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Broadcasting contracts for rugby league (television) 10 live matches per season on BBC TWO until 2026, including two play off matches. 5 matches live on BBC iPlayer. Highlights of Grand Final. 20 live streamed matches from Challenge Cup, League 1, Women's Super League and Wheelchair Rugby League via The Sportsman.
TNT Sports (United Kingdom) require Needlessly long lists of presenters in the Programming section. TNT Sports (formerly BT Sport) is a group of pay television sports channels in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Owned by Warner Bros. Discovery and BT Group, they first launched on 1 August 2013.
England national under-21 football team Live Coverage on BT Sport. Scottish Professional Football League Live Coverage & highlights on BT Sport (Also live on Sky Sports & Highlights on BBC Sport Scotland) Scottish League Cup - Live coverage & Highlights on BBC Sport Scotland. Bundesliga, 2. Bundesliga - Live Coverage on BT Sport.
The main broadcasters in the United Kingdom and Ireland, in current contract (2023-25), are Sky Sports (128 of the 200 televised games in the UK and Ireland), TNT Sports (52), and Amazon Prime Video (20) (UK version) / Premier Sports (53) (Ireland only). The BBC shows weekly highlights of the Premier League on its Match of the Day and Match of ...
BT Sport also provides regular live coverage of the FAWSL and does so until the end of the 2020/21 season. 2018. 14 February – BT and Sky have agreed a £4.4bn three-year deal to show live Premiership football matches from 2019 to 2022, but the amount falls short of the £5.1bn deal struck in 2015.
Peter Donald Drury (born 24 September 1967) is a British sports commentator who currently works for Sky Sports in the United Kingdom and NBC Sports in the United States as the lead commentator for their Premier League coverage. Drury was formerly with ITV Sport as its second-choice football commentator, a role he had held from 1998 to 2013.
BT Sport 1 HD, BT Sport 1. European Football Show (also referred to on occasion as Sunday Night European Football [1]) was a football TV programme on BT Sport presented by James Richardson. The show was originally split into three segments. It began with a discussion between Richardson and the show's pundits of the weekend's European football ...
Since 1937 the BBC has broadcast the Wimbledon tournament on television in the UK. [9] [a] The matches covered are primarily split between its two main terrestrial channels, BBC One and BBC Two, and their Red Button service. This can result in live matches being moved across all 3 channels.