NFL Network
The NFL Network is an American specialty channel owned and operated by the National Football League (NFL). It was launched November 4, 2003, only eight months after all of the league's 32 team owners voted unanimously to approve its formation. The league invested $100 million to fund the network's operations.
NFL Films, which produces commercials, television programs, feature films, and documentaries on the NFL, is a key supplier of NFL Network's programming, with more than 4,000 hours of footage archived in their library. Thus, much of the network's highlights and recaps feature NFL Films' trademark style of slow motion game action, and sounds of the game and the talk on the sidelines.
Beginning with the 2006 season, the channel will broadcast eight prime time, regular season NFL games. In addition, the network provided additional coverage of the 2006 NFL Draft from Radio City Music Hall in New York City on April 29 and 30 in conjunction with ESPN and ESPN2.
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[edit] Senior executives
- Steve Bornstein, President and CEO; also, the NFL's Executive-VP of Media (Bornstein is the former Chairman of ESPN, and also served as president of ABC)
- Steve Sabol, President of NFL Films (Sabol is the most honored filmmaker in sports, having garnered 87 Emmy Awards)
- Howard Katz, Chief Operating Officer of NFL Films (Veteran TV sports executive; former president of ABC Sports; former ESPN Senior-VP)
- Judy Fearing, Senior-VP of Consumer Marketing (Former ESPN and Pepsi marketing executive)
[edit] Live games
[edit] 2006 NFL Schedule
The NFL Network will broadcast eight live games during the 2006 season. The games, starting at 8:00 p.m. EST, will run on Thursday and/or Saturday nights, beginning Thanksgiving evening[1], and will be dubbed The Run to the Playoffs. Veteran TV announcer Bryant Gumbel will be the play-by-play announcer, and former FOX and current NBC analyst Cris Collinsworth will be the color commentator for six games. Collinsworth will miss two Saturday games due to his NBC commitments with a replacement to be named. These games will also air on broadcast stations in the local markets of the teams involved.
[edit] NFL preseason
A total of 54 NFL preseason games are televised on NFL Network. Although some are aired live, a majority of these contests air on a tape-delayed basis, using the home team's local broadcast for the first half and the visitors' broadcast for the second half.
[edit] NFL Europe
NFL Network currently broadcasts all 30 regular season games of NFL Europe from March through May. The network also televises the World Bowl, the league's championship game.
[edit] College football
Starting in 2006, NFL Network will televise the Insight Bowl on December 29th. [2] The network will also begin to carry the Senior Bowl, the postseason college football exhibition game played in Mobile, Alabama, in 2007. [3] The network has also acquired the rights to broadcast the Houston Bowl (a bowl that will be renamed at a later date and played December 28th).[4]
[edit] Original programming
- Coachspeak
- This news show is basically a live whip-around show featuring the Monday press conferences of the league's head coaches around the NFL. The show is hosted by Derrin Horton with former NFL head coach Jim E. Mora.
- Coachspeak Plus
- Similar to Coachspeak except that it focuses on the mid-week press conferences from the league's players and coaches. Derrin Horton and Jim E. Mora also serve as hosts.
- College Football Sunday
- This 60-minute show features highlights and in-depth analysis of the top 25 games of college football and each game's pro prospects.
- Film Session
- This program showcases NFL Films' classic, modern, and historical specials and documentaries that are in its archive. Programs include Team Huddles, Lost Treasures, NFL's Greatest, and Football Follies.
- Football America
- This documentary series features stories from all levels of football in the United States from Pop Warner to the professional level. Some of the stories it has featured include high school huddles, the sidelines of women's flag football championship games, and the semi-pro football game between the New York City Police Department and the New York City Fire Department.
- Game of the Week
- A 60-minute show that uses NFL Films footage to review a particular current or classic NFL game, including every significant play from quarter-to-quarter. There are typically two games per regular season week. Sometimes, however, there will be three games, and two of the games will be in a 30-minute format.
- In Their Own Words
- A documentary series that deals with coaches, players, and other aspects of the league. The series does not feature a host or narration. Instead, the subject tells his story "in his own words" via interviews, archival action footage, and sound that is captured on the field, on the sidelines, or in the locker room.
- NFL Films Presents
- A documentary series hosted by Steve Sabol, President of NFL Films. The show features interviews with former and current NFL stars, visual essays, historical features, and coverage on the game's current trends and nuances.
- NFL re-airs
- Premiering at the start of the 2006 season, this 90-minute show will feature re-broadcasts of the top games from each weekend. They will be edited to include sideline and on-field sound captured during the game, and exclusive shots and camera angles from NFL Films. Sound bites from the postgame press conference will also be featured. [5]
- NFL Replay
- A series that re-broadcasts two-hour versions of a network television's coverage of a memorable NFL games—complete with the original network's footage, graphics, and play-by-play commentary.
- NFL Total Access
- A news and information show covering all 32 NFL teams. Former ESPN sportscaster Rich Eisen anchors the show. (Derrin Horton is the substitute host.) He is joined by former running back and Super Bowl XXXII Most Valuable Player Terrell Davis, former running back and NFL career-rushing-yards leader Emmitt Smith, former 11-time Pro Bowl cornerback Rod Woodson, and former Pro Bowl offensive tackle Lincoln Kennedy. On occasion, they also have an active NFL player as a guest co-host.
- The show has the unique ability to go live to any NFL team headquarters at any time via their "Team Cam" system – a webcam-based video system that has been set up between the network's Los Angeles studio and each team location.
- Playbook
- Hosted by Paul Burmeister with analysts Sterling Sharpe, Brian Baldinger, Butch Davis, and Solomon Wilcots, this show provides analysis of the key match-ups of the upcoming games. The show features the use of team-supplied footage — the same video that coaches and players use each week to prepare their game plans.
- Point After
- This highlight show recaps all of the league's games and post-game press conferences.
- Red Zone
- Airing every Sunday during the regular season, Red Zone is basically a news ticker that shows up-to-the-minute stats, scores, and detailed fantasy football updates on the regular season games that are simultaneously being televised live on CBS, FOX, and NBC. The show's audio features simulcasts of each game's radio broadcast from Sirius Satellite Radio (although during the first season they rebroadcasted Sporting News Radio), including whip-arounds of each game. The show also features the many post-game conferences that are held by each league's head coach after their games.
- Six Days To Sunday
- This 30-minute documentary series profiles the life of an NFL coach or player as they get ready for an upcoming game. The show documents the subject's activities and preparations, including his team practices, exercises in the weight room, studying game film and other relevant forms of preparation. The series has also profiled other people in the NFL such as Cleveland Browns owner Randy Lerner and referee Ed Hochuli.
- Sounds of the Game
- This highlight show recaps the best press conference moments of the past week, along with game footage and sound to illustrate each coaches' and players' comments. The show also features NFL Films footage of recently completed games. It is hosted by Paul Burmeister.
[edit] Service
The channel is an ad-supported cable and satellite television network offering a linear standard-definition channel; a high-definition simulcast feed (NFL Network HD); and video-on-demand product including extended game highlights and Emmy-Award winning programs from the NFL Films library.
[edit] Reach
- The channel is currently available to more than 50 million homes in the U.S. It is also available on selected service providers in Canada.
Current outlets include:
- Comcast, the largest cable company in the U.S., offers the channel on its digital platform.
- DirecTV, the nation's largest DBS satellite provider, offers the network to all 14 million of its customers on Channel 212.
- Dish Network, DirectTV's main DBS competitor, offers this network on channel 154.
- Insight Communications, the nation's ninth-largest cable company, offers the channel on its digital platform.
- More than 50 smaller cable companies also offer the service, primarily on a digital basic or expanded basic level.
Former outlets:
- Charter Communications offered the channel as part of its Digital Sports tier, but the NFL pulled the signal on December 19, 2005 because "the [Digital Sports] tier doesn't enjoy deep penetration" [6]
- Time Warner Cable, the second-largest cable company in the U.S., pulled the network on August 1, 2006 from systems formerly owned by Adelphia. It cited a dispute with the NFL on carriage details. TWC claimed that the NFL asked it to be carried as a premium service.[7] The NFL asked its viewers to call a toll-free "866 number" the weekend before the transition to let TWC know they still wanted to see the service. Those efforts were unsuccessful. On August 4, the Federal Communications Commission mandated that TWC reinstate NFL Network temporarily in former Adelphia areas, in compliance with regulations. [8]
[edit] NFL Network HD
NFL Network HD is a high definition simulcast of NFL Network. It launched in August 2004 and so far is available through Verizon's FiOS.
Comcast was showing NFL Network HD content on its INHD channels during the 2005 season in certain markets (Detroit).
