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Timeline of other British sports channels. This is a timeline of sports channels in the UK other than Sky Sports, BT Sport and Premier Sports / FreeSports. The timeline also includes sports events which were shown on non-sports non-terrestrial channels. The timeline also includes sports coverage broadcast on streaming services.
Fans wanting to subscribe to TNT Sports directly through discovery+ will have to pay £29.99 per month, the same as was previously charged for the BT Sport Monthly Pass - this will include access ...
Free-to-air Player TNT Sports 1: TNT Sports (Warner Bros. Discovery Sports Europe / BT Group) Subscription - Discovery+: Sky Sports Sports TNT Sports 2: TNT Sports 3: TNT Sports 4: TNT Sports Box Office: Pay-per-view TNT Sports Box Office: Pay-per-view
17 March – Sky Sports becomes the exclusive broadcaster of all Formula One races, apart from the British Grand Prix which continues to be shown on Channel 4. Channel 4 also broadcasts highlights of all the other races. 2019 also sees the return to Sky Sports of the IndyCar Series after six seasons with BT Sport.. 2020s. 2020
Fans wanting to subscribe to TNT Sports directly through discovery+ will have to pay £29.99 per month, the same as was previously charged for the BT Sport Monthly Pass - this will include access ...
Sky Sports: Wimbledon Men's Final: BBC One/BBC Sport: Glastonbury 2013: BBC: Bollywood Carmen Live: BBC Three: 2015: WW1 Remembered – From the Battlefield & Westminster Abbey: BBC Two: 2014 FA Cup Semi Final: Hull City v Sheffield United: BT Sport 1: Monty Python (Mostly) Live: One Down, Five to Go: Gold: Tour de France, 2014, Stage 1
In April 2022, Warner Bros. Discovery announced that BT Sport would be rebranded to TNT Sports starting from 18 July 2023. WWE's online streaming service, WWE Network, launched on 19 January 2015 in the United Kingdom.. The United Kingdom version of the WWE Network is set to close in January 2025 as all content including Raw, SmackDown, NXT and ...
UEFA sold all the TV rights to the whole tournament in one exclusive package to one broadcaster per country. Because the winner got it all, there was a fierce competition for the TV rights whose increasing value can only be afforded by large broadcasters. This may increase media concentration and hamper competition between broadcasters.