This is an old revision of this page, as edited by TMC1982 (talk | contribs) at 08:59, 3 December 2006. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 08:59, 3 December 2006 by TMC1982 (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)SportsChannel America was the official American television provider of the National Hockey League from 1988-1992. Taking over for ESPN, SportsChannel was offered $51 million ($17 million per year) over three years, more than double what ESPN had paid ($24 million) for the previous three years. SportsChannel America managed to get a fourth NHL season for just $5 million.
Unfortantely, SportsChannel America was only in a few major markets, and reached only a 1/3 of the households that ESPN did at the time. In other words, SportsChannel America was seen in fewer than 10 million households. When the SportsChannel deal ended in 1992, the league returned to ESPN for another contract that would pay $80 million over five years.
Shortly after the ESPN deal was signed, SportsChannel America would contend that its contract with the NHL gave them the right to match third-party offers for television rights for the 1992-93 season. SportsChannel America accused the NHL of violating a nonbinding clause. In other words, SportsChannel America argued that it had been deprived of its contractual right of first refusal for the 1992-93 season. Appellate Division of New York State Supreme Court justice Shirley Fingerwood would deny SportsChannel America's request for an injunction against the NHL. Upholding that opinion, the appellate court found the agreement on which SportsChannel based its argument to be "too imprecise and ambiguous" and ruled that SportsChannel failed to show irreparable harm.
In 1989, SportsChannel America provided the first ever American coverage of the NHL Draft.
In September 1989, SportsChannel America covered the Washington Capitals training camp in Sweden and pre-season tour of the Soviet Union. The Capitals were joined by the Stanley Cup champion Calgary Flames, who held training camp in Prague, Czechoslovakia and then ventured to the Soviet Union. Each team played four games against Soviet National League clubs. Games were played in Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev and Riga. The NHL clubs finished with a combined 6-2 record against the top Soviet teams, including the Red Army club and Dynamo Moscow. Five of the eight contests were televised by SportsChannel America.
John Shannon was the senior producer of The NHL on Sportschannel America.
Announcers
- Herb Brooks
- Bill Clement
- John Davidson
- Don Edwards
- Mike Emrick
- Pat Foley
- Jiggs McDonald
- Peter McNab
- Bob Papa
- Rick Peckham
- Denis Potvin
- Dale Tallon
- Gary Thorne
See also
External links
- The DrewL Bucket: Can OLN Help Rescue NHL?
- NHL inks SCA deal for $5.5m. (cable television contract between National Hockey League and SportsChannel America) (Multichannel News)
- CBA: TV and the price of expansion
- Is the NHL better off?
- ESPN fails to match, Comcast gets NHL
- Dear Uncle Erza
- Google Groups - 1990
- Google Groups - 1991
- Google Groups - 1992
- Google Groups - 1993