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Wikipedia

MSG Sportsnet

MSG Sportsnet (visually branded on-air as MSGSN) is an American regional sports network owned by MSG Entertainment; it operates as a sister channel to MSG Network. The network serves the New York City metropolitan area, whose reach expands to cover the entire state of New York, Northern New Jersey, Southwestern Connecticut and Northeastern Pennsylvania; MSG Sportsnet carries sports events from several of the New York area's professional sports franchises, as well as college sports events.

MSG Sportsnet
TypeRegional sports network
CountryUnited States
Broadcast area
HeadquartersPennsylvania Plaza, New York, NY 10001
Programming
Language(s)
  • English
  • Spanish (via SAP)
Picture format
Ownership
OwnerMSG Entertainment
Key peopleJames L. Dolan (Chairman & CEO)
Sister channels
History
Founded1976; 47 years ago (1976)[specify]
FounderCharles Dolan
Former names
  • Cablevision Sports 3 (1976–1979)
  • SportsChannel New York (1979–1998)
  • Fox Sports New York (1998–1999)
  • Fox Sports Net New York (1999–2004)
  • FSN New York (2004–2008)
  • MSG Plus (2008-2022)
Links
Websitewww.msgnetworks.com
Availability
Streaming media
MSG GOmsggo.com
(U.S. cable internet subscribers only; requires login from participating providers to stream content; some events may not be available due to league rights restrictions)
DirecTV Stream635
FuboTVAvailable within designated area

History

SportsChannel New York

MSG+ originally launched in 1976 as Cablevision Sports 3, a local sports network owned by Cablevision and available to their subscribers on Long Island (the "3" referenced the network's channel slot on Cablevision, where it remained through the 1990s). When it debuted, the network had agreements to carry the home games of the New York Islanders and New York Nets.[1] The service was renamed SportsChannel New York in March 1979.[2] The next month, both the New York Yankees and New York Mets signed agreements with SportsChannel.[3][4] SportsChannel would also gain the New Jersey Devils when the team relocated in 1982.

As the original SportsChannel was growing in popularity in New York City, Cablevision (through its then-broadcasting unit, Rainbow Media) eventually decided to form a new group of regional sports networks under the SportsChannel brand, with SportsChannel New York serving as the flagship charter affiliate. The expansion began with Cablevision's purchase of PRISM New England, a Boston-based premium channel previously owned by Spectacor, which was rechristened as SportsChannel New England on January 1, 1983. Other SportsChannel networks launched between throughout the 1980s and early 1990s in markets such as San Francisco, Chicago, Philadelphia and Los Angeles.

Throughout most of its history SportsChannel was operated as a joint-venture. The Washington Post became a partner in SportsChannel in 1983, gaining 50% interest in the networks.[5] In 1984, CBS also entered the partnership in a deal that gave each of the three companies a one-third interest.[6] The Washington Post and CBS sold back their shares to Rainbow in 1987.[7]

In December 1988, Cablevision announced that it would form a joint venture with NBC to operate the cable networks owned by the respective companies, including SportsChannel.[8] Through this partnership, SportsChannel acquired the cable television rights to the National Hockey League, which aired several games involving non-New York area teams on the SportsChannel regional networks at times when no games involving local teams were set to air and served as the programming cornerstone for national sister network SportsChannel America.

SportsChannel New York lost the broadcast rights to the Yankees to the MSG Network, then its main competitor, after the 1988 season. This led to a lengthy dispute between Cablevision and MSG that resulted in the network being removed by the provider, resulting in many Cablevision subscribers not being able to see MSG's Yankees telecasts during the 1989 season.

In March 1995, Cablevision and ITT Corporation purchased Madison Square Garden and its properties which included the Knicks, the Rangers, and the MSG Network; giving Cablevision broadcast rights to all professional New York-area sports teams (except the NFL).[9] On April 25, 1995, NBC sold its 50% interest in SportsChannel New York to Rainbow Media for US$93 million, citing that "owning a piece of SportsChannel New York made less sense" after Cablevision and ITT purchased MSG.[10]

FSN New York

On June 30, 1997, Fox/Liberty Networks – a joint venture between News Corporation (then the parent company of the New York Post and Fox owned-and-operated station WNYW (channel 5) and Liberty Media (a spin-off of TCI, an American cable-television group) – purchased a 40% interest in the SportsChannel networks, Madison Square Garden, the New York Knicks and the New York Rangers from Cablevision. The deal was intended to expand the reach of Fox Sports Net – a group of regional sports networks launched by Fox/Liberty in November 1996 through News Corporation's purchase of Liberty's Prime Network – by integrating the SportsChannel networks into the group; SportsChannel New York would also be rebranded as Fox Sports New York, while MSG would also become an FSN outlet, while retaining its existing brand.[11][12][13][14]

National Sports Partners, the venture formed through Cablevision's entry into the News Corporation/Liberty partnership to operate the existing and newly acquired Fox Sports owned-and-operated regional networks, later announced that the other SportsChannel networks would be relaunched under the "Fox Sports Net" banner.[14] The last event broadcast on the network as SportsChannel New York aired on January 27, 1998, was an NBA game between the New Jersey Nets and Denver Nuggets at the McNichols Sports Arena in Denver.

SportsChannel New York officially became Fox Sports New York the following day on January 28, with the first event aired as a Fox Sports Net outlet that evening being an NBA game between the Nets and the Los Angeles Lakers at Great Western Forum in Inglewood, California. Prior to the conversion, FSN programming had aired on then-independent station WBIS-TV during its S+ era, where it carried a hybrid of sporting and business programming; by June 1998 the station dropped the format and eventually became WPXN-TV (though it continued to air Fox-sourced programming until August). Five of the seven other remaining SportsChannel networks relaunched as member networks of Fox Sports Net later that week (SportsChannel Florida, which was rechristened Fox Sports Florida, was the last to join FSN in March 2000, after Rainbow bought Florida Panthers owner Wayne Huizenga's controlling interest).[15] The network was later rebranded as Fox Sports Net New York in 2000, as part of a collective brand modification of the FSN networks under the "Fox Sports Net" banner.

In April 2002, Fox Sports Net New York began sharing the broadcast rights to the Mets with MSG, as the newly launched YES Network took the regional television rights to the Yankees and Nets (both owned by their and the network's co-parent at the time, YankeeNets) from FSN. In 2004, the channel shortened its name to FSN New York, through the networks' de-emphasis of the "Fox Sports Net" brand.

On February 22, 2005, Cablevision and News Corporation agreed to trade several sports-related assets. Cablevision acquired majority control in Fox Sports New York, Fox Sports Chicago, Madison Square Garden and its associated properties, and a 50% share of Fox Sports New England; News Corporation, meanwhile, received Cablevision's ownership stakes in Fox Sports Ohio and Fox Sports Florida (Fox Sports Bay Area was not included in the deal, as News Corporation and Cablevision chose to retain joint ownership of that network).[16] Incidentally, News Corporation would later reverse course and purchase a 49% stake in YES Network in November 2012.

In 2005, the Mets announced that it would launch its own sports network to carry the team's games after FSN New York's contract with the team expired; SportsNet New York became the Mets new cable home when it launched in April 2006, at the start of that year's regular season. As a result of losing the Yankees, Nets and Mets over the span of three years, FSN New York and MSG went from being the sole rightsholders to seven of the New York area's major sports franchises (excluding the New York Jets and New York Giants, as the NFL does not sell game broadcasts on an individual team basis or to regional cable outlets) to carrying games from only four of the teams.

MSG+

On February 26, 2008, Cablevision announced that it would rebrand FSN New York as MSG Plus (branded in logos as "MSG+"), restructuring it as a spin-off of MSG Network.[17] The last event to air under the FSN New York banner was a college basketball game between the Mount St. Mary's Mountaineers and the Robert Morris Colonials from Moon Township, Pennsylvania on March 9.

The network was rebranded as MSG+ at 7:00 p.m. on March 10, beginning with its broadcast of an exhibition tennis match at Madison Square Garden between Roger Federer and Pete Sampras (which was also distributed nationally on the Tennis Channel).[18]

In February 2010, Cablevision spun off MSG Network and MSG+ into The Madison Square Garden Company. In September 2013, YES began carrying many national programs from Fox Sports Networks that were previously broadcast on MSG+; however, the network continued to maintain a reduced schedule of FSN-distributed programming until all the programs from FSN came to an end.

MSGSN

It was announced that MSG Plus would be rebranded as MSG SportsNet effective September 26, 2022, the first day of the NHL's pre-season. The change was likely to prevent customer confusion involving the "Plus" suffix trademark, which has increasingly become synonymous with streaming services such as Paramount+ and ESPN+, rather than wireline cable channels.[19]

Programming

Professional sports

MSGSN holds the regional broadcast rights to the NHL's New Jersey Devils and New York Islanders. MSG Sportsnet also serves an overflow feed in the event that multiple local teams whose games would normally be televised on MSG (such as the NBA's New York Knicks and the NHL's Buffalo Sabres) are playing at the same time. In turn, through MSG's regional television rights agreements, MSG Sportsnet also broadcasts certain NHL games involving the New York Rangers and Major League Soccer games featuring the New York Red Bulls not broadcast by its parent network. MSG Sportsnet also carries a large proportion of Buffalo Sabres games available to subscribers in most of upstate New York.

The network carries New York Rangers and Red Bulls games, which mainly air on MSG, in the event that its parent network is scheduled to air a Knicks (in the case of the Rangers) or Liberty (for Red Bulls and until 2018) game at times when MSGSN is not carrying games of its main local teams. Games respectively involving the Knicks and Liberty (which no longer airs on MSG as of 2018) earn higher ratings on MSG than those involving the Rangers or Red Bulls, and rarely air on MSGSN as a result. This is also the case with MSG, as the Islanders or Devils air on that network in lieu of MSGSN, when those teams play simultaneously at times none of MSG's main contracted teams are playing.

Since the start of 2006–07 NBA and NHL seasons, some Rangers telecasts have aired on MSGSN even when there is a conflict with an Islanders and/or Devils telecast, resulting in these games being relocated to MSG2 and/or MSGSN 2. In addition, when the Knicks are not in contention for the NBA Playoffs and the Rangers are contending for the Stanley Cup playoffs, the Rangers telecast usually airs on MSG and the Knicks telecast on MSG2, or vice versa in either case.

College sports

MSGSN also airs college sports events and local weekly college basketball magazine program for Hofstra University. However, games involving teams in the Tri-State area are generally blacked out outside the New York City market. Some cable providers, such as Time Warner Cable, acquire the rights to the local games for broadcast on local origination and regional sports channels in certain markets. MSGSN previously carried most college sports events televised by Fox Sports Networks (including football and basketball games from the Pac-12 Conference and Big 12 Conference), before these rights were transferred to the YES Network in September 2013 as part of its affiliation with FSN through 21st Century Fox's ownership interest in the network. Nationally televised FSN games aired in all of MSGSN's broadcast zones, unless a local team was playing at the time of the national telecast. In such cases, the collegiate event would be joined-in-progress at the end of the local telecast (if the ended before the conclusion of the national game) on MSG, if there is no other live game telecast scheduled, or not at all.

Fox Sports Net programs

Since joining Fox Sports Net, MSGSN had also carried select non-sports programming distributed by FSN (such as FSN Final Score, The Best Damn Sports Show Period[17] and The Dan Patrick Show). Even after the network's rebranding as MSGSN, it continued to carry these programs until there were discontinuance, similar to a programming agreement FSN maintained with Comcast SportsNet affiliates in markets where there is no local FSN outlet (although CSN maintains a local affiliation with SportsNet New York). As FSN New York, MSGSN formerly aired some Arena Football League games involving the New York Dragons as part of the AFL on FSN package.

Related services

MSGSN 2

MSGSN 2 is a gametime-only overflow feed of MSG Sportsnet, that – along with the MSG overflow MSG 2 – broadcasts in the event that three or four local games are scheduled to air simultaneously on the two main networks (for example, a Knicks or Rangers game would air on MSG2, while an Islanders or a Devils match would be shown on MSGSN 2). Normally, New York Knicks games are televised over MSG2 only during road games that start at least one hour later than a Rangers telecasts due to the fact that the Knicks (whose telecasts are the highest-rated sports events on MSG Network) normally take precedence on the main MSG network when played at Madison Square Garden. However, several Knicks home games originally scheduled to air on MSG were moved to MSG2 in 2008, in order for the former to carry the Rangers' Stanley Cup Playoff matches.

Previous names for this service were SportsChannel Plus, SportsChannel 2, Fox Sports New York 2 (FSNY2), and MSG Plus 2 (MSG+ 2). Traditionally cable providers mainly transmit MSG 2 and MSGSN 2 by preempting telecasts on other non-critical networks (such as a Public-access channel, the TV Guide Network, The Weather Channel, or C-SPAN); conversely, satellite providers carry both networks on alternate provider-assigned channels. With digital cable, many providers today now have dedicated channels for overflow games. For several years in the 1990s when Cablevision had the rights to seven professional sports teams, a SportsChannel 3 overflow feed was occasionally used.

From 1998 to 2005, Cablevision instead placed MSG's NBA and NHL telecasts on the MSG Metro Channels, which had limited availability within the provider's systems in the New York metropolitan area. In high cases of overflow, partially caused by New Jersey Nets telecasts aired on the then-rebranded FSN New York at the same time, games were also aired on Riverhead-based independent station WLNY-TV (channel 55). During this era, when two of the teams that the MSG Networks held the rights to broadcast played against each other, only one broadcast would usually be produced using one of the team's announcing staffs. This was either due to stipulations in MSG's television contracts or a desire to show a different sporting event at the same time. Beginning in the 2005–06 NBA and NHL seasons, after the Metro Networks ceased operation and the Nets telecasts moved to YES Network, MSG and the then-FSN New York relaunched MSG2 and FSN New York 2 (the present-day MSG+ 2) and began producing two separate broadcasts when two of their contracted teams play one another.

MSGSN HD

MSGSN HD is a high-definition simulcast feed of MSGSN HD, which broadcasts in the 1080i resolution format. It is carried on Cablevision (except on its system in Litchfield), Time Warner Cable (in New York and New Jersey), Comcast (which has carried MSGSN HD full-time since October 15, 2009 in areas of northern and central New Jersey within the New York City market)[20] RCN, DirecTV[21] and Verizon FiOS. Sister network MSGSN 2 also maintains an HD simulcast, whose availability depends on geographic location and television provider.[22] MSGSN HD carries all games involving the New York Rangers, New York Islanders, New Jersey Devils and New York Red Bulls in high definition.

On January 22, 2009, hockey games broadcast by MSG HD and MSGSN HD were dropped from NHL's GameCenter Live service following a contract dispute between MSG and the National Hockey League;[23] MSG HD and MSGSN HD returned to NHL Center Ice on March 17, 2010, beginning with the former's telecast of a game between the New Jersey Devils and Pittsburgh Penguins, confirmed on-air by NHL Hour co-host Gary Bettman during the program.[24] On December 14, 2011, a three-judge panel of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals denied MSG Holdings' petition to review an order by the Federal Communications Commission that Cablevision make the HD feeds of its regional sports networks available for distribution to AT&T U-verse and Verizon FiOS.

On-air staff

Current on-air staff

Game broadcasters
  • Mike Breen – Knicks play-by-play announcer
  • Walt Frazier – Knicks color analyst
  • Kenny Albert – fill-in Knicks play-by-play announcer
  • Mike Crispino – fill-in Knicks play-by-play announcer
  • Sam Rosen – Rangers play-by-play announcer
  • Joe Micheletti – Rangers color analyst
  • John Giannone – Rangers sideline reporter; fill-in Rangers play-by-play announcer
  • Brendan Burke – Islanders play-by-play announcer
  • Butch Goring – Islanders color analyst
  • Shannon Hogan – Islanders sideline reporter, pre-game and post-game show and intermission report host
  • Rick DiPietro – Islanders pre-game, post-game, and intermission analyst
  • Stan Fischler – Islanders pre-game, post-game, and intermission analyst
  • Chris King – fill-in Islanders play-by-play announcer
  • Jiggs McDonald – fill-in Islanders play-by-play announcer
  • Steve Cangialosi – Red Bulls play-by-play announcer
  • Bill Spaulding – Devils play-by-play announcer
  • Ken Daneyko – Devils color analyst
  • Bryce Salvador - Devils pre-game, post-game, and intermission analyst
  • Erika Wachter - Devils pre-game, post-game, and intermission analyst
  • Rick Jeanneret – Sabres play-by-play announcer
  • Rob Ray – Sabres sideline reporter
  • Mike Robitaille – fill-in Sabres color analyst
  • Kevin Sylvester – fill-in Sabres play-by-play announcer
  • Jason Horowitz – Liberty play-by-play announcer
  • Shep Messing – Red Bulls color analyst
Studio show staff
  • Anson Carter – Rangers studio analyst
  • Ron Duguay – Rangers studio analyst; MSG Hockey Night Live panelist
  • Stan FischlerMSG Hockey Night Live contributor, occasional Devils or Islanders sideline reporter
  • EJ Hradek – MSG Hockey Night Live panelist
  • Scott Lasky – Inside the Rangers host
  • Brian Leetch – Rangers studio analyst
  • Dave Maloney – Rangers pre-game and post-game analyst; MSG Hockey Night Live panelist; and fill-in Rangers color analyst/sideline reporter
  • Bill Pidto – Rangers and Knicks (road games) pre-game and post-game show and intermission report host; MSG150 commentator; and MSG Hockey Night Live fill-in host
  • Al TrautwigMSG Hockey Night Live host; and Rangers and Knicks (home and playoff games) pre-game and post-game show and intermission report host
  • Steve Valiquette – Rangers studio analyst; and MSG Hockey Night Live panelist

Awards

MSGSN (then MSG+) received Promax Awards in 2009 for their October 2008 rebranding campaign, its promotional campaign for the network's high school sports telecasts, and Devils and Islanders tuners.

References

  1. ^ "Sports News Briefs". The New York Times. 3 September 1975. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on February 22, 2008. Retrieved March 10, 2008.
  3. ^ Durso, Joseph (16 April 1979). "Fate of Faltering Mets Is Tied to Payson Family Drama". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  4. ^ Chass, Murray (10 April 1979). "Yanks Set to Activate Beniquez Soon". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  5. ^ "The Washington Post Co. announced Friday an agreement in..." UPI. February 25, 1983. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  6. ^ Wiggins, Phillip H. (27 November 1984). "CBS BUYS INTO SPORTS CHANNELS". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  7. ^ Sugawara, Sandra (19 June 1987). "POST CO., CBS SELL STAKES IN SPORTSCHANNEL". The Washington Post. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  8. ^ Fabrikant, Geraldine (December 23, 1988). "THE MEDIA BUSINESS; NBC and Cablevision Plan Joint Programming Venture". The New York Times.
  9. ^ Sandomir, Richard (19 February 1997). "Cablevision Hangs On to SportsChannel". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
  10. ^ "NBC SELLS OFF ITS SHARE OF SPORTSCHANNEL NEW YORK". Sports Business Journal. April 26, 1995. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
  11. ^ . Chicago Sun-Times. June 24, 1997. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
  12. ^ Higgins, John M. (June 30, 1997). . Broadcasting & Cable. Reed Business Information. Archived from the original on September 10, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
  13. ^ "SPORTS LANDSCAPE ALTERED WITH FOX/LIBERTY-CABLEVISION DEAL". Sports Business Journal. June 23, 1997. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
  14. ^ a b . Archived from the original on January 11, 2008. Retrieved March 10, 2008.
  15. ^ Donohue, Steve (November 15, 1999). . Multichannel News. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
  16. ^ Sandomir, Richard (February 23, 2005). "Cablevision Locks Up Garden". The New York Times. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
  17. ^ a b Best, Neil (February 26, 2008). . Newsday. Archived from the original on April 26, 2008. Retrieved February 26, 2008.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on March 12, 2008. Retrieved March 10, 2008.
  19. ^ Lafayette, Jon (22 September 2022). "MSG Plus Channel Renamed MSG SportsNet on Sept. 26". Broadcasting Cable. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  20. ^ "Announcement of Comcast-MSG/MSG+ HD carriage". DSL Reports.
  21. ^ "DirecTV HD Channel Lineup". DirecTV.
  22. ^ Hornick, Eric (November 16, 2010). "MSG+2 HD!". The Skinny. Blogspot. Retrieved November 27, 2010.
  23. ^ . Sports Couch Potato. January 29, 2009. Archived from the original on November 30, 2009. Retrieved September 2, 2009.
  24. ^ "Status of MSG HD?". DBSTalk. March 18, 2010. Retrieved March 18, 2010.

sportsnet, visually, branded, msgsn, american, regional, sports, network, owned, entertainment, operates, sister, channel, network, network, serves, york, city, metropolitan, area, whose, reach, expands, cover, entire, state, york, northern, jersey, southweste. MSG Sportsnet visually branded on air as MSGSN is an American regional sports network owned by MSG Entertainment it operates as a sister channel to MSG Network The network serves the New York City metropolitan area whose reach expands to cover the entire state of New York Northern New Jersey Southwestern Connecticut and Northeastern Pennsylvania MSG Sportsnet carries sports events from several of the New York area s professional sports franchises as well as college sports events MSG SportsnetTypeRegional sports networkCountryUnited StatesBroadcast areaNew YorkNorthern amp Central New JerseySoutheastern ConnecticutNortheastern PennsylvaniaNationwide via satellite HeadquartersPennsylvania Plaza New York NY 10001ProgrammingLanguage s EnglishSpanish via SAP Picture format1080i HDTV 480i SDTV OwnershipOwnerMSG EntertainmentKey peopleJames L Dolan Chairman amp CEO Sister channelsMSG NetworkMSG Western New YorkHistoryFounded1976 47 years ago 1976 specify FounderCharles DolanFormer namesCablevision Sports 3 1976 1979 SportsChannel New York 1979 1998 Fox Sports New York 1998 1999 Fox Sports Net New York 1999 2004 FSN New York 2004 2008 MSG Plus 2008 2022 LinksWebsitewww wbr msgnetworks wbr comAvailabilityStreaming mediaMSG GOmsggo com U S cable internet subscribers only requires login from participating providers to stream content some events may not be available due to league rights restrictions DirecTV Stream635FuboTVAvailable within designated area Contents 1 History 1 1 SportsChannel New York 1 2 FSN New York 1 3 MSG 1 4 MSGSN 2 Programming 2 1 Professional sports 2 2 College sports 2 3 Fox Sports Net programs 3 Related services 3 1 MSGSN 2 3 2 MSGSN HD 4 On air staff 4 1 Current on air staff 4 2 Awards 5 ReferencesHistory EditSportsChannel New York Edit MSG originally launched in 1976 as Cablevision Sports 3 a local sports network owned by Cablevision and available to their subscribers on Long Island the 3 referenced the network s channel slot on Cablevision where it remained through the 1990s When it debuted the network had agreements to carry the home games of the New York Islanders and New York Nets 1 The service was renamed SportsChannel New York in March 1979 2 The next month both the New York Yankees and New York Mets signed agreements with SportsChannel 3 4 SportsChannel would also gain the New Jersey Devils when the team relocated in 1982 As the original SportsChannel was growing in popularity in New York City Cablevision through its then broadcasting unit Rainbow Media eventually decided to form a new group of regional sports networks under the SportsChannel brand with SportsChannel New York serving as the flagship charter affiliate The expansion began with Cablevision s purchase of PRISM New England a Boston based premium channel previously owned by Spectacor which was rechristened as SportsChannel New England on January 1 1983 Other SportsChannel networks launched between throughout the 1980s and early 1990s in markets such as San Francisco Chicago Philadelphia and Los Angeles Throughout most of its history SportsChannel was operated as a joint venture The Washington Post became a partner in SportsChannel in 1983 gaining 50 interest in the networks 5 In 1984 CBS also entered the partnership in a deal that gave each of the three companies a one third interest 6 The Washington Post and CBS sold back their shares to Rainbow in 1987 7 In December 1988 Cablevision announced that it would form a joint venture with NBC to operate the cable networks owned by the respective companies including SportsChannel 8 Through this partnership SportsChannel acquired the cable television rights to the National Hockey League which aired several games involving non New York area teams on the SportsChannel regional networks at times when no games involving local teams were set to air and served as the programming cornerstone for national sister network SportsChannel America SportsChannel New York lost the broadcast rights to the Yankees to the MSG Network then its main competitor after the 1988 season This led to a lengthy dispute between Cablevision and MSG that resulted in the network being removed by the provider resulting in many Cablevision subscribers not being able to see MSG s Yankees telecasts during the 1989 season In March 1995 Cablevision and ITT Corporation purchased Madison Square Garden and its properties which included the Knicks the Rangers and the MSG Network giving Cablevision broadcast rights to all professional New York area sports teams except the NFL 9 On April 25 1995 NBC sold its 50 interest in SportsChannel New York to Rainbow Media for US 93 million citing that owning a piece of SportsChannel New York made less sense after Cablevision and ITT purchased MSG 10 FSN New York Edit On June 30 1997 Fox Liberty Networks a joint venture between News Corporation then the parent company of the New York Post and Fox owned and operated station WNYW channel 5 and Liberty Media a spin off of TCI an American cable television group purchased a 40 interest in the SportsChannel networks Madison Square Garden the New York Knicks and the New York Rangers from Cablevision The deal was intended to expand the reach of Fox Sports Net a group of regional sports networks launched by Fox Liberty in November 1996 through News Corporation s purchase of Liberty s Prime Network by integrating the SportsChannel networks into the group SportsChannel New York would also be rebranded as Fox Sports New York while MSG would also become an FSN outlet while retaining its existing brand 11 12 13 14 National Sports Partners the venture formed through Cablevision s entry into the News Corporation Liberty partnership to operate the existing and newly acquired Fox Sports owned and operated regional networks later announced that the other SportsChannel networks would be relaunched under the Fox Sports Net banner 14 The last event broadcast on the network as SportsChannel New York aired on January 27 1998 was an NBA game between the New Jersey Nets and Denver Nuggets at the McNichols Sports Arena in Denver SportsChannel New York officially became Fox Sports New York the following day on January 28 with the first event aired as a Fox Sports Net outlet that evening being an NBA game between the Nets and the Los Angeles Lakers at Great Western Forum in Inglewood California Prior to the conversion FSN programming had aired on then independent station WBIS TV during its S era where it carried a hybrid of sporting and business programming by June 1998 the station dropped the format and eventually became WPXN TV though it continued to air Fox sourced programming until August Five of the seven other remaining SportsChannel networks relaunched as member networks of Fox Sports Net later that week SportsChannel Florida which was rechristened Fox Sports Florida was the last to join FSN in March 2000 after Rainbow bought Florida Panthers owner Wayne Huizenga s controlling interest 15 The network was later rebranded as Fox Sports Net New York in 2000 as part of a collective brand modification of the FSN networks under the Fox Sports Net banner In April 2002 Fox Sports Net New York began sharing the broadcast rights to the Mets with MSG as the newly launched YES Network took the regional television rights to the Yankees and Nets both owned by their and the network s co parent at the time YankeeNets from FSN In 2004 the channel shortened its name to FSN New York through the networks de emphasis of the Fox Sports Net brand On February 22 2005 Cablevision and News Corporation agreed to trade several sports related assets Cablevision acquired majority control in Fox Sports New York Fox Sports Chicago Madison Square Garden and its associated properties and a 50 share of Fox Sports New England News Corporation meanwhile received Cablevision s ownership stakes in Fox Sports Ohio and Fox Sports Florida Fox Sports Bay Area was not included in the deal as News Corporation and Cablevision chose to retain joint ownership of that network 16 Incidentally News Corporation would later reverse course and purchase a 49 stake in YES Network in November 2012 In 2005 the Mets announced that it would launch its own sports network to carry the team s games after FSN New York s contract with the team expired SportsNet New York became the Mets new cable home when it launched in April 2006 at the start of that year s regular season As a result of losing the Yankees Nets and Mets over the span of three years FSN New York and MSG went from being the sole rightsholders to seven of the New York area s major sports franchises excluding the New York Jets and New York Giants as the NFL does not sell game broadcasts on an individual team basis or to regional cable outlets to carrying games from only four of the teams MSG Edit On February 26 2008 Cablevision announced that it would rebrand FSN New York as MSG Plus branded in logos as MSG restructuring it as a spin off of MSG Network 17 The last event to air under the FSN New York banner was a college basketball game between the Mount St Mary s Mountaineers and the Robert Morris Colonials from Moon Township Pennsylvania on March 9 The network was rebranded as MSG at 7 00 p m on March 10 beginning with its broadcast of an exhibition tennis match at Madison Square Garden between Roger Federer and Pete Sampras which was also distributed nationally on the Tennis Channel 18 In February 2010 Cablevision spun off MSG Network and MSG into The Madison Square Garden Company In September 2013 YES began carrying many national programs from Fox Sports Networks that were previously broadcast on MSG however the network continued to maintain a reduced schedule of FSN distributed programming until all the programs from FSN came to an end MSGSN Edit It was announced that MSG Plus would be rebranded as MSG SportsNet effective September 26 2022 the first day of the NHL s pre season The change was likely to prevent customer confusion involving the Plus suffix trademark which has increasingly become synonymous with streaming services such as Paramount and ESPN rather than wireline cable channels 19 Programming EditProfessional sports Edit MSGSN holds the regional broadcast rights to the NHL s New Jersey Devils and New York Islanders MSG Sportsnet also serves an overflow feed in the event that multiple local teams whose games would normally be televised on MSG such as the NBA s New York Knicks and the NHL s Buffalo Sabres are playing at the same time In turn through MSG s regional television rights agreements MSG Sportsnet also broadcasts certain NHL games involving the New York Rangers and Major League Soccer games featuring the New York Red Bulls not broadcast by its parent network MSG Sportsnet also carries a large proportion of Buffalo Sabres games available to subscribers in most of upstate New York The network carries New York Rangers and Red Bulls games which mainly air on MSG in the event that its parent network is scheduled to air a Knicks in the case of the Rangers or Liberty for Red Bulls and until 2018 game at times when MSGSN is not carrying games of its main local teams Games respectively involving the Knicks and Liberty which no longer airs on MSG as of 2018 earn higher ratings on MSG than those involving the Rangers or Red Bulls and rarely air on MSGSN as a result This is also the case with MSG as the Islanders or Devils air on that network in lieu of MSGSN when those teams play simultaneously at times none of MSG s main contracted teams are playing Since the start of 2006 07 NBA and NHL seasons some Rangers telecasts have aired on MSGSN even when there is a conflict with an Islanders and or Devils telecast resulting in these games being relocated to MSG2 and or MSGSN 2 In addition when the Knicks are not in contention for the NBA Playoffs and the Rangers are contending for the Stanley Cup playoffs the Rangers telecast usually airs on MSG and the Knicks telecast on MSG2 or vice versa in either case College sports Edit MSGSN also airs college sports events and local weekly college basketball magazine program for Hofstra University However games involving teams in the Tri State area are generally blacked out outside the New York City market Some cable providers such as Time Warner Cable acquire the rights to the local games for broadcast on local origination and regional sports channels in certain markets MSGSN previously carried most college sports events televised by Fox Sports Networks including football and basketball games from the Pac 12 Conference and Big 12 Conference before these rights were transferred to the YES Network in September 2013 as part of its affiliation with FSN through 21st Century Fox s ownership interest in the network Nationally televised FSN games aired in all of MSGSN s broadcast zones unless a local team was playing at the time of the national telecast In such cases the collegiate event would be joined in progress at the end of the local telecast if the ended before the conclusion of the national game on MSG if there is no other live game telecast scheduled or not at all Fox Sports Net programs Edit Since joining Fox Sports Net MSGSN had also carried select non sports programming distributed by FSN such as FSN Final Score The Best Damn Sports Show Period 17 and The Dan Patrick Show Even after the network s rebranding as MSGSN it continued to carry these programs until there were discontinuance similar to a programming agreement FSN maintained with Comcast SportsNet affiliates in markets where there is no local FSN outlet although CSN maintains a local affiliation with SportsNet New York As FSN New York MSGSN formerly aired some Arena Football League games involving the New York Dragons as part of the AFL on FSN package Related services EditMSGSN 2 Edit MSGSN 2 is a gametime only overflow feed of MSG Sportsnet that along with the MSG overflow MSG 2 broadcasts in the event that three or four local games are scheduled to air simultaneously on the two main networks for example a Knicks or Rangers game would air on MSG2 while an Islanders or a Devils match would be shown on MSGSN 2 Normally New York Knicks games are televised over MSG2 only during road games that start at least one hour later than a Rangers telecasts due to the fact that the Knicks whose telecasts are the highest rated sports events on MSG Network normally take precedence on the main MSG network when played at Madison Square Garden However several Knicks home games originally scheduled to air on MSG were moved to MSG2 in 2008 in order for the former to carry the Rangers Stanley Cup Playoff matches Previous names for this service were SportsChannel Plus SportsChannel 2 Fox Sports New York 2 FSNY2 and MSG Plus 2 MSG 2 Traditionally cable providers mainly transmit MSG 2 and MSGSN 2 by preempting telecasts on other non critical networks such as a Public access channel the TV Guide Network The Weather Channel or C SPAN conversely satellite providers carry both networks on alternate provider assigned channels With digital cable many providers today now have dedicated channels for overflow games For several years in the 1990s when Cablevision had the rights to seven professional sports teams a SportsChannel 3 overflow feed was occasionally used From 1998 to 2005 Cablevision instead placed MSG s NBA and NHL telecasts on the MSG Metro Channels which had limited availability within the provider s systems in the New York metropolitan area In high cases of overflow partially caused by New Jersey Nets telecasts aired on the then rebranded FSN New York at the same time games were also aired on Riverhead based independent station WLNY TV channel 55 During this era when two of the teams that the MSG Networks held the rights to broadcast played against each other only one broadcast would usually be produced using one of the team s announcing staffs This was either due to stipulations in MSG s television contracts or a desire to show a different sporting event at the same time Beginning in the 2005 06 NBA and NHL seasons after the Metro Networks ceased operation and the Nets telecasts moved to YES Network MSG and the then FSN New York relaunched MSG2 and FSN New York 2 the present day MSG 2 and began producing two separate broadcasts when two of their contracted teams play one another MSGSN HD Edit MSGSN HD is a high definition simulcast feed of MSGSN HD which broadcasts in the 1080i resolution format It is carried on Cablevision except on its system in Litchfield Time Warner Cable in New York and New Jersey Comcast which has carried MSGSN HD full time since October 15 2009 in areas of northern and central New Jersey within the New York City market 20 RCN DirecTV 21 and Verizon FiOS Sister network MSGSN 2 also maintains an HD simulcast whose availability depends on geographic location and television provider 22 MSGSN HD carries all games involving the New York Rangers New York Islanders New Jersey Devils and New York Red Bulls in high definition On January 22 2009 hockey games broadcast by MSG HD and MSGSN HD were dropped from NHL s GameCenter Live service following a contract dispute between MSG and the National Hockey League 23 MSG HD and MSGSN HD returned to NHL Center Ice on March 17 2010 beginning with the former s telecast of a game between the New Jersey Devils and Pittsburgh Penguins confirmed on air by NHL Hour co host Gary Bettman during the program 24 On December 14 2011 a three judge panel of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals denied MSG Holdings petition to review an order by the Federal Communications Commission that Cablevision make the HD feeds of its regional sports networks available for distribution to AT amp T U verse and Verizon FiOS On air staff EditCurrent on air staff Edit Game broadcastersMike Breen Knicks play by play announcer Walt Frazier Knicks color analyst Kenny Albert fill in Knicks play by play announcer Mike Crispino fill in Knicks play by play announcer Sam Rosen Rangers play by play announcer Joe Micheletti Rangers color analyst John Giannone Rangers sideline reporter fill in Rangers play by play announcer Brendan Burke Islanders play by play announcer Butch Goring Islanders color analyst Shannon Hogan Islanders sideline reporter pre game and post game show and intermission report host Rick DiPietro Islanders pre game post game and intermission analyst Stan Fischler Islanders pre game post game and intermission analyst Chris King fill in Islanders play by play announcer Jiggs McDonald fill in Islanders play by play announcer Steve Cangialosi Red Bulls play by play announcer Bill Spaulding Devils play by play announcer Ken Daneyko Devils color analyst Bryce Salvador Devils pre game post game and intermission analyst Erika Wachter Devils pre game post game and intermission analyst Rick Jeanneret Sabres play by play announcer Rob Ray Sabres sideline reporter Mike Robitaille fill in Sabres color analyst Kevin Sylvester fill in Sabres play by play announcer Jason Horowitz Liberty play by play announcer Shep Messing Red Bulls color analystStudio show staffAnson Carter Rangers studio analyst Ron Duguay Rangers studio analyst MSG Hockey Night Live panelist Stan Fischler MSG Hockey Night Live contributor occasional Devils or Islanders sideline reporter EJ Hradek MSG Hockey Night Live panelist Scott Lasky Inside the Rangers host Brian Leetch Rangers studio analyst Dave Maloney Rangers pre game and post game analyst MSG Hockey Night Live panelist and fill in Rangers color analyst sideline reporter Bill Pidto Rangers and Knicks road games pre game and post game show and intermission report host MSG150 commentator and MSG Hockey Night Live fill in host Al Trautwig MSG Hockey Night Live host and Rangers and Knicks home and playoff games pre game and post game show and intermission report host Steve Valiquette Rangers studio analyst and MSG Hockey Night Live panelistAwards Edit MSGSN then MSG received Promax Awards in 2009 for their October 2008 rebranding campaign its promotional campaign for the network s high school sports telecasts and Devils and Islanders tuners References Edit Sports News Briefs The New York Times 3 September 1975 Retrieved 24 April 2021 About Rainbow Media Our Story Timeline 80 s Archived from the original on February 22 2008 Retrieved March 10 2008 Durso Joseph 16 April 1979 Fate of Faltering Mets Is Tied to Payson Family Drama The New York Times Retrieved 24 April 2021 Chass Murray 10 April 1979 Yanks Set to Activate Beniquez Soon The New York Times Retrieved 24 April 2021 The Washington Post Co announced Friday an agreement in UPI February 25 1983 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Wiggins Phillip H 27 November 1984 CBS BUYS INTO SPORTS CHANNELS The New York Times Retrieved 25 April 2021 Sugawara Sandra 19 June 1987 POST CO CBS SELL STAKES IN SPORTSCHANNEL The Washington Post Retrieved 25 April 2021 Fabrikant Geraldine December 23 1988 THE MEDIA BUSINESS NBC and Cablevision Plan Joint Programming Venture The New York Times Sandomir Richard 19 February 1997 Cablevision Hangs On to SportsChannel The New York Times Retrieved 26 April 2021 NBC SELLS OFF ITS SHARE OF SPORTSCHANNEL NEW YORK Sports Business Journal April 26 1995 Retrieved April 10 2015 Fox putting together national Sports Net Changes ahead for SportsChannel Chicago Sun Times June 24 1997 Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved April 10 2015 via HighBeam Research Higgins John M June 30 1997 National net keys regional deal Fox Sports Liberty Media Corp challenge ESPN with stake in SportsChannel Broadcasting amp Cable Reed Business Information Archived from the original on September 10 2015 Retrieved April 10 2015 via HighBeam Research SPORTS LANDSCAPE ALTERED WITH FOX LIBERTY CABLEVISION DEAL Sports Business Journal June 23 1997 Retrieved April 10 2015 a b About Rainbow Media Our Story Timeline 90 s Archived from the original on January 11 2008 Retrieved March 10 2008 Donohue Steve November 15 1999 Rainbow Fox Deal for Florida Net Multichannel News Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved April 10 2015 via HighBeam Research Sandomir Richard February 23 2005 Cablevision Locks Up Garden The New York Times Retrieved April 10 2015 a b Best Neil February 26 2008 FSNY to be renamed MSG Plus Newsday Archived from the original on April 26 2008 Retrieved February 26 2008 FSN New York Rebranded as MSG Plus Archived from the original on March 12 2008 Retrieved March 10 2008 Lafayette Jon 22 September 2022 MSG Plus Channel Renamed MSG SportsNet on Sept 26 Broadcasting Cable Retrieved 25 September 2022 Announcement of Comcast MSG MSG HD carriage DSL Reports DirecTV HD Channel Lineup DirecTV Hornick Eric November 16 2010 MSG 2 HD The Skinny Blogspot Retrieved November 27 2010 MSG Hockey MIA in HD Sports Couch Potato January 29 2009 Archived from the original on November 30 2009 Retrieved September 2 2009 Status of MSG HD DBSTalk March 18 2010 Retrieved March 18 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title MSG Sportsnet amp oldid 1128341012, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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