor at ABC Sports, Dennis Swanson), opted not to bid for the rights to show any future Games. Subsequently, The Walt Disney Company acquired Capital Cities-ABC in 1995 and began the process of putting more effort into the branding of ABC's sports channel ESPN than of ABC Sports itself.

ABC loses the baseball package to CBS and the 1989 World Series earthquake edit

In 1989 (the final year of ABC's contract with Major League Baseball), ABC moved the baseball telecasts to Thursday nights[114][115][116][117][118][119][120] in hopes of getting leg up against NBC's Cosby Show. After braving the traumatic Loma Prieta earthquake[121] and an all-time low 16.4 rating for the 1989 World Series,[122] Al Michaels took ABC's loss of baseball to CBS[123][124] as "tough to accept." Michaels added that "baseball was such an early stepchild at ABC and had come such a long way."[125] Gary Thorne,[126] who served as ABC's backup play-by-play announcer in 1989 and was an on-field reporter for the World Series[127] that year (and covering the trophy presentation in the process), simply laughed while saying "Great reviews, just as ABC baseball ends."[128]

Game 3 of the 1989 World Series[129][130][131] (initially scheduled for October 17[132]) was delayed by ten days due to the Loma Prieta earthquake.[133] The earthquake struck at approximately 5:04 p.m. Pacific Time. At the moment the quake struck, ABC's color commentator Tim McCarver[134] was narrating taped highlights of the previous Series game. Viewers saw the video signal begin to break up, heard McCarver repeat a sentence as the shaking distracted him, and heard McCarver's colleague Al Michaels[135] exclaim, "I'll tell you what, we're having an earth—."[136] At that moment, the feed from Candlestick Park was lost.[137] The network put up a green ABC Sports graphic as the audio was switched to a telephone link. Michaels had to pickup a POTS phone in the press booth (phones work off a separate power supply) and call ABC headquarters in New York, at which point they put him back on the air. Michaels cracked, "Well folks, that's the greatest open in the history of television, bar none!" accompanied by the excited screams of fans who had no idea of the devastation elsewhere.[138]

After about a 15-minute delay (ABC aired a rerun of Roseanne[139][140] and subsequently, The Wonder Years[141] in the meantime), ABC was able to regain power via a backup generator.[142] ABC's play-by-play man, Al Michaels (who was familiar[129] with the San Francisco Bay Area[143] dating back to his days working for the San Francisco Giants from 1974-1976) then proceeded to relay reports to Ted Koppel[144][145][146][147] at ABC News' headquarters in Washington, D.C. Al Michaels was ultimately nominated for an Emmy for his on-site reporting at the World Series.

1990s edit

The Pan American Games from Havana, Cuba edit

ABC was the first American television network to broadcast the Pan American Games in 1963, when they devoted one episode of their Wide World of Sports[148] anthology program to the games.

In 1991, ABC[149][150] sought the rights[151] to the Pan Am Games in Havana.[152] The negotiations became bogged down in the U.S. embargo against Cuba,[153] which forbade direct payments to Cuba. After a protracted negotiation with the U.S. Justice Department,[154] ABC eventually inked a deal[155] to broadcast the games. (The fee was paid[156] indirectly to avoid the embargo. ABC partnered[157] with Ted Turner's TNT[158][159][160][161] cable channel for the Havana games. TNT aired the prime time coverage with Ernie Johnson Jr. as host, while Brent Musburger[162] (who had been fired by CBS in March 1990) anchored ABC's weekend afternoon coverage. This would be the last time the games were broadcast by a major broadcast network in the United States. All coverage since has aired on cable or Spanish-language networks.

ABC's alignment with the CFA and the Bowl Championship Series edit

In 1991, ABC acquired the rights to the CFA from CBS in addition to the B10/P10 and went back to televising several regional games in many timeslots. Meanwhile, Notre Dame broke apart from the CFA and signed a deal with NBC for its home games. 1992 was the first year that ABC made most of its regional games available via pay-per-view (similar to what became known as ESPN GamePlan). In 1996, CBS obtained rights to the SEC, Big East, and Army/Navy Game and also added a Conference USA game. ABC however, still had rights to the SEC title game.

In 1998, ABC was awarded the first exclusive Bowl Championship Series television contract beginning with the 1999 series. In 2005, the network lost rights to most of the BCS games, including the BCS National Championship Game, to Fox beginning with the 2006-07 series, in a deal worth close to $20 million per game.[163] Although due to a separate arrangement with the Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association, ABC retained the broadcast rights to events in the series that were held at the Rose Bowl stadium, such as the Rose Bowl Game and the 2010 BCS Championship. ABC sister network ESPN assumed the BCS rights, including the rights to the Rose Bowl, beginning in 2010.[164]

Keith Jackson, who was supposed to retire after the 1998 season, stayed with the network until 2005, in which he announced games televised primarily from the West Coast, where he was based; Jackson's last broadcast with the network was the 2006 Rose Bowl.

In 1999, as Jackson reduced his schedule, ABC began the year with the team of Jackson and Bob Griese intact – albeit not as the lead announcing team, as they almost exclusively handled action from Pac-10 Conference teams; Brent Musburger and Dan Fouts returned, as did the longtime tandem of Brad Nessler and Gary Danielson. These assignments were not permanent and many different combinations were used[165] ABC locked its broadcasting teams in mid-season. Jackson was teamed with Fouts, Musburger was paired with Danielson, and Nessler with Bob Griese.[166]

Counter programming the Winter Olympics with boxing edit

In 1992, ABC announced plans to counterprogram[167] the Winter Olympics on CBS with boxing, a sport at that point, seldom seen on network television. This particular boxing series was sponsored by Fruit of the Loom.[168][169] ABC proceeded to forgo the typical $300,000 rights fees of the prior year, and instead, set a $75,000 limit and scheduled three consecutive Saturdays of action.[170]

Baseball temporarily returns to ABC edit

After a four-year-long hiatus (when CBS exclusively carried the over-the-air Major League Baseball television rights), ABC returned to baseball in (again, alongside NBC) 1994.

Under a six-year plan, Major League Baseball was intended to receive 85% of the first $140 million in advertising revenue (or 87.5% of advertising revenues and corporate sponsorship from the games until sales top a specified level), 50% of the next $30 million, and 80% of any additional money. Prior to this, Major League Baseball was projected to take a projected 55% cut in rights fees and receive a typical rights fee from the networks.

After NBC was finished with their post-1994 All-Star Game six-week baseball coverage, ABC (with a reunited Al Michaels, Tim McCarver, and Jim Palmer as the primary crew) then picked up where NBC left off by televising six more regular season games. Joining the team of Michaels, McCarver, and Palmer was Lesley Visser, who served as the lead field reporter for the CBS' baseball coverage from 1990 to 1993. Visser was reuniting with McCarver, for whom she had worked with on CBS. The regular season games fell under the Baseball Night in America umbrella which premiered on July 16, 1994.

In even-numbered years, NBC had the rights to the All-Star Game and both League Championship Series while ABC had the World Series and newly created Division Series. In odd-numbered years, the postseason and All-Star Game television rights were supposed to alternate.

The long-term plans for The Baseball Network crumbled when the players went on strike on August 12, 1994 (thus forcing the cancellation of the World Series). In July 1995, ABC and NBC, who wound up having to share the duties of televising the 1995 World Series[171] as a way to recoup (with ABC broadcasting Games 1, 4, and 5 and NBC broadcasting Games 2, 3, and 6), announced that they were opting out of their agreement with Major League Baseball. Both networks figured that as the delayed 1995 baseball season opened without a labor agreement, there was no guarantee against another strike. Both networks soon publicly vowed to cut all ties with Major League Baseball for the remainder of the 20th century.

Joining forces with the World League of American Football, Major League Soccer and the Arena Football League edit

ABC Sports broadcast some games in both seasons, mostly on Sunday afternoons. ABC showed the 1991 World Bowl, while USA carried the game in 1992.

The reported cost of the contracts varied – the L.A. Times said that ABC had paid $28m for two years, and USA $25m. For the 1992 season the WLAF charged each network less for broadcasting rights; The New York Times reported that ABC's annual fee went down from $12m to $3m, and USA's from $14m to $10m. The ABC coverage's average ratings fell from 1991 to 1992, from around 2.1 to 1.7, and USA's from 1.2 to 1.1. Both networks asked the WLAF to expand into two major U.S. markets for 1993.

Major League Soccer with ESPN and ABC Sports announced the league's first television rights deal on March 15, 1994, without any players, coaches, or teams in place. The three-year agreement covered English-language broadcasting for the 1996–1998 seasons, and committed 10 games on ESPN, 25 on ESPN2, and the MLS Cup on ABC. The deal gave MLS no rights fees, but the advertising revenue was divided between the league and networks.[172]

ABC (under the Wide World of Sports umbrella) aired the ArenaBowl five consecutive years from 199802.

Overhauling ABC's golf coverage edit

In 1990, Roger Twibell took over as lead anchor, with Dave Marr as his analyst. Peter Alliss became sole anchor of the second anchor team. During this period, ABC acquired the rights to several non-major PGA Tour events, mostly important events such as the Memorial Tournament and The Tour Championship. 1990 would also mark the final PGA Championship to be broadcast by ABC.

In 1992, Brent Musburger, who had been heavily criticized for his hosting of golf coverage while with CBS, took over as host. Marr was dismissed from the network, while Twibell was reassigned to ESPN's golf coverage, although he occasionally hosted on ABC for a few lower-level tournaments. The format was also reorganized to more emphasize the on-course reporters. Steve Melnyk moved over from CBS to become lead analyst; however, Alliss would anchor for stretches during the telecast. Beyond the team in the booth, all of ABC's other voices were on the course, including Rankin, Rosburg and newcomer Mark Rolfing.

After facing much criticism for its golf coverage, especially Jack Nicklaus' involvement and Musburger's perceived lack of knowledge of the game, ABC decided to completely overhaul its visual presentation, becoming more in line with cable partner ESPN, while changing the format for its coverage to be more of the standard in line with the other networks, featuring a lead anchor team, announcers assigned to individual holes, and on-course reporters. Mike Tirico became the host, with Curtis Strange serving as lead analyst. Steve Melnyk, Peter Alliss and Ian Baker-Finch became hole announcers, while Bob Rosburg, Judy Rankin and Rolfing were the primary on-course reporters.

ABC continued its renewed commitment to golf when it reached a new television contract in 1999 in which the network gained the broadcast rights to many events, including the entire fall PGA Tour season and two of the new World Golf Championships events. ABC partnered with ESPN on much of its coverage, with ESPN carrying the early rounds of tournament events that ABC broadcast, in addition to those that were part of the cable channel's own schedule; the ABC team would work the cable telecasts in these cases.

Beginning in 1999, ABC aired a series of match play golf challenge matches on Monday nights. All the matches have involved World Number 1 Tiger Woods, and the first seven were run by his representatives IMG. Monday Night Golf proved to be an initial success, drawing more viewers than the final round of the U.S. Open,[173] and being second only to the final round of the Masters Tournament in terms of golf broadcasts.[174] Ratings increased significantly for the second match,[175] but they declined rapidly after that,[176][177] and the event was initially cancelled after the 2005 edition, with Woods also wishing to take a break from the event.

The end of the Pro Bowlers Tour on ABC and Wide World of Sports edit

Although the Professional Bowlers Tour maintained high ratings throughout most of its years, ABC (which was transitioning to new management after being purchased by The Walt Disney Company in 1996) opted against renewing its contract with the PBA primarily due to the overall decline of the sport in the late 1980s and 1990s. This was partially attributed to the explosion of sports viewing choices in the 1990s, especially on cable television, the lack of any one bowling star to follow, and an aging audience for televised bowling. (Research in 1997 showed that 67% of the viewing audience for network TV bowling was at least 50 years old.)[178]

The final PBT broadcast aired on June 21, 1997, at the St. Clair Classic in Fairview Heights, Ill. that was won by Walter Ray Williams Jr. It was a very emotional broadcast in which Williams Jr. and Pete Weber, the game's two giants at the time, battled it out until the very end.

In later years, with the rise of cable television offering more outlets for sports programming, Wide World of Sports lost many of the events that had been staples of the program for many years (many, although not all, of them ended up on ESPN, a sister network to ABC for most of its existence). Ultimately, on January 3, 1998, Jim McKay announced that Wide World of Sports, in its traditional anthology series, had been canceled after a 37-year run. The Wide World of Sports name remained in use afterward as an umbrella title for ABC's weekend sports programming.

Major changes at Monday Night Football edit

In 1997, ABC began using a scoring bug showing the game clock and score throughout the entire broadcast.

For the 1998 season, ABC pushed Monday Night Football back an hour (it has usually aired at 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time). A special pre-game show was created, Monday Night Blast, hosted by Chris Berman from the ESPN Zone restaurant in Baltimore. The game would start around 8:20 p.m. Eastern for this particular season. Despite leaving the booth, Frank Gifford stayed on one more year as a special contributor to the pre-game show, usually presenting a single segment.

Beginning in 1999, Monday Night Football telecasts used a computer-generated yellow line to mark where a team needs to get a first down, a method first used by ABC sister cable channel ESPN. 1999 also saw the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game being moved from Saturday afternoon to Monday night. It would remain on Monday night through 2005.

2000s edit

ABC lands the NHL edit

In the 1992–93[179] and 1993–94 seasons, ABC televised six[180] weekly regional telecasts[181][182] on Sunday afternoons beginning in March[183] (or the last three Sundays[184] of the regular season). This marked the first time that regular season National Hockey League games were broadcast on American network television[185] since 1974–75 (when NBC was the NHL's American broadcast television partner). ABC would then televise three weeks worth of playoff games[186][187] (or the first three Sundays[188][189] of the playoffs[190][191][192][193]). The network did not televise the Stanley Cup Finals, which instead, were televised nationally by ESPN and by Prime Ticket in Los Angeles (1993) and MSG Network in New York (1994). Games televised on ABC were not subject to blackout.

These broadcasts (just as was the case with the 19992004 package) were essentially, time-buys[194] by ESPN.[195][196] In other words, ABC would sell three-hour blocks of airtime to ESPN,[197] which in return, would produce, supply broadcasters and sell advertising.

In August 1998, ABC, ESPN and ESPN2 signed a five-year television deal with the NHL, worth a total of approximately US$600 million[198][199] (or $120 million per year). The $120 million per year that ABC and ESPN paid for rights dwarfed the $5.5 million that the NHL received from American national broadcasts in the 1991–92 season.[200] ABC's terms of this deal included: rights to the NHL All-Star Game, 4 to 5 weeks of regular season action, with three games a week, weekend Stanley Cup Playoff games, and the rest of the Stanley Cup Finals.

Following the 2003–04 season, ESPN was only willing to renew its contract for two additional years at $60 million per year.[201] ABC refused to televise the Stanley Cup Finals in prime time, suggesting that the Finals games it would telecast be played on weekend afternoons (including a potential Game 7). Disney executives later conceded that they overpaid for the 1999–2004 deal, so the company's offer to renew the television rights was lower in 2004.[202]

ABC airs its final boxing card edit

Prior to the advent of Wide World of Sports, many major heavyweight boxing title matches were televised via “closed-circuit” (this generally meant that you had go to a movie theater to see it, pay a decent-sized amount of money to get it, and then watch it on a giant screen). Often, Wide World of Sports would show full-length replays of the fights a week or two later; these replays were usually called by Howard Cosell, who became one of the best-known (and possibly most controversial) sportscaster in American television history.

ABC's final boxing card occurred on June 17, 2000[203][204] with José Luis Castillo upsetting Stevie Johnston in the lightweight championship bout in Bell Gardens, California.[205]

Seven years after ABC's last boxing card, they were scheduled to broadcast a card from Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey on April 22, 2007. The card would've featured former light heavyweight champion Antonio Tarver facing off against Elvir Muriqi. Promoter Joe DeGuardia of Star Boxing had been working on the time buy deal. The production would've been handled by ABC's sister company, ESPN with Friday Night Fights commentators Joe Tessitore and Teddy Atlas.

Dan Fouts, Dennis Miller and later John Madden join Monday Night Football edit

Unexpectedly, comedian Dennis Miller joined the cast in 2000, along with Dan Fouts.[206] The move was ultimately regarded as a bust by many viewers and commentators. ABC briefly considered adding radio personality Rush Limbaugh before Miller was added to the broadcast team, despite having no prior sports broadcast experience (Limbaugh would instead be assigned as a commentator to Sunday NFL Countdown on ABC sister ESPN). Miller demonstrated a knowledge of the game and its personalities, although at times he tended to lapse into sometimes obscure analogy-riddled streams of consciousness similar to the "rants" of his standup comedy act. ABC even set up a webpage dedicated to explaining Miller's sometimes obscure pop culture references. Soon, it would become apparent that Miller's comedy did not mix with football.

In 2002, both Dennis Miller and Dan Fouts were dropped and John Madden joined Al Michaels in a two-man booth. Madden was a coach for the Oakland Raiders, namesake of the seminal Madden NFL video game series, and a successful broadcaster for 21 years – first with CBS until 1993 and then with Fox – before joining Monday Night Football.

ABC and ESPN outbids NBC for the NBA contract edit

In late 2001, the NBA was in the midst of putting together a new broadcast and cable television deal. At the time, conventional wisdom was that NBC would renew its existing broadcasting contract with the league. An October 5, 2001, Sports Business Daily article cited The New York Times sports columnist Richard Sandomir regarding the possibility of ESPN joining with ABC in obtaining a portion of the contract:

[it would be] difficult to imagine the NBA being so overwhelmed by an ESPN offer that it would let [ESPN] team up for a broadcast deal with ABC that would yield fewer games, promotion and exposure.

The negotiations were closely watched by those in the business world, as it was the first time that a major sports league crafted a television deal in the new economic environment since the September 11 terrorist attacks a few months before. Declining ratings for NBC's NBA game telecasts had already led many[who?] to believe that the NBA's next television rights fee would be lower than previous years, and the economic recession made that a likely scenario. As predicted, NBC's offer to the league was lower than the previous agreement's amount. Had the NBA agreed to the network's offer, it would have been the first sports league to experience a decline in rights fees. However, the NBA rejected NBC's offer and after the network's exclusive negotiating period with the league expired, ABC and ESPN stepped in. On January 22, 2002, the NBA signed a six-year deal with The Walt Disney Company and Turner Sports, which renewed an existing deal with TNT and allowed ABC and ESPN to acquire the rights to air the league's games. ABC and ESPN reportedly paid an average of about US$400 million a season. Technically, ESPN pays the NBA for its broadcast rights and "buys" time on ABC to air select games (this is noted in copyright tags during the end credits at the conclusion of the telecasts, saying "The preceding program has been paid for by ESPN, Inc.")[207] In all, the contract allowed the NBA to increase its rights fees by 25%.

In June 2007, and again in October 2014, the NBA renewed its television agreement with ESPN, as well as TNT, with the current contract extending through the 2024–25 season.[208][209][210]

The end of Monday Night Football on ABC edit

Despite high ratings, ABC lost millions of dollars on televising the games during the late 1990s and 2000s. The NFL also indicated that it wanted Sunday night to be the new night for its marquee game, because more people tend to watch television on Sundays, and games held on that night would be more conducive to flexible scheduling, a method by which some of the NFL's best games could be moved from the afternoon to the evening on Sunday on short notice. Given these factors, as well as the rise of ABC's ratings on Sunday night, and the network's wish of protecting its Desperate Housewives franchise (which they knew would be costly), on April 18, 2005, ABC and the NFL announced the end of their 36-year partnership, with the Monday Night Football broadcasts being moved to ESPN starting with the 2006 season;[211] the move was criticized by some of the Disney shareholders (as well as NFL fans and purists). However, ESPN's ability to collect subscription fees from cable and satellite providers, in addition to selling commercials, made it more likely that ESPN could turn a profit on NFL telecasts, as opposed to ABC's heavy losses.

The final Monday Night Football broadcast on ABC aired on December 26, 2005, when the New York Jets hosted the New England Patriots from Giants Stadium. Coincidentally, both the first and last ABC Monday Night Football game telecasts ended with a score of 31–21 with the Jets on the losing end. Vinny Testaverde holds the distinction of throwing the last touchdown pass in ABC's MNF telecast history; it was to wide receiver Laveranues Coles. Also, Testaverde's pass set an NFL record: most consecutive seasons with a touchdown pass, 19 seasons (1987–2005). Patriots linebacker Mike Vrabel set a record of note during that last ABC telecast, becoming the first player to catch two touchdown passes and record a quarterback sack in the same game. The final play of the ABC era was a Patriots kneeldown by 44-year-old reserve quarterback Doug Flutie. John Madden said at the show's ending:

They can take football away from ABC on Monday nights, but they can't take away the memories.

Being fully integrated into ESPN edit

In 1984, ABC reached a deal with Getty Oil to acquire ESPN. ABC retained an 80% share, and sold a 20% interest to Nabisco. The Nabisco shares were later sold to the Hearst Corporation, which still holds a 20% ownership stake in the channel today. In May 1985, ABC was purchased by Capital Cities Communications in a $3.5 billion deal that was finalized in February 1986.[212] Under Getty ownership, the channel was unable to compete for the television rights to major sports events contracts as its majority corporate parent would not provide the funding, leading ESPN to lose out for broadcast deals with the National Hockey League (to USA Network) and NCAA Division I college football (to TBS). For years, the NFL, NBA and Major League Baseball refused to consider cable as a means of broadcasting some of their games.[213] However, with the backing of ABC, ESPN's ability to compete for major sports contracts greatly increased, and gave it credibility within the sports broadcasting industry.

In February 1996, The Walt Disney Company purchased Capital Cities/ABC for $19 billion, and assumed the latter company's 80% stake in ESPN at that time.[214] According to an analysis published by Barron's Magazine in February 2008, ESPN "is probably worth more than 40% of Disney's entire value... based on prevailing cash-flow multiples in the industry."[215] Despite it technically being a joint venture, for all intents and purposes, ESPN operates as a division of Disney as a result of the company's controlling interest (as it was with ABC and Capital Cities before it).

In August 2006, ESPN announced that ABC Sports would be fully integrated into ESPN,[216] using the channel's graphics and music for its sports presentations, in addition to handling production responsibilities for the ABC sports telecasts. The last live sporting event televised under the ABC Sports banner was the U.S. Championship Game of the Little League World Series on August 26, 2006 (ABC was slated to carry the Little League World Series Championship Game on August 27, but the game was postponed to August 28 due to rain, and subsequently aired on ESPN2). The changeover took effect the following weekend to coincide with the start of the college football season, with NBA, IndyCar Series and NASCAR coverage eventually following suit.[217]

Despite the rebranding, George Bodenheimer's official title remained "President, ESPN Inc. and ABC Sports" until his retirement at the end of 2011, upon which the "ABC Sports" portion of the title was retired.[218] In addition, ABC itself maintains the copyright over many of the ESPN-branded broadcasts, if they are not contractually assigned to the applicable league or organizer. ABC-affiliated stations owned by Hearst Television (such as WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh; WCVB-TV in Boston; WMUR-TV in Manchester, New Hampshire; WISN-TV in Milwaukee and KMBC-TV in Kansas City) have the right of first refusal over the local simulcasts of ESPN-televised Monday Night Football games involving teams within their home market, which are very rarely waived to other local stations in their market areas. Equally, other Hearst-owned stations affiliated with other networks (such as NBC affiliate WBAL-TV in Baltimore) have been able to air NFL games from ESPN for the same reason.[219]

ESPN has been criticized for decreasing the number of sports broadcasts on ABC,[220][221][222] especially during the summer months. One such example is NASCAR: from 2007 to 2009, ABC aired all of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup races, along with the penultimate race to the chase. From 2010 to 2014, ABC only broadcast three Sprint Cup races with only one Chase race (held in Charlotte, North Carolina) to the outrage of many NASCAR fans and sponsors. Several other events such as the Rose Bowl, the Citrus Bowl and The Open Championship, have also been moved from ABC to ESPN. This, however, is not entirely the fault of ESPN, as ABC in general has attracted a primarily female viewership in recent years, with sports largely attracting a male-dominated audience.[223]

ESPN Sports Saturday, an analogy program in the vein of Wide World of Sports, was cancelled after five seasons in August 2015. This was because ABC gave back the Sunday afternoon schedule to its affiliates four months later. Also, with the rise of the Internet and 24/7 mobile applications and streaming services specializing in sports news have eliminated the need for a traditional anthology sports program airing on broadcast television (including ABC) during weekend afternoons. It also eliminated the need for a separate Sunday afternoon block on ABC which had seen a long decline until January 2016. It is now simply a simulcast of the 30 for 30 documentary series sourced from ESPN.

2010s-2020s edit

The major sporting events return edit

After mainly being a home for the NBA and college football since the ESPN integration in 2006, the major sporting events returned to ABC nine years later.

To increase viewership after a disastrous cable-only Wild Card game, ESPN announced that their one Wild Card game for the 2015-16 playoffs would be simulcast on ABC, bringing the NFL back to ABC for the first time since Super Bowl XL in 2006. ABC’s involvement with ESPN’s NFL coverage would expand in the next few years, with the return of the Pro Bowl and the last day of the NFL Draft in 2018, with the latter eventually expanding to all three days in 2019, to go along with NFL Scouting Combine coverage, regular season game simulcasts in 2020, NFL Training Camp coverage in 2021, and exclusive games beginning in 2022. ESPN also gained rights to a Divisional game, which is also expected to be simulcast on ABC, and two Super Bowls, both exclusively on ABC.

In 2019, after not airing any games since 2008, Major League Soccer announced that the 2019 MLS Cup would air on ABC, after years of being on ESPN and Fox. ABC later returned to airing regular season and select Cup playoff games in 2020. ABC later expanded its soccer range by including international matchups.

2019 also saw the return of college basketball to ABC, for the first time since 2014, with 5 games airing on the network. ABC’s schedule later expanded to as many as 10 regular season games, either men’s or women’s.

2020 marked the return of pro baseball to ABC. With Major League Baseball expanding their postseason for the COVID-shortened 2020 season, ESPN was given rights to air 7 of the 8 new Wild Card Series, which saw 3 games air on ABC. These were the network’s first MLB games since the 1995 World Series. In 2021, with ESPN’s new agreement with MLB, a possible, and eventual, postseason expansion and return of the Wild Card Series would see ABC get some games. On August 8, ABC aired a Sunday Night Baseball game for the first time ever. This marked ABC’s first exclusive regular season broadcast since 1989.

After being away from the game since 2004, in 2021, ESPN and the NHL reached a 7-year agreement to bring the NHL back to not only ESPN, but to ABC as well. With ESPN producing 100 games a season, ABC will air about a tenth of the games under a brand new ABC Hockey Saturday package. ABC will also air or simulcast select Stanley Cup Playoff games, primarily on weekends, as well as, for the first time since 1980, all 7 games of the Stanley Cup Finals, with the latter happening in 4 of the 7 years of ESPN’s deal, alternating with TNT.

After airing select tournament games since 2021, in 2023, the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship Game will move to ABC. This will be the first time since 1995 that the Tournament Final will air on broadcast television. To accommodate ABC’s primetime lineup, the game will move to an afternoon start, similar to ESPN’s Pro Bowl coverage in 2018.

Other events that have made its way to ABC include: F1, the UFC, middle weekend Wimbledon matches, Australian Open highlights, the NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championships, the NCAA Division I softball tournament, the XFL, which previously aired on ABC in 2020, which returned in 2023, and the Premier Lacrosse League.

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography
  • Gerlach, Larry (2004), The Winter Olympics – From Chamonix to Salt Lake City, The University of Utah Press, ISBN 0-87480-778-6
  • Walker, James R.; Bellamy, Robert V. (2008). Center field shot: a history of baseball on television. Omaha, Ne.: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0803248250.

External links edit

  • ABC Sports - ESPN.com
  • Sports News & Articles – Scores, Pictures, Videos - ABC News
  • ABC Sports Is Dead at 45; Stand by for ESPN
  • ABC Sports: The Rise and Fall of Network Sports
    • ABC Sports: The Rise and Fall of Network Sports Television (Sport in World History)
  • Sports Programming On ABC Sports Now Branded ESPN
  • Goodbye ABC Sports, hello ESPN on ABC - Today Show
  • ABC Rebranding Sports Under ESPN
  • President of ESPN Will Run ABC Sports
  • ABC SPORTS - TELEVISION & OLYMPICS HISTORY
  • ABC affiliates upset about losing sports to ESPN
  • Bronx Banter Book Review: The ESPN Book
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history, espn, sports, programming, american, broadcasting, company, provided, occasion, primarily, weekend, afternoons, since, 2006, sports, division, been, defunct, with, sports, telecasts, being, produced, association, with, sister, cable, network, espn, un. Sports programming on the American Broadcasting Company is provided on occasion primarily on weekend afternoons since 2006 the ABC Sports division has been defunct with all sports telecasts on ABC being produced in association with sister cable network ESPN under the branding ESPN on ABC While ABC has in the past aired notable sporting events such as the NFL s Monday Night Football and various college football bowl games including most prominently for a period the Bowl Championship Series general industry trends and changes in rights have prompted reductions in sports broadcasts on broadcast television the BCS s successor the College Football Playoff and national championship air exclusively on ESPN 1 2 ABC is the broadcast television rightsholder of the National Basketball Association NBA with its package under the NBA on ESPN branding traditionally beginning with its Christmas Day games followed by a series of Sunday afternoon games through the remainder of the season weekend playoff games and all games of the NBA Finals ABC is the broadcast television rightsholder of the National Hockey League NHL with its package under the NHL on ESPN branding In this deal ABC broadcasts up to 10 regular season games mostly afternoon the NHL All Star Game and four Stanley Cup Finals During college football season ABC typically carries an afternoon doubleheader on Saturdays along with the primetime Saturday Night Football ABC also airs coverage of selected bowl games The Saturday afternoon lineup outside of football season typically features airings of ESPN Films documentaries or other studio programs under the banner ESPN Sports Saturday while Sunday afternoons usually feature either brokered programming or encore and burn off airings of ABC programs Contents 1 1950s 1 1 Early beginnings as Sports Programs Inc 1 2 Earliest coverage of the National Football League 1 3 Creating the Major League Baseball Game of the Week 2 1960s 2 1 Becoming ABC Sports and the birth of Wide World of Sports 2 2 Broadcasting the American Football League and MLB again 2 3 Early forays with college basketball 2 4 The debut of the Pro Bowlers Tour 2 5 ABC s original coverage of the NBA 2 6 The premiere of The American Sportsman 2 7 Winning the NCAA football contract 2 8 The beginning of ABC s two decade relationship with the Olympics 3 1970s 3 1 The birth of Monday Night Football 3 2 Coverage of the 1972 Munich massacre 3 3 ABC s coverage of NASCAR and the Daytona 500 3 4 ABC launches Monday Night Baseball 3 5 Coverage of the North American Soccer League and the FIFA World Cup 4 1980s 4 1 The Miracle on Ice 4 2 Breaking the news of John Lennon s murder 4 3 Sports journalism and ABC SportsBeat magazine show 4 4 ABC s coverage of golf 4 5 ABC s stint with the USFL 4 6 The deregulation of college football on television begins 4 7 The end of Howard Cosell s tenure on Monday Night Football and later ABC 4 8 ABC airs its very first Super Bowl 4 9 ABC airs the Indianapolis 500 live for the first time 4 10 ABC finally centralizes the Triple Crown of thoroughbred racing 4 11 Al Michaels joins Monday Night Football 4 12 The beginning of ABC s regular college basketball package 4 13 ABC broadcasts its final Olympic Games 4 14 ABC loses the baseball package to CBS and the 1989 World Series earthquake 5 1990s 5 1 The Pan American Games from Havana Cuba 5 2 ABC s alignment with the CFA and the Bowl Championship Series 5 3 Counter programming the Winter Olympics with boxing 5 4 Baseball temporarily returns to ABC 5 5 Joining forces with the World League of American Football Major League Soccer and the Arena Football League 5 6 Overhauling ABC s golf coverage 5 7 The end of the Pro Bowlers Tour on ABC and Wide World of Sports 5 8 Major changes at Monday Night Football 6 2000s 6 1 ABC lands the NHL 6 2 ABC airs its final boxing card 6 3 Dan Fouts Dennis Miller and later John Madden join Monday Night Football 6 4 ABC and ESPN outbids NBC for the NBA contract 6 5 The end of Monday Night Football on ABC 6 6 Being fully integrated into ESPN 7 2010s 2020s 7 1 The major sporting events return 8 See also 9 References 10 External links1950s editEarly beginnings as Sports Programs Inc edit See also History of the American Broadcasting Company Children s programming and the launch of ABC Sports 1960 1965 Widely credited as a pioneer in network sports broadcasting Edgar Scherick created the television program ABC s Wide World of Sports at his company Sports Programs Inc which he started in 1956 with 600 00 3 Scherick had formed this company after leaving CBS when the network would not make him the head of sports programming choosing instead Bill MacPhail a former baseball public relations agent Before ABC Sports even became a formal division of the network Scherick and ABC programming chief Tom Moore pulled off many programming deals involving the most popular American sporting events While Scherick wasn t interested in For Men Only he recognized the talent Roone Arledge had Arledge realized ABC was the organization he was looking to join The lack of a formal organization would offer him the opportunity to claim real power when the network matured So he signed on with Scherick as an assistant producer Several months before ABC began broadcasting NCAA college football games Arledge sent Scherick a remarkable memo filled with youthful exuberance and television production concepts which sports broadcasts have adhered to since citation needed Previously network sporting broadcasts had consisted of simple set ups and focused on the game itself The genius of Arledge in this memo was not that he offered another way to broadcast the game to the sports fan Arledge recognized television had to take the sports fan to the game In addition Arledge realized that the broadcasts needed to attract and hold the attention of women viewers At age 29 on September 17 1960 he put his vision into reality with ABC s first NCAA college football broadcast from Birmingham Alabama between Alabama Crimson Tide and the Georgia Bulldogs won by Alabama 21 6 That same year ABC began broadcasting games of the fledgling American Football League and used the same innovative techniques in their broadcasts Sports broadcasting has not been the same since citation needed Earliest coverage of the National Football League edit In 1948 and 1950 ABC televised the National Football League Championship Game Harry Wismer 4 provided commentary for the game in 1948 game and the game in 1955 joined by Red Grange and Joe Hasel Since the game was played in Los Angeles there was no network telecast of the 1951 NFL Championship Game because at that time there was no way to send live TV programs from the West Coast to the East Coast and vice versa ABC first broadcast regular season National Football League games in 1953 At the time they only broadcast Chicago Bears home games and Chicago Cardinals home games Beginning in 1954 ABC added Washington Redskins home games In ABC s final year of their initial go around with the National Football League they added Los Angeles Rams and San Francisco 49ers games for the Pacific Time Zone affiliates to go along with their coverage of the Bears and Cardinals Wire accounts found in newspaperarchive com indicated that the Washington Philadelphia game in Week 2 of the 1953 season was to have been regionally televised by ABC but the cables needed for the telecast never arrived The articles said that NFL Commissioner Bert Bell was fuming over the incident ABC s relationship with the NFL at this point pretty much ended when CBS began carrying regular season games across its network nationwide in 1956 This came off the heels of the NFL s previous principal network TV partner the DuMont Network suspending its operations Less than five years later however ABC became the initial network television partner for the American Football League The deal called for ABC to broadcast approximately 37 regular season games the AFL Championship Game and the AFL All Star Game These games were typically broadcast regionally on 15 consecutive Sundays and on Thanksgiving Day This became the first ever cooperative television plan for professional football in which the proceeds of the contract were divided equally among member clubs the National Football League would follow suit in 1961 a move that required Congress to pass the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 to accommodate such collective broadcasting contracts Creating the Major League Baseball Game of the Week edit In 1953 5 Scherick broached a Saturday Game of the Week 6 TV sport s first network series At the time ABC was labeled a nothing network that had fewer outlets than CBS or NBC ABC also needed paid programming or anything for bills as Scherick put it At first ABC hesitated at the idea of a nationally televised regular season baseball program ABC wondered how exactly the Game of the Week would reach television in the first place and who would notice if it did Also Major League Baseball barred the Game of the Week from airing within 50 miles of any ballpark 7 Major League Baseball according to Scherick insisted on protecting local coverage and didn t care about national appeal ABC though did care about the national appeal and claimed that most of America was still up for grabs In April 1953 Edgar Scherick set out to sell teams rights but instead only got the Philadelphia Athletics Cleveland Indians 8 and Chicago White Sox 9 10 to sign on 11 These were not national broadcast contracts since they were assembled through negotiations with individual teams to telecast games from their home parks It was until the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 that antitrust laws barred pooled rights TV contracts negotiated with a central league broadcasting authority In 1953 ABC earned an 11 4 rating for their Game of the Week telecasts Blacked out cities had 32 of households In the rest of the United States 3 in 4 TV sets in use watched Dizzy Dean 12 and Buddy Blattner 13 or backup announcers Bill McColgan and Bob Finnegan call the games for ABC CBS took over the Saturday Game in 1955 the rights were actually set up through the Falstaff Brewing Corporation 14 retaining Dean Blattner and McColgan Finnegan as the announcing crews as well as Gene Kirby who produced the Dean Blattner games and alternated with them on play by play and adding Sunday coverage in 1957 As Edgar Scherick said In 53 no one wanted us Now teams begged for Game s cash In 1959 ABC broadcast the best of three playoff series 15 16 17 to decide the National League pennant between the Milwaukee Braves and Los Angeles Dodgers The cigarette company L amp M was in charge of all of the telecasts George Kell 18 and Bob DeLaney were the announcers 1960s editBecoming ABC Sports and the birth of Wide World of Sports edit In February 1960 Scherick sold Sports Programs to the American Broadcasting Company for 500 000 in ABC stock where it became ABC Sports the sports division of the network With the acquisition Scherick was appointed head of the ABC Sports division then Vice President in charge of Network Sales Despite the production values he brought to NCAA college football Scherick wanted low budget as in inexpensive broadcasting rights sports programming that could attract and retain an audience He hit upon the idea of broadcasting track and field events sponsored by the Amateur Athletic Union While Americans were not exactly fans of track and field events Scherick figured Americans understood games So in January 1961 Scherick called Arledge into his office and asked him to attend the annual AAU board of governors meeting While he was shaking hands Scherick said if the mood seemed right might he cut a deal to broadcast AAU events on ABC It seemed a tall assignment but as Scherick said years later Roone was a gentile and I was not Arledge came back with a deal for ABC to broadcast all AAU events for 50 000 a year Next Scherick and Arledge divided up their NCAA college football sponsor list They then telephoned their sponsors and said in so many words Advertise on our new sports show coming up in April or forget about buying commercials on NCAA college football this fall The two persuaded enough sponsors to advertise though it took them to the last day of a deadline imposed by ABC programming to do it Wide World of Sports suited Scherick s plans exactly By exploiting the speed of jet transportation and flexibility of videotape Scherick was able to undercut NBC and CBS s advantages in broadcasting live sporting events In that era with communications nowhere near as universal as they are today ABC was able to safely record events on videotape for later broadcast without worrying about an audience finding out the results Arledge his colleague Chuck Howard and Jim McKay who left CBS for this opportunity made up the show on a week by week basis the first year it was broadcast Arledge had a genius for the dramatic story line that unfolded in the course of a game or event McKay s honest curiosity and reporter s bluntness gave the show an emotional appeal which attracted viewers who might not otherwise watch a sporting event But more importantly from Arledge s perspective Wide World of Sports allowed him to demonstrate his ability as an administrator as well as producer Arledge did not gain a formal title as president of ABC Sports until 1968 even though Scherick left his position to assume a position of vice president for programming at ABC in 1964 During its initial season in the spring and summer of 1961 Wide World of Sports was initially broadcast from 5 p m to 7 p m Eastern Time on Saturdays Beginning in 1962 it was pushed to 5 to 6 30 pm and later to 4 30 to 6 pm Eastern Time to allow ABC affiliates in the Eastern and Central Time Zones to carry local early evening newscasts Broadcasting the American Football League and MLB again edit On June 9 1960 the league signed a five year television contract with ABC which brought in revenues of approximately 2 125 000 per year for the entire league The deal called for ABC to broadcast approximately 37 regular season games the AFL Championship Game and the AFL All Star Game These games were typically broadcast regionally on 15 consecutive Sundays and on Thanksgiving Day This became the first ever cooperative television plan for professional football in which the proceeds of the contract were divided equally among member clubs the National Football League would follow suit in 1961 a move that required Congress to pass the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 to accommodate such collective broadcasting contracts ABC would broadcast AFL games from the league s very first season in 1960 19 until the 1964 season when NBC took over as the league s primary network television broadcaster Also in 1960 ABC returned to baseball broadcasting with a series of late afternoon Saturday games Jack Buck 20 and Carl Erskine 21 22 were the lead announcing crew for this series which lasted one season 23 ABC typically did three games a week Two of the games were always from the Eastern or Central Time Zone The late games no doubleheaders were usually San Francisco Giants 24 or Los Angeles Dodgers home games However the Milwaukee Braves 25 used to start many of their Saturday home games late in the afternoon So if the Giants and Dodgers were both the road at the same time ABC still would be able to show a late game In 1965 ABC provided the first ever nationwide baseball coverage with weekly Saturday broadcasts 26 on a regional basis ABC paid 5 7 million for the rights to the 28 Saturday holiday Games of the Week ABC s deal 27 28 covered all of the teams except the New York Yankees and Philadelphia Phillies 29 who had their own television deals and called for two regionalized games on Saturdays Independence Day and Labor Day 30 Each Saturday ABC broadcast two 2 p m games and one 5 p m game for the Pacific Time Zone ABC blacked out the games in the home cities of the clubs playing those games 31 Major League Baseball however had a TV deal with NBC for the All Star Game and World Series At the end of the season ABC declined to exercise its 6 5 million option for 1966 citing poor ratings 32 33 especially in New York According to ABC announcer Merle Harmon s profile in Curt Smith s book Voices of Summer in 1965 CBS Yankee Game of the Week beat ABC in the ratings in at least Dallas and Des Moines To make matters worse local television split the big city audience Therefore ABC could show the Cubs vs the Cardinals in the New York market yet the Mets would still kill them in terms of viewership Harmon Chris Schenkel Keith Jackson 34 and on occasion Ken Coleman 35 served as ABC s principal play by play voices for this series Also on the network s announcing team were pregame host Howard Cosell and color commentators Leo Durocher Tommy Henrich Warren Spahn who worked with Chris Schenkel on a July 17 Baltimore Detroit contest and Hall of Fame Brooklyn Dodger great Jackie Robinson who on April 17 1965 became the first black network broadcaster for Major League Baseball 36 According to ABC Sports producer Chuck Howard Robinson had a high stabbing voice great presence and sharp mind All he lacked was time Early forays with college basketball edit ABC first broadcast college basketball games in 1962 when the network aired the NCAA Championship Game on a day behind delayed basis as part of its Wide World of Sports anthology series On December 15 1973 ABC aired what is considered to be the first 37 telecast of a regular season college basketball game by a major broadcast network between UCLA and North Carolina State in St Louis ABC which had recently lost the NBA rights to CBS televised this game using its former NBA announcing crew of Keith Jackson and Bill Russell In the 1977 78 season C D Chesley who controlled the rights to the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC at the time wanted NBC to televise select ACC games as part of its national package as it had done the previous few years However NBC wanted to feature intersectional games This action greatly upset Chesley who wound up selling the rights to the ACC Tournament final to ABC ABC would televise the 1978 ACC Tournament final as part of Wide World of Sports The game called by Jim Lampley and Bill Russell marked the first time Duke University s Blue Devils basketball team played on national television The debut of the Pro Bowlers Tour edit Prior to the debut of the PBA on ABC television in 1962 most tournaments were organized where once the cut was established after qualifying rounds a set number of match play games were bowled and bonus pins were given to the winner of each match The champion was then decided based on the final overall total pinfall From 1962 to 1965 ABC started televising the PBA Tour starting with a limited number of tournaments on ABC s Wide World of Sports and later having its own timeslot Therefore a round robin tournament format was implemented to determine the champion The televised finals would be cut to the top four bowlers after match play and then three round robin matches between the fourth third and second seeded bowlers would determine the final two bowlers If any bowler were to win both of his matches in the round robin he would go on to face the tournament leader If the three bowlers each split their matches to go 1 and 1 in the round robin total pinfall would decide which man would advance to the final match to face the tournament leader The winner of the final match would win the tournament The first ever telecast was actually taped and aired at a later date The original commentators were Chris Schenkel and bowling star Billy Welu On May 16 1974 Welu died suddenly of a heart attack The search for his replacement included bowling legends Dick Weber and Dave Davis but it was the young Nelson Burton Jr who was ultimately selected for the analyst job in 1975 He remained Schenkel s broadcasting partner until the end of the series ABC s original coverage of the NBA edit Meanwhile ABC first signed a deal with the National Basketball Association to become the league s primary television 38 partner in 1964 39 the network s first game telecast aired on January 3 1965 40 a game between the Boston Celtics and Cincinnati Royals 41 ABC s initial alliance with the NBA first came about due to ABC Sports head Roone Arledge s search for live programming that could diminish the ratings of CBS Sports Spectacular and ABC s own analogy program Wide World of Sports a boost with sponsors ABC initially paid the NBA only 650 000 for the rights annually For much of the 1960s ABC only televised Sunday afternoon games including during the NBA Playoffs This meant that ABC did not have to televise a potential NBA Finals deciding game if it were played on a weeknight In 1969 ABC did televise Game 7 of the Los Angeles Lakers Boston Celtics series in prime time on a weeknight The following season ABC aired the 1970 NBA Finals in its entirety making it the first Finals series to have all games televised nationally By 1969 ABC s NBA contract worth only 3 million To put things into proper perspective in 1969 Major League Baseball s television contract with NBC was worth 16 5 million while the National Football League cost CBS about 22 million What that meant is that ABC had made a bargain in purchasing the television rights to the NBA considering the league s steady ratings To give you a better idea ABC s ratings for the NBA rose from a 6 0 in 1965 to an 8 2 in 1968 ABC lost the broadcast rights to the NBA to CBS 42 after the 1972 73 season 43 44 45 with the network s initial tenure with the league ending with its last NBA Finals game on May 10 1973 ABC filled the void left by losing the NBA by counterprogramming Wide World of Sports on Sundays against CBS NBA coverage The premiere of The American Sportsman edit The show has its roots in a 20 minute segment depicting Curt Gowdy and Joe Brooks fly fishing in the Andes Mountains in Argentina in 1964 The segment appeared on Wide World of Sports and immediately was spun off into its own series airing at 3 PM EST on Sundays January through March on ABC 46 The show s first episode was on January 31 1965 and ran through 1986 47 ABC would present filmed highlights involving the program s hosts and celebrities participating in hunting and or fishing trips along with outdoor recreational activities such as whitewater kayaking hang gliding and free climbing Winning the NCAA football contract edit ABC won the NCAA contract from the 1966 season onwards This was essentially the television plan that stayed in place until the University of Oklahoma and the University of Georgia filed a lawsuit against the NCAA in 1981 alleging antitrust violations The lawsuit NCAA v Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma made it all the way to the Supreme Court who in 1984 ruled in favor of Oklahoma and Georgia and declared the NCAA s forced collective contract a violation of antitrust law ABC then negotiated with the College Football Association for its game package ABC announced the entire 1966 TV schedule in June with 8 national games and 24 regional games for a total of 15 broadcast windows In 1966 the NCAA allowed each school to appear on ABC for at most one national telecast and one regional telecast On November 19 1966 ABC showed a regional doubleheader The main early game was Notre Dame Michigan State ranked 1 and 2 This was the famous 10 10 tie ABC was unable to televise this game live nationally due to the above restriction However ABC got approval from the NCAA to show this game on tape delay in the late timeslot in the regions of the country which got Kentucky Tennessee in the early timeslot On September 23 1967 Chris Schenkel and Bud Wilkinson were scheduled to announce the Penn State Navy game However there was an NABET strike of engineers and technicians 48 which AFTRA was supporting and this duo members of AFTRA refused to work the game So ABC Sports producer Chuck Howard did play by play on this game Howard lined up Jim Tarman Penn State s SID and Bud Thalman Navy s SID to provide color commentary The beginning of ABC s two decade relationship with the Olympics edit While CBS aired both the 1960 Winter and Summer Games marking the first time that the Olympics were broadcast on American television by 1964 a different network showed the Winter Games ABC Roone Arledge won broadcast rights for his network and began a relationship with the five rings that would last over two decades The program used many of the same production staff from ABC s Wide World of Sports as well as the same host Jim McKay who moved to ABC from CBS in 1961 In 1968 ABC showed both the Winter Games and the Summer Games The 1964 Winter Games were in Innsbruck Austria and coverage was taped and flown by plane back to the United States All of it was in black and white but with most Winter Olympic events in the morning local time most TV coverage aired the day the events were held A portion of the Closing Ceremony was televised live via satellite Telstar which had to be tracked and allowed about a 15 minute window between the U S and Europe when it was zooming over the Atlantic Everything else was videotaped and flown to the U S via a Munich London New York route There was little margin for error If a flight was canceled ABC had a tape of a U S Romania hockey game played the day before the Opening Ceremony and shipped over ready to play All went well and it never made the air ABC aired 16 5 hours of coverage of the Innsbruck Games the majority of the coverage occurring outside of primetime 49 By 1968 ABC was broadcasting the Olympics in full color and satellites made possible live coverage of several events at the Winter Games in Grenoble France and of nearly all of the network s coverage of the Summer Games in Mexico City In reality only the Opening Ceremony and the ladies figure skating final were televised live via satellite most other coverage was sent via satellite to ABC and run off tape from New York The 1968 Winter Olympics were the first to be televised in color except for a couple of events the French fed in black and white Highlighting the 1968 Winter Games was a dramatic sweep in men s alpine skiing by Frenchman Jean Claude Killy while the major highlight of the Summer Games was a world record long jump by Bob Beamon of the United States which happened to air live in the US 1970s editThe birth of Monday Night Football edit During the early 1960s NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle envisioned the possibility of playing at least one game weekly during prime time that could be viewed by a greater television audience while the NFL had scheduled Saturday night games on the DuMont Television Network in 1953 and 1954 poor ratings and the dissolution of DuMont led to those games being eliminated by the time CBS took over the rights in 1956 An early bid by the league in 1964 to play on Friday nights was soundly defeated with critics charging that such telecasts would damage the attendance at high school football games Undaunted Rozelle decided to experiment with the concept of playing on Monday night scheduling the Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions for a game on September 28 1964 While the game was not televised it drew a sellout crowd of 59 203 spectators to Tiger Stadium the largest crowd ever to watch a professional football game in Detroit up to that point Two years later Rozelle would build on this success as the NFL began a four year experiment of playing on Monday night scheduling one game in prime time on CBS during the 1966 and 1967 seasons and two contests during each of the next two years NBC followed suit in 1968 and 1969 with games involving American Football League teams During subsequent negotiations on a new television contract that would begin in 1970 coinciding with a merger between the NFL and AFL Rozelle concentrated on signing a weekly Monday night deal with one of the three major networks After sensing reluctance from both NBC and CBS in disturbing their regular programming schedules Rozelle spoke with ABC Despite the network s status at the time as the lowest rated of the three major broadcast networks ABC was also reluctant to enter the risky venture It was only after Rozelle used the threat of signing a deal with the independent Hughes Sports Network an entity bankrolled by reclusive businessman Howard Hughes did ABC sign a contract for the scheduled games Speculation was that had Rozelle signed with Hughes many ABC affiliates would have pre empted the network s Monday lineup in favor of the games severely damaging potential ratings After the final contract for Monday Night Football was signed ABC Sports producer Roone Arledge immediately saw possibilities for the new program Setting out to create an entertainment spectacle as much as a simple sports broadcast Arledge hired Chet Forte who would serve as director of the program for over 22 years Arledge also ordered twice the usual number of cameras to cover the game expanded the regular two man broadcasting booth to three and used extensive graphic design within the show as well as instant replay Looking for a lightning rod to garner attention Arledge hired controversial New York City sportscaster Howard Cosell as a commentator along with veteran football play by play announcer Keith Jackson Arledge had tried to draw in Curt Gowdy and then Vin Scully to ABC for the MNF play by play role but settled for Jackson after they proved unable to break their respective existing contracts with NBC Sports and the Los Angeles Dodgers Jack Buck was also considered but when Arledge assistant Chuck Howard telephoned Buck with the job offer Buck refused to respond due to anger at his treatment by ABC during an earlier stint with the network 50 Arledge s original choice for the third member of the trio Frank Gifford was unavailable since he was still under contract to CBS Sports However Gifford suggested former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Don Meredith setting the stage for years of fireworks between the often pompous Cosell and the laid back Meredith Monday Night Football first aired on ABC on September 21 1970 with a game between the New York Jets and the Browns in Cleveland Advertisers were charged US 65 000 per minute by ABC during the clash a cost that proved to be a bargain when the contest collected 33 of the viewing audience The Browns defeated the Jets 31 21 in a game which featured a 94 yard kickoff return for a touchdown by the Browns Homer Jones to open the second half and was punctuated when Billy Andrews intercepted Joe Namath late in the fourth quarter and returned it 25 yards for the clinching touchdown However Cleveland viewers saw different programming on WEWS TV because of the NFL s blackout rules of the time this would apply for all games through the end of the 1972 season beginning in 1973 home games could be televised if tickets were sold out 72 hours before kickoff In 1971 Frank Gifford became available after his contract with CBS Sports concluded Arledge brought him to ABC to serve as play by play announcer replacing Jackson who returned to broadcasting college football for the network which he continued to do for the next 35 seasons The former New York Giant had been an NFL analyst for CBS during the 1960s but had never called play by play prior to joining Monday Night Football In that capacity for Monday Night Football from 1971 to 1985 Gifford was often criticized for his see no evil approach in regard to discussing the NFL earning him the dubious nickname Faultless Frank Regardless Gifford would have the longest tenure of any broadcaster on the show lasting until 1998 Coverage of the 1972 Munich massacre edit In 1972 NBC showed the Winter Games from Sapporo Japan then ABC returned to carry the Summer Games in Munich Germany It was during the Summer Games that Palestinian terrorists attacked the Olympic Village and killed 11 Israeli athletes Although Chris Schenkel was the actual host of the Games that year Arledge assigned the story to McKay largely because he was a local news anchor in Baltimore Maryland prior to joining CBS and later ABC McKay was joined on set by ABC news correspondent and former and future evening news anchor Peter Jennings and coverage continued for many hours until the outcome was known Howard Cosell went with the film crew to get interviews in the village McKay later won an Emmy Award for his coverage 51 We just got the final word you know when I was a kid my father used to say Our greatest hopes and our worst fears are seldom realized Our worst fears have been realized tonight They ve now said that there were eleven hostages Two were killed in their rooms yesterday morning nine were killed at the airport tonight They re all gone Jim McKay 52 By the time the 1976 edition of the Winter Games came around McKay was now installed at the host a role he would play throughout the 1970s and 80s ABC s coverage of NASCAR and the Daytona 500 edit From 1962 to 1978 the Daytona 500 was shown on ABC s Wide World of Sports citation needed During the 1960s and early 1970s the race was filmed and an edited highlight package aired the following weekend In 1974 ABC began the first semi live coverage joined in progress of the Daytona 500 Coverage was normally timed to begin when the race was halfway over Brief taped highlights of the start and early segments were shown then ABC joined the race live already in progress picking up approximately the last 90 minutes of the race This format continued through 1978 The 1976 race was held on the same day of the final day of competition in the Winter Olympics also broadcast on ABC ABC carried 30 minutes of live coverage of the start of the race then switched to the Olympics for 90 minutes to carry taped coverage of the final two competitive events a cross country ski race and the final runs in the bobsled held earlier that day Then it was back to Daytona for about an hour and a half for the finish ESPN began showing NASCAR races in 1981 with the first event being at North Carolina Speedway The last of its 265 Cup telecasts that number includes some on ABC Sports was the 2000 Atlanta fall race now the Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 ABC launches Monday Night Baseball edit In 1976 ABC picked up the television rights 53 for Monday Night Baseball 54 games from NBC For most of its time on ABC the Monday night games were held on dead travel days when few games were scheduled The team owners liked that arrangement as the national telecasts didn t compete against their stadium box offices ABC on the other hand found the arrangement far more complicated ABC often had only one or two games to pick from for each telecast from a schedule designed by Major League Baseball While trying to give all of the teams national exposure ABC ended up with far too many games between sub 500 clubs from small markets Reviewing the network s first two weeks of coverage for Sports Illustrated William Leggett opined It may be unfair to say that Monday Night Baseball as it has been presented by ABC so far this season is the worst television treatment ever given a major sport because by all odds somebody at sometime must have done something worse But it is difficult to remember when or where that might have happened 55 Just like with Monday Night Football ABC brought in the concept of the three man booth originally with Bob Prince Bob Uecker and Warner Wolf 56 as the primary crew to their baseball telecasts Said ABC Sports head Roone Arledge It ll take something different for it to work i e curb viewership yawns and lulls with Uecker as the real difference so Arledge reportedly hoped Prince disclosed to his broadcasting partner Jim Woods about his early worries about calling a network series for the first time Prince for one didn t have as much creative control over the broadcasts on ABC as he did calling Pittsburgh Pirates games on KDKA radio ABC s coverage 57 for such things as its camera work 58 59 they often followed fly balls like they did golf shots keeping the focus on the ball and its choice of announcers Bob Prince was accused of a National League bias 60 while Bob Uecker was considered to be just a Don Meredith 61 62 63 clone Bob Prince was gone by the fall of 1976 with Keith Jackson Howard Cosell 64 65 66 and guest analyst Reggie Jackson calling that year s American League Championship Series Warner Wolf Al Michaels and guest analyst Tom Seaver worked the NLCS On the subject of his dismissal from ABC Bob Prince said I hated Houston and ABC never let me be Bob Prince 67 68 president of abc sports In 1979 the start of ABC s Monday Night Baseball coverage was moved back to June due to poor ratings during the May sweeps period In place of April and May prime time games ABC began airing Sunday Afternoon Baseball games in September 69 The network also aired one Friday night game Yankees at Angels on July 13 of that year Coverage of the North American Soccer League and the FIFA World Cup edit In 1979 ABC Sports began covering the NASL in a deal that called for 9 telecasts of league games including the playoffs and Soccer Bowl After enduring briefly during the late 1970s attendances dropped after 1980 The sport s popularity fell and the media lost interest The deal with ABC to broadcast NASL matches was also lost in 1980 and the 1981 Soccer Bowl 70 71 was only shown on tape delay All of the franchises quickly became unprofitable and a salary cap enforced before the 1984 season only delayed the inevitable In 1982 PBS and ESPN provided the first thorough American television coverage of the FIFA World Cup ABC aired the first live telecast of the final ABC aired commercials during the live action Meanwhile PBS aired same day highlights of the top game of the day 1980s editThe Miracle on Ice edit The 1980 Winter Olympics was the setting for the Miracle on Ice a medal round men s ice hockey game in Lake Placid New York on February 22 The United States team made up of amateur and collegiate players and led by coach Herb Brooks defeated the Soviet team which consisted of veteran professional players with significant experience in international play The rest of the United States except those who watched the game live on Canadian television had to wait to see the game as ABC decided to broadcast the late afternoon game on tape delay in prime time 72 Sportscaster Al Michaels who was calling the game on ABC along with former Montreal Canadiens goalie Ken Dryden picked up on the countdown in his broadcast and delivered his famous call 73 Eleven seconds you ve got ten seconds the countdown going on right now Morrow up to Silk Five seconds left in the game Do you believe in miracles YES During the broadcast wrap up after the game ABC Olympic sports anchor Jim McKay compared the American victory over the Soviet professionals to a group of Canadian college football players defeating the Pittsburgh Steelers the recent Super Bowl champions and at the height of their dynasty Breaking the news of John Lennon s murder edit On the evening of December 8 1980 English musician John Lennon formerly of the Beatles was fatally shot in the archway of the Dakota his residence in New York City When Roone Arledge who was presiding over ABC s telecast of Monday Night Football in his capacity as its executive producer received word of Lennon s death a game between the New England Patriots and the Miami Dolphins was tied with less than a minute left in the fourth quarter and the Patriots were driving toward the potential winning score As the Patriots tried to put themselves in position for a field goal Arledge informed Frank Gifford and Howard Cosell of the shooting and suggested that they be the ones to report on the murder Cosell who had interviewed Lennon during a Monday Night Football broadcast in 1974 was chosen to do so but was apprehensive of it at first as he felt the game should take precedence and that it was not their place to break such a big story Gifford convinced Cosell otherwise saying that he should not hang on to the news as the significance of the event was much greater than the finish of the game The following exchange began with thirty seconds left in the fourth quarter shortly after Gifford and Cosell had been informed of what had transpired 74 Cosell but the game s suddenly been placed in total perspective for us I ll finish this they re in the hurry up offense Gifford Third down four Chuck Foreman it ll be fourth down Matt Cavanaugh will let it run down for one final attempt he ll let the seconds tick off to give Miami no opportunity whatsoever Whistle blows Timeout is called with three seconds remaining John Smith is on the line And I don t care what s on the line Howard you have got to say what we know in the booth Cosell Yes we have to say it Remember this is just a football game no matter who wins or loses An unspeakable tragedy confirmed to us by ABC News in New York City John Lennon outside of his apartment building on the West Side of New York City the most famous perhaps of all of the Beatles shot twice in the back rushed to Roosevelt Hospital dead on arrival Hard to go back to the game after that newsflash which in duty bound we have to take Frank Gifford after a pause Indeed it is 75 Sports journalism and ABC SportsBeat magazine show edit In the fall of 1981 Cosell debuted a serious investigative 30 minute magazine show ABC SportsBeat on ABC s weekend schedule He made news and covered topics that were not part of general sports coverage including the first story about drugs in professional sports the story of former Minnesota Viking Carl Eller s cocaine use an in depth look at how NFL owners negotiated tax breaks and incentives for building new stadiums and together with Arthur Ashe an investigation into apartheid and sports Though ratings were low Cosell and his staff earned three Emmy Awards for excellence in reporting and broke new ground in sports journalism 76 At the time ABC SportsBeat was the first and only regularly scheduled network program devoted solely to sports journalism To produce this pioneering program Cosell recruited a number of employees from outside the ranks of those that produced games who he felt might be too invested in the success of the athletes and leagues to look at the hard news He brought in Michael Marley then a sportswriter for The Washington Post Lawrie Mifflin a writer for The New York Times and a 20 year old researcher who quickly rose to an associate producer Alexis Denny As a sophomore at Yale University Ms Denny had been a student in a seminar that Cosell taught on the Business of Big Time Sports in America and was selected by the Director of Monday Night Football to join their production crew She took her junior year off to join Cosell s staff at ABC Headquarters in New York City and produced many segments including in 1983 a half hour special report previewing the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles 77 Despite the games being one of ABC s biggest investments with a record breaking 225 million dollar rights fee at the time 78 the 30 minute documentary style program produced by Denny showed many sides of the questions about the viability of the Games themselves from concerns about traffic pollution and terrorism to a look at how the sponsorship deals were structured ABC s coverage of golf edit See also History of the American Broadcasting Company Merger with Capital Cities purchase of ESPN and reprogramming Friday nights 1981 1990 ABC broadcast golf events for the first time in 1962 when it began televising the Open Championship as part of its anthology series Wide World of Sports The network later gained the broadcast rights to the PGA Championship in 1965 and the U S Open in 1966 Chris Schenkel and Byron Nelson were the initial hosts of the tournament coverage In 1975 Jim McKay and Dave Marr became the lead broadcast team while Bob Rosburg joined the network as the first ever on course reporter and Peter Alliss joined as a co anchor Beginning in 1982 ABC adopted its most well known format of the Wide World of Sports era The broadcast operated using anchor teams in which an anchor and an analyst would call all of the action from the tower at the 18th hole and the teams would be rotated on coverage after about a half hour Meanwhile the three on course reporters which included Judy Rankin and Ed Sneed in addition to Rosburg would be utilized when prompted by the anchor team McKay and Marr would be the lead team with Jack Whitaker and Alliss 79 as the second team Occasionally Rosburg or Whitaker would host if McKay was unavailable while Roger Twibell would take over the secondary team After his 1986 Masters win Jack Nicklaus would appear on ABC after the end of his round and served as an analyst for the rest of the telecast ABC s stint with the USFL edit On Sunday March 6 1983 ABC televised three games The Los Angeles Express and New Jersey Generals 80 played in the primary regional televised USFL game 81 with the Express winning 20 15 ABC also televised the Chicago Blitz at Washington Federals and the Philadelphia Stars at Denver Gold According to an ABC spokesman the network averaged a 6 0 rating 82 for their first USFL season This was slightly better than the network s coverage of the first American Football League football season back in 1960 In its second year AFL games on ABC averaged a 6 1 rating and in 1962 the third year a 6 5 The coverage was nonetheless quite low for a Big Three television network with a June 17 prime time regular season game between Chicago and Birmingham finishing as the lowest rated prime time broadcast of the week with a 4 8 rating 83 ABC offered the USFL a 4 year 175 million TV deal to play in the spring in 1986 By this point the league had driven out most of the owners who would have been willing to accept those terms The owners in the league walked away from what averaged out to 67 million per year starting in 1986 to pursue their big picture merger with the NFL The deregulation of college football on television begins edit In June 1984 a US Supreme Court ruling ended the control that the NCAA had exercised on televised college football and allowed individual colleges to make their own TV deals CBS obtained rights to Big 10 and Pac 10 home games while ABC obtained rights to the College Football Association essentially home games for all schools other than the B10 and P10 CBS also separately obtained rights to Boston College Miami and Army Navy CBS and ABC typically carried only 1 2 games per time slot rather than the frequent large slates of regional games in prior years Meanwhile ESPN carried live CFA games each Saturday typically at noon and 7 30 p m WTBS carried SEC games USA Network also carried games primarily the Big 8 The end of Howard Cosell s tenure on Monday Night Football and later ABC edit Cosell continued to draw criticism during Monday Night Football with one of his offhand comments during the September 5 1983 game igniting a controversy and laying the groundwork for his departure at the end of that season In a game between the Washington Redskins and Dallas Cowboys Cosell referred to Alvin Garrett an African American wide receiver for the Redskins as a little monkey Cosell noted that Garrett s small stature and not his race was the basis for his comment citing the fact that he had used the term to describe his grandchildren Later a special on Howard Cosell showed him calling Mike Adamle a white player a little monkey Stung by the unrelenting barrage of remarks Cosell claimed upon his departure from Monday Night Football that the NFL had become a stagnant bore In Cosell s book I Never Played the Game he devoted an entire chapter Monkey Business to the Garrett episode In the book Cosell also said that ABC should have had the right to choose its own Monday Night schedule In his mind Monday Night Football is what elevated the NFL in popularity over Major League Baseball He felt that this should have been ABC s reward for raising the league s profile After Cosell s memoir I Never Played the Game which among other things chronicled his disenchantment with fellow ABC commentators was published in September 1985 Cosell was taken off scheduled announcing duties for that year s World Series and was dismissed by ABC television shortly thereafter Cosell s book was seen by many as a bitter hate rant against those who had offended him TV Guide published excerpts of his memoirs and reported that they had never had as many viewers responses and they were overwhelmingly negative towards Cosell The magazine reported some of the printable ones saying things such as Will Rogers never met Howard Cosell In I Never Played the Game Cosell popularized the word jockocracy originally coined by author Robert Lipsyte describing how athletes were given announcing jobs that they had not earned Coincidentally he was replaced for the 1985 World Series broadcast by Tim McCarver himself a former baseball player to join Al Michaels and Jim Palmer The title of the book is a double entendre meaning that Cosell never actually played the game of football or any other professional sport he broadcast as well as implying that he never played the game of corporate politics Cosell is notably absent from the Pro Football Hall of Fame 84 85 ABC airs its very first Super Bowl edit As a result of the 1982 television contract signed by the NFL with the three networks this game was the first Super Bowl to be televised in the United States by ABC as they earned their first turn at the Super Bowl with a new alternation process started for the 1983 game Previously the Super Bowl telecast alternated between CBS and NBC while the networks simulcast the first AFL NFL World Championship Game Frank Gifford was the play by play announcer while then ABC Sports analyst Don Meredith and then Washington Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann served as color commentators Al Michaels and Jim Lampley hosted the pregame 2 hours halftime and postgame Lampley presided over the Vince Lombardi Trophy presentation ceremony coverage for ABC Michaels and Lampley were joined by analysts O J Simpson who would normally have been the second color commentator when interviewed as to why Theismann would join Gifford and Meredith in the booth instead of Simpson director Chet Forte was quoted in the January 14 1985 edition of Broadcasting Magazine as saying that Theismann could contribute more due to having played both teams in the regular season as well as having played in the two previous Super Bowls 86 and Tom Landry in a separate booth during the game Also helping out with ABC s coverage were Jack Whitaker Dick Schaap Donna de Varona Ray Gandolf and ABC News reporters Stone Phillips Jeff Greenfield Judd Rose and Bill Redeker This would be the only ABC Super Bowl for Gifford as play by play announcer the final game for Don Meredith and the second and last time a commentator for the Super Bowl Theismann was an active player Jack Kemp in Super Bowl II was the only other active player to provide commentary Michaels would call ABC s next six Super Bowls until the network lost their NFL rights in 2006 ABC airs the Indianapolis 500 live for the first time edit From 1965 to 1970 ABC televised a combination of filmed and or taped recorded highlights of the race the following weekend on Wide World of Sports The 1965 and 1966 presentations were in black and white while all subsequent presentations have been in color From 1971 to 1985 the Indianapolis 500 was shown on a same day tape delay basis Races were edited down to a between two and three hour broadcast and shown in prime time It was also blacked out in the Indianapolis market until a later date The broadcasts would typically open with the rendition of Back Home Again in Indiana and the starting command but no other pre race ceremonies In addition the broadcast was supplemented with some pre recorded in depth featurettes aired during down times Later telecasts included live introductions at the top and bottom of the broadcast with the closing segment sometimes an interview with the race winner which by that time had been revealed to the viewers During this period the announcers commentary at both the start and finish of the race were recorded as those events transpired However the commentary of the middle parts of the race was semi scripted and recorded in post production and edited into the broadcast as it was being aired Starting in 1986 the race has been shown live in flag to flag coverage In the Indianapolis market as well as other parts of Indiana the live telecast is blacked out and shown tape delayed to encourage live attendance On March 21 2018 NBC Sports announced that it had acquired the television rights to the IndyCar Series after previously serving as cable rightsholder through NBCSN or CNBC for races not aired by ABC replacing the package of races on ABC with a package of eight races on NBC including the Indianapolis 500 ending ABC s 54 year tenure as broadcaster of the event 87 88 ABC s final IndyCar telecast was the second race of the Detroit Grand Prix on June 3 2018 ABC finally centralizes the Triple Crown of thoroughbred racing edit In 1977 ABC was awarded the contract to televise the Preakness Triple Crown Productions was formed in 1985 after CBS terminated its contract with NYRA ABC Sports won the rights to broadcast all three races as well as many prep races Ratings went up after the package was centralized Other than the Kentucky Derby the Preakness Stakes and Belmont Stakes were considered the two other races ABC Sports which had broadcast the Derby since 1975 wanted to televise all the races as a three race package CBS Sports which showed the other two races had much lower ratings for them with the possible exceptions of years in which the Crown was at stake like 1973 1977 and 1978 Combined broadcast arrangements with ABC continued until 2001 when NBC Sports took over Al Michaels joins Monday Night Football edit Michaels served as the play by play announcer teaming with Frank Gifford for a two man booth in 1986 During that season the Miami Dolphins again made records with the biggest blowout in Monday Night Football history in a 45 3 rout of the then 10 1 New York Jets the record was later tied and subsequently broken in 2005 see below Also in 1986 when Al Michaels became unavailable because he was calling Major League Baseball s League Championship Series Frank Gifford moved up into the play by play spot while Lynn Swann or O J Simpson filled in as the color commentator Gifford would once again call the play by play when Michaels was busy calling the World Series in 1987 and 1989 and the National League Championship Series in 1988 In 1987 Gifford and Michaels were joined by Dan Dierdorf returning the series to its original concept of three announcers in the booth The trio would last for 11 seasons through the conclusion of the 1997 season In 1989 television composer Edd Kalehoff created a new arrangement of Johnny Pearson s Heavy Action by that time fully synonymous with the series This more or less replaced an original composition by Charles Fox Also debuting in 1989 was Hank Williams Jr performing All My Rowdy Friends Are Here on Monday Night sung to the music of his 1984 hit All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight The beginning of ABC s regular college basketball package edit When ABC s coverage 89 90 began in 1987 91 92 93 the network primarily covered 94 95 the Big Ten Big 8 96 and Pac 10 Conferences By 1991 around the time NBC was phasing out their own college basketball coverage ABC ramped up its basketball coverage in an effort to fill the void 97 98 As a result the network also started to cover games focusing on teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC and Southeastern Conference SEC Otherwise it was essentially a considerable hodge podge with an ACC game one week or a Pac 10 or Big 10 game the next The games that were broadcast were a hodge podge of conference matchups even after the ESPN on ABC brand change with SEC and Big East match ups occasionally being shown alongside frequent ACC Big 12 and Pac 10 match ups ABC s early regular season broadcasts were for the most part technically time buys from organizations such as Raycom 99 100 101 102 particularly around 1990 91 or sister network ESPN This in return was a way to avoid union contracts which require that 100 of network shows had to use crew staff who were network union members 103 During the early 1990s Raycom paid ABC US 1 8 million for six weeks of network airtime of 26 regional games The format allowed Raycom to control the games and sell the advertising 104 In the 1987 88 season ABC did not air any college basketball games during the last three weekends of February due to the network s coverage of the Winter Olympics As previously mentioned coverage by ABC steadily increased during the early 1990s 105 by the 1991 92 season ABC was carrying regional games in many timeslots on Saturday and Sunday afternoons By 1997 ABC s presenting sponsor was Paine Webber 106 ABC broadcasts its final Olympic Games edit The Calgary Winter Olympics were the first winter games to earn a significant television revenue base where the 1980 Lake Placid Games generated only US 20 7 million worldwide OCO 88 generated 324 9 million in broadcast rights 107 The overwhelming majority of television revenues came from the American Broadcasting Company ABC which agreed in 1984 to pay 309 million for American television rights over three times the 91 5 million it paid for the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo 108 The deal at the time the highest amount ever paid for a sporting event allowed organizers to announce the Games would be debt free 109 The CTV Television Network paid C 4 5 million for Canadian rights and to act as the host broadcaster 110 The games were also televised on CBC While western European nations paid US 5 7 million combined 111 OCO 88 made several alterations to the Olympic program as part of efforts to ensure value for its broadcast partners Premier events including ice hockey and figure skating were scheduled for prime time and the Games were lengthened to 16 days from the previous 12 to ensure three weekends of coverage 112 However a significant downturn in advertising revenue for sporting events resulted in ABC forecasting significant financial losses on the Games Calgary organizers appreciated their fortunate timing in signing the deal King described the timing of the contract with ABC as the passing of the sun and the moon at the right time for Calgary 111 ABC lost an estimated 60 million and broadcast rights to the 1992 Winter Olympics were later sold to the CBS network for 243 million a 20 reduction compared to Calgary 113 The network at the insistence of new owner Capital Cities Communications much to the chagrin of Roone Arledge s successor at ABC Sports Dennis Swanson opted not to bid for the rights to show any future Games Subsequently The Walt Disney Company acquired Capital Cities ABC in 1995 and began the process of putting more effort into the branding of ABC s sports channel ESPN than of ABC Sports itself ABC loses the baseball package to CBS and the 1989 World Series earthquake edit In 1989 the final year of ABC s contract with Major League Baseball ABC moved the baseball telecasts to Thursday nights 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 in hopes of getting leg up against NBC s Cosby Show After braving the traumatic Loma Prieta earthquake 121 and an all time low 16 4 rating for the 1989 World Series 122 Al Michaels took ABC s loss of baseball to CBS 123 124 as tough to accept Michaels added that baseball was such an early stepchild at ABC and had come such a long way 125 Gary Thorne 126 who served as ABC s backup play by play announcer in 1989 and was an on field reporter for the World Series 127 that year and covering the trophy presentation in the process simply laughed while saying Great reviews just as ABC baseball ends 128 Game 3 of the 1989 World Series 129 130 131 initially scheduled for October 17 132 was delayed by ten days due to the Loma Prieta earthquake 133 The earthquake struck at approximately 5 04 p m Pacific Time At the moment the quake struck ABC s color commentator Tim McCarver 134 was narrating taped highlights of the previous Series game Viewers saw the video signal begin to break up heard McCarver repeat a sentence as the shaking distracted him and heard McCarver s colleague Al Michaels 135 exclaim I ll tell you what we re having an earth 136 At that moment the feed from Candlestick Park was lost 137 The network put up a green ABC Sports graphic as the audio was switched to a telephone link Michaels had to pickup a POTS phone in the press booth phones work off a separate power supply and call ABC headquarters in New York at which point they put him back on the air Michaels cracked Well folks that s the greatest open in the history of television bar none accompanied by the excited screams of fans who had no idea of the devastation elsewhere 138 After about a 15 minute delay ABC aired a rerun of Roseanne 139 140 and subsequently The Wonder Years 141 in the meantime ABC was able to regain power via a backup generator 142 ABC s play by play man Al Michaels who was familiar 129 with the San Francisco Bay Area 143 dating back to his days working for the San Francisco Giants from 1974 1976 then proceeded to relay reports to Ted Koppel 144 145 146 147 at ABC News headquarters in Washington D C Al Michaels was ultimately nominated for an Emmy for his on site reporting at the World Series 1990s editThe Pan American Games from Havana Cuba edit ABC was the first American television network to broadcast the Pan American Games in 1963 when they devoted one episode of their Wide World of Sports 148 anthology program to the games In 1991 ABC 149 150 sought the rights 151 to the Pan Am Games in Havana 152 The negotiations became bogged down in the U S embargo against Cuba 153 which forbade direct payments to Cuba After a protracted negotiation with the U S Justice Department 154 ABC eventually inked a deal 155 to broadcast the games The fee was paid 156 indirectly to avoid the embargo ABC partnered 157 with Ted Turner s TNT 158 159 160 161 cable channel for the Havana games TNT aired the prime time coverage with Ernie Johnson Jr as host while Brent Musburger 162 who had been fired by CBS in March 1990 anchored ABC s weekend afternoon coverage This would be the last time the games were broadcast by a major broadcast network in the United States All coverage since has aired on cable or Spanish language networks ABC s alignment with the CFA and the Bowl Championship Series edit In 1991 ABC acquired the rights to the CFA from CBS in addition to the B10 P10 and went back to televising several regional games in many timeslots Meanwhile Notre Dame broke apart from the CFA and signed a deal with NBC for its home games 1992 was the first year that ABC made most of its regional games available via pay per view similar to what became known as ESPN GamePlan In 1996 CBS obtained rights to the SEC Big East and Army Navy Game and also added a Conference USA game ABC however still had rights to the SEC title game In 1998 ABC was awarded the first exclusive Bowl Championship Series television contract beginning with the 1999 series In 2005 the network lost rights to most of the BCS games including the BCS National Championship Game to Fox beginning with the 2006 07 series in a deal worth close to 20 million per game 163 Although due to a separate arrangement with the Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association ABC retained the broadcast rights to events in the series that were held at the Rose Bowl stadium such as the Rose Bowl Game and the 2010 BCS Championship ABC sister network ESPN assumed the BCS rights including the rights to the Rose Bowl beginning in 2010 164 Keith Jackson who was supposed to retire after the 1998 season stayed with the network until 2005 in which he announced games televised primarily from the West Coast where he was based Jackson s last broadcast with the network was the 2006 Rose Bowl In 1999 as Jackson reduced his schedule ABC began the year with the team of Jackson and Bob Griese intact albeit not as the lead announcing team as they almost exclusively handled action from Pac 10 Conference teams Brent Musburger and Dan Fouts returned as did the longtime tandem of Brad Nessler and Gary Danielson These assignments were not permanent and many different combinations were used 165 ABC locked its broadcasting teams in mid season Jackson was teamed with Fouts Musburger was paired with Danielson and Nessler with Bob Griese 166 Counter programming the Winter Olympics with boxing edit In 1992 ABC announced plans to counterprogram 167 the Winter Olympics on CBS with boxing a sport at that point seldom seen on network television This particular boxing series was sponsored by Fruit of the Loom 168 169 ABC proceeded to forgo the typical 300 000 rights fees of the prior year and instead set a 75 000 limit and scheduled three consecutive Saturdays of action 170 Baseball temporarily returns to ABC edit After a four year long hiatus when CBS exclusively carried the over the air Major League Baseball television rights ABC returned to baseball in again alongside NBC 1994 Under a six year plan Major League Baseball was intended to receive 85 of the first 140 million in advertising revenue or 87 5 of advertising revenues and corporate sponsorship from the games until sales top a specified level 50 of the next 30 million and 80 of any additional money Prior to this Major League Baseball was projected to take a projected 55 cut in rights fees and receive a typical rights fee from the networks After NBC was finished with their post 1994 All Star Game six week baseball coverage ABC with a reunited Al Michaels Tim McCarver and Jim Palmer as the primary crew then picked up where NBC left off by televising six more regular season games Joining the team of Michaels McCarver and Palmer was Lesley Visser who served as the lead field reporter for the CBS baseball coverage from 1990 to 1993 Visser was reuniting with McCarver for whom she had worked with on CBS The regular season games fell under the Baseball Night in America umbrella which premiered on July 16 1994 In even numbered years NBC had the rights to the All Star Game and both League Championship Series while ABC had the World Series and newly created Division Series In odd numbered years the postseason and All Star Game television rights were supposed to alternate The long term plans for The Baseball Network crumbled when the players went on strike on August 12 1994 thus forcing the cancellation of the World Series In July 1995 ABC and NBC who wound up having to share the duties of televising the 1995 World Series 171 as a way to recoup with ABC broadcasting Games 1 4 and 5 and NBC broadcasting Games 2 3 and 6 announced that they were opting out of their agreement with Major League Baseball Both networks figured that as the delayed 1995 baseball season opened without a labor agreement there was no guarantee against another strike Both networks soon publicly vowed to cut all ties with Major League Baseball for the remainder of the 20th century Joining forces with the World League of American Football Major League Soccer and the Arena Football League edit ABC Sports broadcast some games in both seasons mostly on Sunday afternoons ABC showed the 1991 World Bowl while USA carried the game in 1992 The reported cost of the contracts varied the L A Times said that ABC had paid 28m for two years and USA 25m For the 1992 season the WLAF charged each network less for broadcasting rights The New York Times reported that ABC s annual fee went down from 12m to 3m and USA s from 14m to 10m The ABC coverage s average ratings fell from 1991 to 1992 from around 2 1 to 1 7 and USA s from 1 2 to 1 1 Both networks asked the WLAF to expand into two major U S markets for 1993 Major League Soccer with ESPN and ABC Sports announced the league s first television rights deal on March 15 1994 without any players coaches or teams in place The three year agreement covered English language broadcasting for the 1996 1998 seasons and committed 10 games on ESPN 25 on ESPN2 and the MLS Cup on ABC The deal gave MLS no rights fees but the advertising revenue was divided between the league and networks 172 ABC under the Wide World of Sports umbrella aired the ArenaBowl five consecutive years from 1998 02 Overhauling ABC s golf coverage edit In 1990 Roger Twibell took over as lead anchor with Dave Marr as his analyst Peter Alliss became sole anchor of the second anchor team During this period ABC acquired the rights to several non major PGA Tour events mostly important events such as the Memorial Tournament and The Tour Championship 1990 would also mark the final PGA Championship to be broadcast by ABC In 1992 Brent Musburger who had been heavily criticized for his hosting of golf coverage while with CBS took over as host Marr was dismissed from the network while Twibell was reassigned to ESPN s golf coverage although he occasionally hosted on ABC for a few lower level tournaments The format was also reorganized to more emphasize the on course reporters Steve Melnyk moved over from CBS to become lead analyst however Alliss would anchor for stretches during the telecast Beyond the team in the booth all of ABC s other voices were on the course including Rankin Rosburg and newcomer Mark Rolfing After facing much criticism for its golf coverage especially Jack Nicklaus involvement and Musburger s perceived lack of knowledge of the game ABC decided to completely overhaul its visual presentation becoming more in line with cable partner ESPN while changing the format for its coverage to be more of the standard in line with the other networks featuring a lead anchor team announcers assigned to individual holes and on course reporters Mike Tirico became the host with Curtis Strange serving as lead analyst Steve Melnyk Peter Alliss and Ian Baker Finch became hole announcers while Bob Rosburg Judy Rankin and Rolfing were the primary on course reporters ABC continued its renewed commitment to golf when it reached a new television contract in 1999 in which the network gained the broadcast rights to many events including the entire fall PGA Tour season and two of the new World Golf Championships events ABC partnered with ESPN on much of its coverage with ESPN carrying the early rounds of tournament events that ABC broadcast in addition to those that were part of the cable channel s own schedule the ABC team would work the cable telecasts in these cases Beginning in 1999 ABC aired a series of match play golf challenge matches on Monday nights All the matches have involved World Number 1 Tiger Woods and the first seven were run by his representatives IMG Monday Night Golf proved to be an initial success drawing more viewers than the final round of the U S Open 173 and being second only to the final round of the Masters Tournament in terms of golf broadcasts 174 Ratings increased significantly for the second match 175 but they declined rapidly after that 176 177 and the event was initially cancelled after the 2005 edition with Woods also wishing to take a break from the event The end of the Pro Bowlers Tour on ABC and Wide World of Sports edit Although the Professional Bowlers Tour maintained high ratings throughout most of its years ABC which was transitioning to new management after being purchased by The Walt Disney Company in 1996 opted against renewing its contract with the PBA primarily due to the overall decline of the sport in the late 1980s and 1990s This was partially attributed to the explosion of sports viewing choices in the 1990s especially on cable television the lack of any one bowling star to follow and an aging audience for televised bowling Research in 1997 showed that 67 of the viewing audience for network TV bowling was at least 50 years old 178 The final PBT broadcast aired on June 21 1997 at the St Clair Classic in Fairview Heights Ill that was won by Walter Ray Williams Jr It was a very emotional broadcast in which Williams Jr and Pete Weber the game s two giants at the time battled it out until the very end In later years with the rise of cable television offering more outlets for sports programming Wide World of Sports lost many of the events that had been staples of the program for many years many although not all of them ended up on ESPN a sister network to ABC for most of its existence Ultimately on January 3 1998 Jim McKay announced that Wide World of Sports in its traditional anthology series had been canceled after a 37 year run The Wide World of Sports name remained in use afterward as an umbrella title for ABC s weekend sports programming Major changes at Monday Night Football edit In 1997 ABC began using a scoring bug showing the game clock and score throughout the entire broadcast For the 1998 season ABC pushed Monday Night Football back an hour it has usually aired at 9 00 p m Eastern Time A special pre game show was created Monday Night Blast hosted by Chris Berman from the ESPN Zone restaurant in Baltimore The game would start around 8 20 p m Eastern for this particular season Despite leaving the booth Frank Gifford stayed on one more year as a special contributor to the pre game show usually presenting a single segment Beginning in 1999 Monday Night Football telecasts used a computer generated yellow line to mark where a team needs to get a first down a method first used by ABC sister cable channel ESPN 1999 also saw the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game being moved from Saturday afternoon to Monday night It would remain on Monday night through 2005 2000s editABC lands the NHL edit In the 1992 93 179 and 1993 94 seasons ABC televised six 180 weekly regional telecasts 181 182 on Sunday afternoons beginning in March 183 or the last three Sundays 184 of the regular season This marked the first time that regular season National Hockey League games were broadcast on American network television 185 since 1974 75 when NBC was the NHL s American broadcast television partner ABC would then televise three weeks worth of playoff games 186 187 or the first three Sundays 188 189 of the playoffs 190 191 192 193 The network did not televise the Stanley Cup Finals which instead were televised nationally by ESPN and by Prime Ticket in Los Angeles 1993 and MSG Network in New York 1994 Games televised on ABC were not subject to blackout These broadcasts just as was the case with the 1999 2004 package were essentially time buys 194 by ESPN 195 196 In other words ABC would sell three hour blocks of airtime to ESPN 197 which in return would produce supply broadcasters and sell advertising In August 1998 ABC ESPN and ESPN2 signed a five year television deal with the NHL worth a total of approximately US 600 million 198 199 or 120 million per year The 120 million per year that ABC and ESPN paid for rights dwarfed the 5 5 million that the NHL received from American national broadcasts in the 1991 92 season 200 ABC s terms of this deal included rights to the NHL All Star Game 4 to 5 weeks of regular season action with three games a week weekend Stanley Cup Playoff games and the rest of the Stanley Cup Finals Following the 2003 04 season ESPN was only willing to renew its contract for two additional years at 60 million per year 201 ABC refused to televise the Stanley Cup Finals in prime time suggesting that the Finals games it would telecast be played on weekend afternoons including a potential Game 7 Disney executives later conceded that they overpaid for the 1999 2004 deal so the company s offer to renew the television rights was lower in 2004 202 ABC airs its final boxing card edit Prior to the advent of Wide World of Sports many major heavyweight boxing title matches were televised via closed circuit this generally meant that you had go to a movie theater to see it pay a decent sized amount of money to get it and then watch it on a giant screen Often Wide World of Sports would show full length replays of the fights a week or two later these replays were usually called by Howard Cosell who became one of the best known and possibly most controversial sportscaster in American television history ABC s final boxing card occurred on June 17 2000 203 204 with Jose Luis Castillo upsetting Stevie Johnston in the lightweight championship bout in Bell Gardens California 205 Seven years after ABC s last boxing card they were scheduled to broadcast a card from Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City New Jersey on April 22 2007 The card would ve featured former light heavyweight champion Antonio Tarver facing off against Elvir Muriqi Promoter Joe DeGuardia of Star Boxing had been working on the time buy deal The production would ve been handled by ABC s sister company ESPN with Friday Night Fights commentators Joe Tessitore and Teddy Atlas Dan Fouts Dennis Miller and later John Madden join Monday Night Football edit Unexpectedly comedian Dennis Miller joined the cast in 2000 along with Dan Fouts 206 The move was ultimately regarded as a bust by many viewers and commentators ABC briefly considered adding radio personality Rush Limbaugh before Miller was added to the broadcast team despite having no prior sports broadcast experience Limbaugh would instead be assigned as a commentator to Sunday NFL Countdown on ABC sister ESPN Miller demonstrated a knowledge of the game and its personalities although at times he tended to lapse into sometimes obscure analogy riddled streams of consciousness similar to the rants of his standup comedy act ABC even set up a webpage dedicated to explaining Miller s sometimes obscure pop culture references Soon it would become apparent that Miller s comedy did not mix with football In 2002 both Dennis Miller and Dan Fouts were dropped and John Madden joined Al Michaels in a two man booth Madden was a coach for the Oakland Raiders namesake of the seminal Madden NFL video game series and a successful broadcaster for 21 years first with CBS until 1993 and then with Fox before joining Monday Night Football ABC and ESPN outbids NBC for the NBA contract edit In late 2001 the NBA was in the midst of putting together a new broadcast and cable television deal At the time conventional wisdom was that NBC would renew its existing broadcasting contract with the league An October 5 2001 Sports Business Daily article cited The New York Times sports columnist Richard Sandomir regarding the possibility of ESPN joining with ABC in obtaining a portion of the contract it would be difficult to imagine the NBA being so overwhelmed by an ESPN offer that it would let ESPN team up for a broadcast deal with ABC that would yield fewer games promotion and exposure The negotiations were closely watched by those in the business world as it was the first time that a major sports league crafted a television deal in the new economic environment since the September 11 terrorist attacks a few months before Declining ratings for NBC s NBA game telecasts had already led many who to believe that the NBA s next television rights fee would be lower than previous years and the economic recession made that a likely scenario As predicted NBC s offer to the league was lower than the previous agreement s amount Had the NBA agreed to the network s offer it would have been the first sports league to experience a decline in rights fees However the NBA rejected NBC s offer and after the network s exclusive negotiating period with the league expired ABC and ESPN stepped in On January 22 2002 the NBA signed a six year deal with The Walt Disney Company and Turner Sports which renewed an existing deal with TNT and allowed ABC and ESPN to acquire the rights to air the league s games ABC and ESPN reportedly paid an average of about US 400 million a season Technically ESPN pays the NBA for its broadcast rights and buys time on ABC to air select games this is noted in copyright tags during the end credits at the conclusion of the telecasts saying The preceding program has been paid for by ESPN Inc 207 In all the contract allowed the NBA to increase its rights fees by 25 In June 2007 and again in October 2014 the NBA renewed its television agreement with ESPN as well as TNT with the current contract extending through the 2024 25 season 208 209 210 The end of Monday Night Football on ABC edit Despite high ratings ABC lost millions of dollars on televising the games during the late 1990s and 2000s The NFL also indicated that it wanted Sunday night to be the new night for its marquee game because more people tend to watch television on Sundays and games held on that night would be more conducive to flexible scheduling a method by which some of the NFL s best games could be moved from the afternoon to the evening on Sunday on short notice Given these factors as well as the rise of ABC s ratings on Sunday night and the network s wish of protecting its Desperate Housewives franchise which they knew would be costly on April 18 2005 ABC and the NFL announced the end of their 36 year partnership with the Monday Night Football broadcasts being moved to ESPN starting with the 2006 season 211 the move was criticized by some of the Disney shareholders as well as NFL fans and purists However ESPN s ability to collect subscription fees from cable and satellite providers in addition to selling commercials made it more likely that ESPN could turn a profit on NFL telecasts as opposed to ABC s heavy losses The final Monday Night Football broadcast on ABC aired on December 26 2005 when the New York Jets hosted the New England Patriots from Giants Stadium Coincidentally both the first and last ABC Monday Night Football game telecasts ended with a score of 31 21 with the Jets on the losing end Vinny Testaverde holds the distinction of throwing the last touchdown pass in ABC s MNF telecast history it was to wide receiver Laveranues Coles Also Testaverde s pass set an NFL record most consecutive seasons with a touchdown pass 19 seasons 1987 2005 Patriots linebacker Mike Vrabel set a record of note during that last ABC telecast becoming the first player to catch two touchdown passes and record a quarterback sack in the same game The final play of the ABC era was a Patriots kneeldown by 44 year old reserve quarterback Doug Flutie John Madden said at the show s ending They can take football away from ABC on Monday nights but they can t take away the memories Being fully integrated into ESPN edit See also Criticism of ESPN Integration of ABC Sports In 1984 ABC reached a deal with Getty Oil to acquire ESPN ABC retained an 80 share and sold a 20 interest to Nabisco The Nabisco shares were later sold to the Hearst Corporation which still holds a 20 ownership stake in the channel today In May 1985 ABC was purchased by Capital Cities Communications in a 3 5 billion deal that was finalized in February 1986 212 Under Getty ownership the channel was unable to compete for the television rights to major sports events contracts as its majority corporate parent would not provide the funding leading ESPN to lose out for broadcast deals with the National Hockey League to USA Network and NCAA Division I college football to TBS For years the NFL NBA and Major League Baseball refused to consider cable as a means of broadcasting some of their games 213 However with the backing of ABC ESPN s ability to compete for major sports contracts greatly increased and gave it credibility within the sports broadcasting industry In February 1996 The Walt Disney Company purchased Capital Cities ABC for 19 billion and assumed the latter company s 80 stake in ESPN at that time 214 According to an analysis published by Barron s Magazine in February 2008 ESPN is probably worth more than 40 of Disney s entire value based on prevailing cash flow multiples in the industry 215 Despite it technically being a joint venture for all intents and purposes ESPN operates as a division of Disney as a result of the company s controlling interest as it was with ABC and Capital Cities before it In August 2006 ESPN announced that ABC Sports would be fully integrated into ESPN 216 using the channel s graphics and music for its sports presentations in addition to handling production responsibilities for the ABC sports telecasts The last live sporting event televised under the ABC Sports banner was the U S Championship Game of the Little League World Series on August 26 2006 ABC was slated to carry the Little League World Series Championship Game on August 27 but the game was postponed to August 28 due to rain and subsequently aired on ESPN2 The changeover took effect the following weekend to coincide with the start of the college football season with NBA IndyCar Series and NASCAR coverage eventually following suit 217 Despite the rebranding George Bodenheimer s official title remained President ESPN Inc and ABC Sports until his retirement at the end of 2011 upon which the ABC Sports portion of the title was retired 218 In addition ABC itself maintains the copyright over many of the ESPN branded broadcasts if they are not contractually assigned to the applicable league or organizer ABC affiliated stations owned by Hearst Television such as WTAE TV in Pittsburgh WCVB TV in Boston WMUR TV in Manchester New Hampshire WISN TV in Milwaukee and KMBC TV in Kansas City have the right of first refusal over the local simulcasts of ESPN televised Monday Night Football games involving teams within their home market which are very rarely waived to other local stations in their market areas Equally other Hearst owned stations affiliated with other networks such as NBC affiliate WBAL TV in Baltimore have been able to air NFL games from ESPN for the same reason 219 ESPN has been criticized for decreasing the number of sports broadcasts on ABC 220 221 222 especially during the summer months One such example is NASCAR from 2007 to 2009 ABC aired all of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup races along with the penultimate race to the chase From 2010 to 2014 ABC only broadcast three Sprint Cup races with only one Chase race held in Charlotte North Carolina to the outrage of many NASCAR fans and sponsors Several other events such as the Rose Bowl the Citrus Bowl and The Open Championship have also been moved from ABC to ESPN This however is not entirely the fault of ESPN as ABC in general has attracted a primarily female viewership in recent years with sports largely attracting a male dominated audience 223 ESPN Sports Saturday an analogy program in the vein of Wide World of Sports was cancelled after five seasons in August 2015 This was because ABC gave back the Sunday afternoon schedule to its affiliates four months later Also with the rise of the Internet and 24 7 mobile applications and streaming services specializing in sports news have eliminated the need for a traditional anthology sports program airing on broadcast television including ABC during weekend afternoons It also eliminated the need for a separate Sunday afternoon block on ABC which had seen a long decline until January 2016 It is now simply a simulcast of the 30 for 30 documentary series sourced from ESPN 2010s 2020s editThe major sporting events return edit After mainly being a home for the NBA and college football since the ESPN integration in 2006 the major sporting events returned to ABC nine years later To increase viewership after a disastrous cable only Wild Card game ESPN announced that their one Wild Card game for the 2015 16 playoffs would be simulcast on ABC bringing the NFL back to ABC for the first time since Super Bowl XL in 2006 ABC s involvement with ESPN s NFL coverage would expand in the next few years with the return of the Pro Bowl and the last day of the NFL Draft in 2018 with the latter eventually expanding to all three days in 2019 to go along with NFL Scouting Combine coverage regular season game simulcasts in 2020 NFL Training Camp coverage in 2021 and exclusive games beginning in 2022 ESPN also gained rights to a Divisional game which is also expected to be simulcast on ABC and two Super Bowls both exclusively on ABC In 2019 after not airing any games since 2008 Major League Soccer announced that the 2019 MLS Cup would air on ABC after years of being on ESPN and Fox ABC later returned to airing regular season and select Cup playoff games in 2020 ABC later expanded its soccer range by including international matchups 2019 also saw the return of college basketball to ABC for the first time since 2014 with 5 games airing on the network ABC s schedule later expanded to as many as 10 regular season games either men s or women s 2020 marked the return of pro baseball to ABC With Major League Baseball expanding their postseason for the COVID shortened 2020 season ESPN was given rights to air 7 of the 8 new Wild Card Series which saw 3 games air on ABC These were the network s first MLB games since the 1995 World Series In 2021 with ESPN s new agreement with MLB a possible and eventual postseason expansion and return of the Wild Card Series would see ABC get some games On August 8 ABC aired a Sunday Night Baseball game for the first time ever This marked ABC s first exclusive regular season broadcast since 1989 After being away from the game since 2004 in 2021 ESPN and the NHL reached a 7 year agreement to bring the NHL back to not only ESPN but to ABC as well With ESPN producing 100 games a season ABC will air about a tenth of the games under a brand new ABC Hockey Saturday package ABC will also air or simulcast select Stanley Cup Playoff games primarily on weekends as well as for the first time since 1980 all 7 games of the Stanley Cup Finals with the latter happening in 4 of the 7 years of ESPN s deal alternating with TNT After airing select tournament games since 2021 in 2023 the NCAA Women s Basketball Championship Game will move to ABC This will be the first time since 1995 that the Tournament Final will air on broadcast television To accommodate ABC s primetime lineup the game will move to an afternoon start similar to ESPN s Pro Bowl coverage in 2018 Other events that have made its way to ABC include F1 the UFC middle weekend Wimbledon matches Australian Open highlights the NCAA Women s Gymnastics Championships the NCAA Division I softball tournament the XFL which previously aired on ABC in 2020 which returned in 2023 and the Premier Lacrosse League See also editHistory of the American Broadcasting Company History of ESPN History of NBC SportsReferences edit Major sporting events are becoming even more dispersed across television Awful Announcing March 29 2017 Retrieved December 29 2018 Sandomir Richard January 4 2011 As Bowls Migrate to Cable Viewership Is Just a Number The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 29 2018 Our Respects to Edgar Jay Scherick Network TV Salesman Turns Program Chief Broadcasting July 8 1963 Brulia Timothy POST SEASON FOOTBALL TV ANNOUNCERS PDF profootballresearchers org Searchable Network TV Broadcasts ABC Sports rec sport baseball Walker amp Bellamy 2008 p 103 Club Owners Veto Television of Spring Games The Spokane Review Associated Press March 14 1954 p 1 Ames Walter June 13 1953 Major League Ball Game on KECA TV Topper Series Set as Irma Replacement Los Angeles Times p A5 Albany Club Owner Asks for Video Of Major League Games in His Area Hartford Courant Associated Press June 6 1953 Ames Walter May 8 1954 L A Las Vegas Relay Ready by Fall Lamenting Berle Seeks New Home Los Angeles Times p A5 TV Baseball Ban Denied By Official The Daily Reporter Associated Press March 11 1954 p 1 George Dave April 25 2008 San Francisco Palm Beach Post Was in Slump All His Career Beaver Valley Times May 15 1954 SPORTS BRIEFS Los Angeles Times March 6 1954 p B3 Reichler Joe September 29 1959 Dodgers Confident of National Flag Times Daily Associated Press p 5 Lowry Cynthia September 29 1959 Crosby Sings Plenty Kentucky New Era Associated Press p 18 United Press International September 30 1959 Vet Rookie Combine for LA Playoff Win The Modesto Bee p C10 TELEVISION NOTEBOOK Baseball Scores A Hit Among Week s Shows New York Times October 4 1959 p X17 Brulia Tim A CHRONOLOGY OF PRO FOOTBALL ON TELEVISION Part 1 PDF Pro Football Researchers Buck Jack 6 May 2014 Jack Buck OThat s a Winner o Sports Publishing ISBN 9781613216798 ABC Signs Erskine as TV Color Man Los Angeles Times Associated Press April 12 1960 p C7 Can t Hide No Hitter From Fans Erskine The Miami News Associated Press June 5 1960 p 2C No Major Changes Loom in TV Sports During 1961 Hartford Courant Associated Press January 1 1961 ABC Adds Saturday Fights Fifth Game Prescott Evening Courier Associated Press March 17 1960 p 13 TV Scout Preview St Petersburg Times April 16 1960 p 10B Jay Robert June 5 2015 A Year in TV Guide June 5th 1965 Television Obscurities Television Package is Baseball s Aim The Tuscaloosa News Associated Press December 11 1964 p 7 ABC Signs 12 2 Million Baseball Pact Reading Eagle Associated Press December 15 1964 p 14 New York Times April 8 1965 ABC Plans on Instant Replays The Miami News p 6B Tele Log Deseret News April 14 1965 p 2B Dubrow Rick April 16 1965 Baseball in New Venture Beaver County Times United Press International p 7 Adams Val August 19 1965 ABC Doubtful About Televising Baseball in 66 New York Times p 61 Reichler Joe August 22 1965 TV Baseball Has Problems The Herald Tribune Associated Press p 4D Page Don April 17 1965 SPORTSLOOK Up to Our Chins in NBA Dribbles Los Angeles Times p B2 Cady Steve February 24 1965 CBS RIVALS BACK SALE OF YANKEES New York Times p 46 Adams Val March 18 1965 Jackie Robinson Is Back in Baseball As a Commentator New York Times p 67 Milestone firsts in college basketball TV history Classic Sports TV and Media November 15 2013 Retrieved November 21 2013 Sarmento Mario R The NBA on Network Television Historical Analysis Vogan Travis 6 November 2018 ABC Sports The Rise and Fall of Network Sports Television Univ of California Press ISBN 9780520966260 Tax Court United States 1978 Reports of the United States Tax Court Volume 70 p 828 Source ABC ad for NBA game in Chicago Tribune January 3 1965 Friedman David December 22 2010 The NBA in the 1970s Roone s Revenge 20 Second Timeout The NBA on ABC Then and Now ABC Sports Online December 18 2002 1973 NBA Game of the Week Theme Song on YouTube Sarmento Mario R 1998 Page 1 THE NBA ON NETWORK TELEVISION A HISTORICAL ANALYSIS CiteSeerX 10 1 1 26 1281 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help How The American Sportsman was Born The American Sportsman TV com Archived from the original on 2009 02 26 Retrieved 2019 12 24 1976 Game program PDF Harold B Lee Library Billings A C Angelini J R MacArthur P J 22 August 2017 Olympic Television Broadcasting The Biggest Show on Earth ISBN 9781138930322 Jack Buck Rob Rains 1997 That s a Winner Sports Publishing LLC p 140 The Tragedy of the Munich Games DVD ABC Sports 2002 American Sportscasters Online interview with Jim McKay Americansportscastersonline com Retrieved 7 June 2010 NBC splits MLB Rights NBC Sports History Page Lucas Ed May 19 2016 Lucas ABC s Monday Night Baseball was ahead of its time The Jersey Journal Leggett William May 10 1976 ABC has the Monday blahs Sports Illustrated Retrieved October 20 2018 Shea Stuart 7 May 2015 Calling the Game Baseball Broadcasting from 1920 to the Present SABR Inc p 372 ISBN 9781933599410 Lovett Daniel J 17 April 2014 Anybody Seen Dan Lovett Memoirs of a Media Nomad Balboa Press p 185 ISBN 9781452594200 Leggett William December 20 1976 THE WINTER GAMES WIN A MEDAL Sports Illustrated Legget William May 10 1976 ABC HAS THE MONDAY BLAHS Sports Illustrated Forr James Bob Prince SABR Lucas Ed May 19 2016 Lucas ABC s Monday Night Baseball was ahead of its time The Jersey Journal Leonard John May 30 1976 TV VIEW The New York Times Pergament Alan October 27 1995 NBC S MORGAN EMERGES AS SERIES STAR IN BOOTH The Buffalo News Vogan Travis 6 November 2018 ABC Sports The Rise and Fall of Network Sports Television Univ of California Press ISBN 9780520966260 Walker and Hughes James R and Pat 1 May 2015 Crack of the Bat A History of Baseball on the Radio U of Nebraska Press p 214 ISBN 9780803277434 Glasspiegel Ryan April 30 2015 Howard Cosell Was Quite Incorrect About the Future Fortunes of ESPN and John Madden The Big Lead Cushing Rick March 2010 1960 Pittsburgh Pirates Day by Day A Special Season an Extraordinary Dorrance Publishing p 387 ISBN 9781434904980 Smith Curt 2005 Voices of Summer Ranking Baseball s 101 All Time Best Announcers Carroll amp Graf Publishers p 175 ISBN 0 7867 1446 8 Walker amp Bellamy 2008 p 143 1981 Soccer Bowl Chicago Sting New York Cosmos Highlights on YouTube 1981 09 26 CHICAGO STING VS NEW YORK COSMOS SOCCER BOWL PART 1 NASL on YouTube College kids perform Olympic miracle ESPN com 1980 Miracle On Ice on YouTube Ausiello Jeff 5 December 2010 Ex Pats kicker forever linked to Lennon ESPN Retrieved 6 December 2010 Monkovic Toni 6 December 2010 Behind Cosell s Announcement of Lennon s Death The New York Times Retrieved 6 December 2010 Cosell Howard 1993 Hall of Fame Inductee American Sportscasters Online Retrieved August 6 2015 Ribowsky Mark Nov 14 2011 Howard Cosell The Man The Myth and the Transformation of American Sports W W Horton ISBN 9780393080179 Nelson Murray R 2013 American Sports A History of Icons Idols and Ideas ABC CLIO p 947 ISBN 9780313397530 Retrieved August 6 2015 Hagger Jeff June 15 2015 Original ABC footage of TC Chen double hit in 1985 US Open Classic TV Sports ABC coverage of the USFL begins today with Herschel Opening day of the USFL on ABC in 1983 Classic Sports TV and Media 6 March 2013 Retrieved 7 March 2013 The key to survival was winning television money At first the new league had modest success starting with 18 million from ABC and an additional 8 million from ESPN cable But U S F L fans never showed up in force The average game attendance dropped by 3 000 last season to 27 000 More ominous TV ratings fell almost 30 By the end of its third season the league had dwindled to eight clubs with total losses of around 200 million As for the ratings the two semifinal playoff games drew a so so 5 0 and 5 9 and the championship pulled overnights of 7 4 in New York 8 7 in Chicago and 9 9 in Los Angeles disappointing for prime time On Black Friday June 17 ABC aired a prime time game between Chicago and Birmingham It finished 72nd out of 72 shows that week with a rating of 4 8 the worst prime time number of the year Some advertisers who bought time this season seem skittish about reenlisting Billson Marky August 4 2010 As strange as it sounds Howard Cosell has never won Rozelle award Sports Illustrated Missing Howard Cosell has still not won Pro Football Hall of Fame s Rozelle Award Bowl will be bright for ABC PDF American Radio History Broadcasting Magazine p 70 Retrieved March 18 2017 The Indy 500 will soon have a new TV network Indianapolis Star Retrieved 2018 03 21 Steinberg Brian 2018 03 21 NBC Sports Grabs Indianapolis 500 Rights From ABC After 54 Years Variety Retrieved 2018 03 21 William Oscar Johnson William Taaffe December 26 1988 A Whole New Game Sports Illustrated Time Inc Meanwhile the cupboards of the other two networks are comparatively bare Once the colossus of TV sports ABC has a good college football package Monday Night Football a so so performer these days a middling college basketball contract and a number of individual events including the Triple Crown races the Indianapolis 500 the Rose Bowl the Sugar Bowl and golf s U S Open British Open and PGA Championship ABC s biggest shortcoming at least in terms of prestige is that for the first time since 1960 it doesn t have either a Winter or Summer Games in its lineup Indeed after losing the Barcelona Olympics the network decided not to adorn a new truck which it had recently ordered with its traditional ABC Sports Olympic slogan William Oscar Johnson December 12 1988 A Golden Opportunity Sports Illustrated Time Inc Not only that but ABC the once reigning champion of TV sports is widely expected to deal itself out of baseball s new television contract which will be announced later this month This would leave the network with week to week sports programming consisting of the NFL s less than splendid Monday Night Football some college football lots of golf and a college basketball package that doesn t include the NCAA Final Four LSU vs Kentucky College Basketball on WLKY Jan 18 1987 Complete w Commercials on YouTube Kentucky vs Indiana NCAA College Basketball Dec 5 1987 Complete w Commercials on YouTube ABC Intershow February 1987 on YouTube ABC Men s College Basketball TV Schedule William F Reed December 12 1988 College Basketball Sports Illustrated Time Inc The Big Four Classic has two more years left in its TV contract with ABC if NCAA sanctions that Kentucky seems sure to get include no regular season TV appearances what would the Big Four do Postpone the classic until the Cats get out of the doghouse Play as scheduled with ABC televising only the game not involving Kentucky Replace the Wildcats with say Western Kentucky ABC Sports Sunday Promo Mar 8 1991 on YouTube 90 s Commercials Vol 60 on YouTube 1992 ABC College Basketball Duke vs UCLA commercial on YouTube 1994 95 ABC Sports College Basketball Intro Theme on YouTube Nebraska Basketball vs 3 Kansas Feb 7 1993 Part 2 of 2 on YouTube Sports4 Online Sports Archived from the original on September 28 2011 The biggest time buy arrangement is between Raycom and ABC For the 1991 92 season it paid ABC 1 8 million for six weeks of air time 13 telecasts covering 26 college basketball games regionally Raycom used ABC on air talent including Brent Musburger Dick Vitale Jim Valvano Gary Bender Cheryl Miller and Mark Jones PaineWebber to sponsor ABC Raycom college basketball William Taaffe October 12 1987 It s Bottom line Time Sports Illustrated Time Inc Also revealing is ABC s whirlwind use of network crews on last season s college basketball games The cameramen and technicians typically arrived at an arena to set up at around 2 00 a m on the day of the game so the network could save on expenses They then caught a few hours sleep returned to the arena to televise the game broke down the equipment and flew home so as not to run up costs the following day Richard Sandomir January 31 1992 TV SPORTS Syndicator Gives ABC Easy Fast Break on Profit The New York Times Retrieved May 12 2010 ABC Sports College Basketball Intro Theme 1990 1993 on YouTube Handful of March 1997 ABC commercials on YouTube Gerlach 2004 p 119 ABC gets 1988 Winter Games Sarasota Herald Tribune p 12B 1984 01 25 retrieved 2013 02 15 88 Winter Olympics debt free thanks to television contract The Daily Times Portsmouth OH p 9 1984 01 25 retrieved 2013 02 15 Perricone Mike 1986 12 28 Snags hit Winter Olympics Chicago Sun Times archived from the original on 2016 10 18 retrieved 2013 02 15 via Highbeam a b Powers John 1987 02 22 No gold for ABC Network to take Olympic sized bath on rights fee Boston Globe archived from the original on 2016 10 18 retrieved 2013 02 15 via Highbeam Kaufmann Bill 2013 02 10 The legacy games Calgary Sun 88 when the world came to Calgary pp 3 6 CBS Wins Rights to 92 Games 243 Million Paid For Winter Olympics Washington Post 1988 05 25 archived from the original on 2016 03 14 retrieved 2013 02 18 via Highbeam Vance Reid October 25 2016 The Cubs and I Medium Gary Thorne ESPN Press Room Nidetz Steve June 9 1989 FOR ABC WRIGLEY S A NEW BALLGAME Chicago Tribune NBC ABC IN LAME DUCK YEAR FOR COVERAGE OF MAJORS The Buffalo News April 1 1989 June 26 1989 Promo for Thursday Night Baseball amp Monday Night Movie Bumper on YouTube Brooks Marsh Tim Earle F 24 June 2009 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946 Present Random House Publishing Group p 105 ISBN 9780307483201 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Warner Rick November 12 1988 It s Let s Make a Deal time for networks cable Gadsden Times Associated Press p B5 Smith Shelley October 30 1989 we re Having An Sports Illustrated 1989 World Series Game 1 Giants A s pregame on YouTube Stewart Larry December 15 1988 Baseball to CBS NBC Strikes Out ABC Also Falls Short as 4 Year Package Goes for 1 Billion The Los Angeles Times A WHOLE NEW GAME Two megabuck TV deals may change the face of baseball for good or not so good Sports Illustrated 26 December 1988 Nidetz Steve 17 October 1989 Forever Away Is Here For Michaels Chicago Tribune Stewart Larry February 24 1989 Hernandez s Dream Job Gone but Now There s a Fantasy Los Angeles Times p 3 Encina Eduardo A October 24 2014 Orioles broadcaster Gary Thorne says memories of 1989 World Series earthquake still vivid The Baltimore Sun Smith Curt 2005 Voices of Summer Ranking Baseball s 101 All Time Best Announcers Carroll amp Graf Publishers p 381 ISBN 0 7867 1446 8 a b Smith Shelley October 30 1989 WE RE HAVING AN Sports Illustrated Journalism and Popular Culture SAGE 16 January 1992 p 199 ISBN 9781446230640 Rapak Dan 11 December 2012 Brought to You By AuthorHouse p 355 ISBN 9781477290507 Foster Jason September 19 2015 The 9 best network baseball theme songs of all time ranked Sporting News Curtis Bryan Lee Patricia 30 October 2013 Rocked An oral history of the 1989 World Series which was dominated by the Oakland A s and devastated by the Loma Prieta earthquake Grantland Palmer Maimon Jim Alan June 2016 Jim Palmer Nine Innings to Success A Hall of Famer s Approach to Achieving Triumph Books LLC ISBN 9781633194625 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Al Michaels joins Damon Ratto and Kolsky 957thegame radio com October 17 2019 Earthquake Time Monday October 30 1989 Ed Magnuson p 2 Retrieved September 5 2009 News report on MLB COM 1 50 minutes in Retrieved August 29 2009 Earthquake Time Monday October 30 1989 Ed Magnuson p 3 Retrieved September 5 2009 Journalism and Popular Culture SAGE 16 January 1992 p 197 ISBN 9781446230640 Goodman Walter October 19 1989 Review Television How the Networks Coped With Scant Information New York Times Bell Ficociello Robert C Robert M 19 October 2017 America s Disaster Culture The Production of Natural Disasters in Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 9781628924619 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Carman John October 14 1999 Local News Met Quake s Challenge SF Gate Kroichick Ron October 12 2019 Al Michaels brought Bay Area background to 1989 earthquake coverage San Francisco Chronicle Hall Jane October 19 1989 Networks Turned to Affiliates After Quake Los Angeles Times Margulies and Goldman Lee and John October 18 1989 BAY AREA QUAKE COVERAGE TELEVISION Networks Scrambled to Report Disaster Los Angeles Times Shales Tom October 19 1989 AFTER THE QUAKE IMAGES FROZEN IN TIME The Washington Post Dawson Greg October 19 1989 QUAKE COVERAGE HAD MANY SHAKY MOMENTS Orlando Sentinel Wide World of Sports Highlights 1960s ESPN com Sandomir Richard June 23 1991 TV SPORTS PAN AMERICAN GAMES Technology Hits Cuba By Land Sea and U S The New York Times Nidetz Steve August 2 1991 ABC GEARS UP FOR PAN AM GAMES Chicago Tribune ABC obtains TV rights to 91 Pan The Baltimore Sun December 4 1990 AIM Report September A 1991 Accuracy in Media Robb Sharon June 22 1990 Making sacrifices cuba gets ready for the pan american games South Florida Sun Sentinel MISCELLANEOUS ABC WINS BID TO TELEVISE PAN AM GAMES IN HAVANA South Florida Sun Sentinel May 17 1989 THE SIDELINES Pan Am Games TV Suit Settled Los Angeles Times December 13 1990 Pettavino Pye Paula J Geralyn 15 September 1994 Sport in Cuba The Diamond in the Rough p 221 ISBN 9780822974598 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Isaacs Stan August 17 1991 BOXING FANS TASTE CHOCOLATE Sun Sentinel ABC TNT GET NO MEDALS FOR PAN AM COVERAGE Greensboro com August 6 1991 Games Aren t Losing Money for Turner Los Angeles Times August 16 1991 WHO IS THIS HUBIE BROWN WHAT HAPPENED WITH SENNA The Morning Call May 22 1994 Sandomir Richard August 2 1991 TV SPORTS Valvano in Havana With Regret The New York Times Luna Richard June 18 1991 ABC announces Pan Am Games coverage UPI Steven Zeitchik December 28 2007 Fox faces BCS contract challenges The Hollywood Reporter Chris Dufresne June 13 2009 Rose Bowl game moving to ESPN in 2011 Los Angeles Times The Jackson Shuffle St Petersburg Times August 27 1999 Richard Sandomir October 22 1999 TV SPORTS The Crown Jewels Are Glittering Anew The New York Times Retrieved April 30 2010 Williams Jennifer February 7 1992 CBS ANNOUNCERS ARE READY FOR OLYMPICS Daily Press Stewart Larry February 7 1992 No Need to Coach Fratello for TV Los Angeles Times Nidetz Steve January 6 1992 ABC SAW NO DOLLAR SENSE IN OLYMPICS Chicago Tribune Craig Jack February 16 1992 Some networks included see fight game gaining from Tyson s loss The Baltimore Sun Meachem Matt October 16 1995 SERIES EVOKES FOND MEMORIES FOR UECKER TOO Chicago Tribune U S Pro League Moves Along By Signing a Television Deal The New York Times March 16 1994 Retrieved February 22 2012 Prime Time Golf Shootout Is a Ratings Success Los Angeles Times August 4 1999 Retrieved 2009 04 28 Woods to take on Garcia in Match Play showdown RTE March 23 2000 Retrieved 2009 04 28 Bonk Thomas August 2 2004 Tonight s Match Has Commercial Appeal for Some Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2009 04 28 Monday Night Golf not going anywhere Sporting News July 29 2003 Retrieved 2009 04 28 permanent dead link Battle at the Bridges goes through ratings collapse USA Today August 3 2004 Retrieved 2009 04 28 Callahan Gerry The Last Frame Article in Sports Illustrated on June 30 1997 1 Steve Wulf December 27 1993 The Network Lineup Sports Illustrated NHL strikes TV deal with ESPN UPI September 2 1992 NHL governors ecstatic over reported TV package Kitchener Waterloo Record August 27 1992 p E2 E M Swift June 20 1994 Hot Not Sports Illustrated Rudy Martzke February 5 1993 NHL s new boss ready to clear up confusion USA Today p 3C Michael Hiestand April 28 1993 Camera could be newest Derby rider USA Today p 3C Jim Shea May 7 1993 Select few watching NHL on ABC Hartford Courant p E9 Michael Heistand March 4 1993 Weighty ESPY awards get lighthearted touch USA Today p 3C Mike Kiley January 21 1994 NHL BOSS FINISHES EVENTFUL 1ST YEAR BETTMAN FOCUSES ON CBS DEAL Chicago Tribune p 3 Jorge Milan May 22 1993 NBC WINS WITH LOTTERY EAST FINALS Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel p 7C Ken McKee April 15 1994 TV picture still fuzzy for NHL playoff schedule Toronto Star p E8 Randy Covitz March 6 1993 ABC to help showcase NHL with 5 playoff games Kansas City Star p D6 Mike Kiley March 28 1993 He s Muni ficent Oilers coach lavishes praise on new Hawk Chicago Tribune p 12 Joe LaPointe April 11 1993 HOCKEY N H L Is About to Showcase Lemieux and the Prime Time Penguins The New York Times Mike Kiley April 12 1993 Hawks must win Norris to make ABC telecast Chicago Tribune p 11 Michael Hiestand September 3 1992 NHL announces TV deal but some details murky USA Today p 3C Craig Davis August 22 1992 TOO MUCH PUNCH RUINS NHL PARTY Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel p 1C Rudy Martzke September 12 1994 Fox makes hockey its newest surprise USA Today p 3C Sandomir Richard August 27 1992 HOCKEY Legal Sabers Rattle Over N H L TV Plan New York Times Is Disney Goofy To Bid 600 Million For Nhl Tv Rights Sports Illustrated August 17 1998 John Walters January 10 2000 Learning It Cold Sports Illustrated Richard Sandomir August 7 1998 Best N H L Action Is the Battle Over TV Rights Retrieved March 20 2008 Rudy Martzke May 19 2004 NHL announces TV deal with NBC USA Today Retrieved July 2 2012 Kevin Downey 12 April 2001 Sports TV get pricier and pricier Here s why Media Life Magazine Archived from the original on 13 October 2008 Vester Mark April 13 2007 Antonio Tarver Speaks on Fight Postponement BoxingScene com Jose Luis Castillo vs Stevie Johnston 1 3 on YouTube Rafael Dan March 23 2007 Tarver fight on ABC might revive boxing on network TV ESPN com Dennis Miller a surprise addition to MNF June 22 2000 Sandomir Richard June 10 2015 Without Showing Games ESPN Leaves a Mark on the N B A Finals The New York Times Retrieved June 12 2015 NBA Extends and Expands Partnerships NBA 27 June 2007 Retrieved 17 October 2016 NBA extends partnership with Turner Broadcasting Disney Press release National Basketball Association October 6 2014 Archived from the original on November 29 2014 Retrieved August 9 2015 NBA extends television deals ESPN com October 7 2014 Retrieved August 9 2015 Leonard Shapiro Mark Maske April 19 2005 Monday Night Football Changes the Channel The Washington Post p A1 Archived from the original on September 22 2018 Vise David A March 19 1985 Capital Cities Communications To Buy ABC for 3 5 Billion Retrieved December 23 2017 via www WashingtonPost com Wolverton Brad Lopez Rivera Marisa Killough Ashley C September 4 2009 A Powerful League Piles Up Its Advantages Chronicle of Higher Education 56 2 A1 A28 Retrieved November 11 2015 Geraldine Fabrikant THE MEDIA BUSINESS Disney and ABC Shareholders Solidly Approve Merger Deal New York Times Retrieved July 8 2013 Santoli M 2008 February The Magics Back Barrons 88 8 27 29 31 Retrieved February 16 2011 from ABI INFORM Global Document ID 1435830791 Miller Shales James Andrew Tom Those Guys Have All the Fun Inside the World of ESPN PDF p 562 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Nagle Dave January 2 2007 ESPN Inc 2006 in Review ESPNPressroom com ESPN Inc Retrieved April 30 2021 ESPN announces ESPN on ABC will become the brand for all sports carried on the ABC Television Network beginning Saturday Sept 2 Cieply Michael Stelter Brian November 22 2011 Disney Promotes a New Leader at ESPN Media Decoder The New York Times Company Retrieved October 7 2012 Ravens Vs Panthers On WBAL Archived from the original on March 15 2012 Retrieved September 16 2011 Fang Ken November 12 2008 Is ESPN Forcing ABC To Get Out of the Sports Business Fang s Bites Archived from the original on July 27 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Rapak Dan 11 December 2012 Brought to You By p 375 ISBN 9781477290507 Weiss Will June 7 2011 Bronx Banter Book Review The ESPN Book The Associated Press ABC adds 14 new shows for next season Archived from the original on December 28 2014 Retrieved July 30 2015 BibliographyGerlach Larry 2004 The Winter Olympics From Chamonix to Salt Lake City The University of Utah Press ISBN 0 87480 778 6 Walker James R Bellamy Robert V 2008 Center field shot a history of baseball on television Omaha Ne University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0803248250 External links editABC Sports ESPN com Sports News amp Articles Scores Pictures Videos ABC News ABC Sports Is Dead at 45 Stand by for ESPN ABC Sports The Rise and Fall of Network Sports ABC Sports The Rise and Fall of Network Sports Television Sport in World History Sports Programming On ABC Sports Now Branded ESPN Goodbye ABC Sports hello ESPN on ABC Today Show ABC Rebranding Sports Under ESPN President of ESPN Will Run ABC Sports ABC SPORTS TELEVISION amp OLYMPICS HISTORY ABC affiliates upset about losing sports to ESPN Bronx Banter Book Review The ESPN Book Is ESPN Forcing ABC To Get Out of the Sports Business Could ABC get back into the NFL business with Thursday Night Football Brought to You by Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of ESPN on ABC amp oldid 1182227322, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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