Sports TV News
FS1 Will Offer Fans Tiger-Focused US Open Coverage
“Friday through Sunday – fans will have to go back to FOX’s digital platform for additional coverage options.”

Published
4 years agoon
By
Jack Ferris
Whether it’s NBC, FOX or CBS covering a tournament, golf fans have come to expect digital support to supplement the network’s prime time telecasts. Generally, the online platforms stick to high profile groups or featured holes – like Augusta’s Amen Corner. This year, FOX is planning something a little different for it’s fifth consecutive US Open.
Thursday, fans can find coverage from Pebble Beach starting at 12:30 pm ET on Fox Sports 1. Come 7:30 pm ET, FOX will pick up the coverage with Joe Buck steering the ship. However, die hard Tiger fans can stick to FS1 to watch Woods’ round uninterrupted (5:09 tee time) with Jordan Spieth and Justin Rose. The same cable option will have every shot from that group and Brooks Koeka’s 4:47 threesome with Francesco Molinari and Victor Hovland. This decision marks the first time FOX will use FS1 as a 2nd feed to help cover an event.
“There are times when you think you could be competing with yourself,” FOX Executive Producer Mark Loomis told John Ourand of the Sports Business Journal. “The thought I had over the winter was ‘what’s the way to get more peoples’ eyes on the US Open?’ I thought this might work.”
Due to FOX’s commitment to the Women’s World Cup and the MLB, FS1 will only serve as a secondary option to their network’s main telecast on Thursday. While it’s only one day, FOX Sports will have a pretty good idea of how to cover the USGA championship in the future based on their first round numbers on both linear channels. Friday through Sunday – fans will have to go back to FOX’s digital platform for additional coverage options. Justin Kutcher will anchor the supplemental coverage with Mark Brooks on board as an analyst.

Jack Ferris writes feature stories for BSM and serves as an update anchor for iHeart Radio in San Francisco and as a freelance contributor for the PAC-12 Network. Previously he has worked as a sports anchor for KXLY-TV in Spokane and as the co-host of the Don West Show on KPQ in Central Washington. You can find him on Twitter @JFerris714 or reach him by email at [email protected].
Sports TV News
NASCAR to Announce $1.1B Rights Deal with FOX, NBC, Prime Video, TNT
The $1.1 billion figure represents a nearly 40% increase in what the organization receives from its current deals.

Published
5 hours agoon
November 29, 2023By
BSM Staff
NASCAR is on the verge of announcing a new TV rights deal that will see the racing organization bring in $1.1 billion annually from five TV partners.
The $1.1 billion figure represents a nearly 40% increase in what the organization receives from its current deals.
Beginning in 2025 and running through the 2031 season, NASCAR will air its first 14 Cup Series events with FOX and FS1. The next five events will air on Amazon Prime Video, making the first time a NASCAR event will be shown exclusively on a streaming service.
Following Amazon’s portion of the schedule, another five events will be broadcast on both TNT and the B/R Sports tier of the Max streaming service. The final 14 races of the year will be broadcast with NBC, USA Network, and Peacock, according to reporting from Sports Business Journal’s Adam Stern.
Previously, FOX Sports aired 18 races, while NBC aired 20, which includes two exhibition events.
In addition to its new deals with Amazon Prime Video and TNT for the Cup Series, NASCAR also has a previously announced new broadcast agreement with The CW to air each race of the Xfinity Series.
The upcoming announcement, which is expected either Wednesday or Thursday, comes on the heels of NASCAR President Steve Phelps admitting new TV partners would be entering the fray in the next contract.
“We are going to have an additional partner and we may have two additional partners,” Phelps told NBC Sports. “That’s kind of where we’re trying to figure out in these last few weeks — what that’s going to look like, but we already know we’re going to have more partners.”
Sports TV News
First Take Has Its Most-Watched Month Ever
This marked the 16th consecutive month of growth for one of ESPN’s flagship programs.

Published
6 hours agoon
November 29, 2023By
Jeff Kotuby
First Take is in the midst of an all-time hot streak — and it just had its most-watched month ever.
According to a tweet posted by ESPN PR, First Take achieved its most-watched month ever in November 2023 with an average of 614,000 viewers. This marked the 16th consecutive month of growth for one of ESPN’s flagship programs.
Just last month, First Take hit its second-highest viewership numbers at an average of 544,000 viewers, and the entirety of 2023 has been marked by record highs for seemingly every month of the year.
The records continue for @FirstTake with @stephenasmith & @MollyQerim
— ESPN PR (@ESPNPR) November 29, 2023
☑️ In November, First Take marked its most-watched month EVER!
☑️ The show extended its year-over-year viewership growth streak to 16 consecutive months pic.twitter.com/YHPj3VVUuy
The show has evolved from a debate show with two equal “combatants” into a show starring Stephen A. Smith that features a rotating group of analysts, including Shannon Sharpe, Christopher “Mad Dog” Russo, and Pat McAfee, as they debate the day’s most pressing sports topics. Sharpe left Undisputed and joined First Take in August, while “Mad Dog” turned sporadic appearances on the program into a weekly gig starting in March 2022.
Smith and Russo worked together on the latter’s Mad Dog Radio radio station on SiriusXM from 2013-17 and remained close after Smith returned to ESPN.

Jeff Kotuby is a nationally-published journalist with bylines on many popular broadcasting and pop culture sites, including The Streamable, eBaum’s World, Twin Galaxies, and more. Jeff grew up in the shadows of New York City and cultivated his love for sports media with the classic broadcasting voices of the area, like Mike & The Mad Dog, Mike “Doc” Emerick, and Michael Kay. You can reach Jeff on Twitter @JeffKotu3y.
Sports TV News
Diamond Sports Group Files Motion for 120-Day Extension in Ch. 11 Bankruptcy
“The Debtors believe they have more than earned this extension through their hard work, diligence, and accomplishments to date.”

Published
6 hours agoon
November 29, 2023By
BSM Staff
Diamond Sports Group recently participated in a hearing regarding the status of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection earlier in November upon reaching a cooperation agreement with its stakeholders. A term of this agreement, however, is that it does not become effective unless a management services agreement between Diamond and its parent company, Sinclair, Inc., is assumed or rejected by Nov. 30, 2023.
In late July, Diamond filed a lawsuit against Sinclair and alleged it received around $1.5 billion because of misconduct related to the “fraudulent transfer of assets, unlawful distributions and payments, breaches of contracts, unjust enrichment and breaches of fiduciary duties.” This remains a pending lawsuit and is resulting in an in-person mediation session that is currently slated to occur on Dec. 7, 2023. Should these issues be unable to reach a resolution, Diamond Sports Group debtors say they are prepared to continue litigating these proceedings to a conclusion. Sinclair counsel prognosticated that Diamond’s business will “go away” during the hearing with the bankruptcy court.
Debtors from Diamond Sports Group have requested a 120-day extension to file a Ch. 11 bankruptcy plan, the third such motion to grant an extension during the bankruptcy case. If approved, it would move the filing deadline through and including March 28, 2024, and solicit acceptances up to and including May 28, 2024. Within its rationale, the regional sports network operator claimed that more than 81% of first lien claim holders are in support of the cooperation agreement, along with “certain large holders of second lien claims.” The current filing exclusivity period runs through and includes Nov. 29, 2023, while the solicitation exclusivity period runs through and includes Jan. 29, 2023.
“It has taken months of painstaking negotiations to break the logjam in these cases and reach the settlements and resolutions embodied in the Cooperation Agreement and the NBA agreement,” Diamond Sports Group said in a court filing. “This is primarily because of headwinds that the Debtors’ linear television business has faced leading up to and during these chapter 11 cases. Moreover, the Debtors’ wide array of active stakeholders have held differing views regarding the Debtors’ go-forward business and resolution of these chapter 11 cases in the context of these systemic industry changes.”
The NBA approves this cooperation agreement as well, which was approved by the court on Nov. 15 and allowed Diamond to enter into agreements with the NBA and NHL to modify their media rights contracts. As it pertains to MLB, the debtors conveyed that they have communicated with the league about which teams Diamond intends to keep broadcasting. MLB previously declared that “time is up” for Diamond to determine its plan, leading it to file a motion to compel that is set for a hearing on Dec. 15, 2023.
Last season, Diamond Sports Group selectively rejected broadcast contracts of the San Diego Padres and Arizona Diamondbacks, resulting in the league stepping in to broadcast and disseminate the games independently. Prior to the season’s start, the league created a local media department, headed by former regional sports network executive Billy Chambers, and also provided at least 80% of remuneration that teams would have received under their previous deals with Diamond. The league also recently hired Josh Clark in a newly-created role of senior vice president of content distribution, serving a pivotal role in distribution agreements for local media live game rights and other media interests.
The filing refers to the cooperation agreement as a “significant breakthrough,” but it does acknowledge that there are two key tasks within the case as a whole. Depending on the outcome of the Dec. 15 hearing on the motion to compel filed by MLB and another motion to compel filed by Sinclair, the effectiveness of the cooperation agreement is said to potentially be impacted.
This agreement was reached on condition of a beneficial resolution therein, along with reaching a deal with the NHL, which it is in the midst of finalizing the terms of with the league. Diamond Sports Group debtors are also continuing to work with multichannel virtual programming distributors (MVPD) to ensure games will continue to be accessible with the fans.
If the motions to compel from both entities are denied, along with the NHL agreement being approved and an amendment to a cash collateral order to include certain terms in the cooperation agreement, Diamond Sports Group debtors intend to file a Ch. 11 plan within 10 business days or within another timeframe to be agreed on. These obligations are imposed on the Debtors under the cooperation agreement, which entails that it must implement the intercreditor settlement within the Ch. 11 plan.
“Once that plan is filed, the Debtors expect to prosecute it on a reasonable timeline,” the motion reads, “with confirmation likely to be scheduled for early spring following approval of a disclosure statement and completion of plan solicitation.”
At the moment, the Debtors continue to work with a judicial mediator to attain concordance among creditor groups, the UCC and commercial counterparties on the best path forward. The intent to operate the Diamond Sports Group business through the 2024 MLB season is a path that it believes will maximize distributable value for creditors. Utilizing the cooperation agreement as a baseline, the parties within reached settlement on intercreditor issues that will diminish and/or eliminate costs associated with additional litigation.
“The Debtors’ entry into the Cooperation Agreement was a critical step in these chapter 11 cases that provides the Debtors, their creditors, and team, league, and distributor partners with clarity and visibility over the course of the 2023-24 Seasons,” Diamond Sports Group said, “and a pathway to confirming a chapter 11 plan while minimizing further administrative costs.”
Diamond Sports Group debtors have currently been granted a cumulative 140 days worth of extensions to file a Ch. 11 plan. Within its motion, the debtors express that they are not seeking an extension to pressure stakeholders, but rather to safeguard and build upon the progress made under exclusivity and protect optionality.
“The Debtors believe they have more than earned this extension through their hard work, diligence, and accomplishments to date,” Diamond Sports Group said in the filing. “Moreover, it is difficult even to conceive of any other party competently filing a plan of its own. But the mere possibility of other parties filing competing over the next few months would, at minimum, be a needless and costly distraction.”