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Find out which TV and radio channels have the rights to broadcast various sports events in the United Kingdom. See the details of the contracts for football, rugby, cricket, tennis, golf and more.
Find out which TV channels show the Premier League, English football's top-level competition, in the UK, Ireland and around the world. See the history of the broadcast rights sales, the number of live games per season and the blocked hours rule.
TNT Sports is a group of pay television sports channels in the UK and Ireland, formerly owned by BT Group and now by Warner Bros. Discovery. It broadcasts live and recorded sports events, including the Premier League, UEFA Champions League, UFC, MotoGP and more.
BBC Radio 5 Live (2009–present) BBC Sport (2010–2015) BT Sport (2013–present) Angus Scott: None ITV Sport (1998–2006, 2010) Setanta Sports (2007–2009) beIN Sports (2009–2020 Amazon Prime Video (2020-present BT Sport (2020–present) Vicki Sparks: None BBC Radio 5 Live BT Sport: Joe Speight None Setanta Sports (2007–2009) ESPN ...
A comprehensive list of sports channels from different regions and countries, including current and former ones. Find out which channels broadcast live sports events, sports news and other related programming.
A comprehensive list of linear television channels in the UK, including BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Paramount, Sky, Virgin Media and more. Find out the names, logos, subsidiaries, streaming options and availability of each channel.
From 2002, Sky Sports News was available free to view on digital terrestrial TV. [3] From April 2002, Sky Sports News had another face-lift, the channel stayed in the same studio, but with a silver look replacing the old wooden bench, and there was a promise of being first for breaking news, along with much more useful information.
Spurs would also feature in the BBC's first live league match at Manchester United on a Friday night a few weeks later. By the late 1980s the value of live TV coverage had rocketed; while a two-year contract for rights in 1983 had cost just £5.2m, the four-year contract exclusively landed by ITV in 1988 cost £44m, a fourfold increase per year.