en-academic.com

Comcast SportsNet Bay Area

Comcast SportsNet Bay Area
Csn bayarea.png
CSN Bay Area logo
Launched 1990 (as SportsChannel Bay Area)
Network Comcast SportsNet
Owned by NBCUniversal (45%)
San Francisco Giants (30%)
Fox Entertainment Group (25%)
Slogan Authentic Bay Area Sports
Country United States
Language English
Broadcast area San Francisco Bay Area
Northern California
Central California
Southern Oregon
Nevada
Nationwide via satelite
Formerly called SportsChannel Bay Area (1990-1991)
SportsChannel Pacific (1991-1998)
Fox Sports Bay Area (1998-2000)
Fox Sports Net Bay Area (2000-2004)
FSN Bay Area (2004-2008)
Replaced Pacific Sports Network
Sister channel(s) Comcast SportsNet California
KNTV
KSTS
NBC Sports Network
Website CSN Bay Area
Availability
Satellite
DirecTV 696 CSN Bay Area (SD/HD)
697 CSN Bay Area Plus (SD)
697-1 CSN Bay Area Plus (HD)
Dish Network 419 (HD/SD)
Cable
Available on select cable systems Check local listings for channels

Comcast SportsNet Bay Area (CSN Bay Area for short) is a regional sports network that serves cable outlets throughout the San Francisco Bay Area, as well as other parts of Northern California, Central California, Southern Oregon, and Nevada.

History

Originally launched as SportsChannel Bay Area in April 1990, it merged with the Pacific Sports Network in the July 1991 and became SportsChannel Pacific. When the SportsChannel networks joined the Fox Sports Net family, the channel was rebranded as Fox Sports Bay Area in January 1998, and to FSN Bay Area in 2004. With the network being 45% owned by NBCUniversal, 30% owned by the San Francisco Giants and 25% owned by Fox, the network was rebranded as a part of the Comcast SportsNet family on March 31, 2008.[1]

CSN Bay Area was the first Comcast SportsNet-branded network to use the current logo, which was later adopted by all the other CSN-branded networks on October 1, 2008.

With NBCUniversal also owning NBC O&O KNTV and Telemundo affiliate KSTS, on April 19, 2011, the network announced plans to build an additional set specifically for KNTV sports segments. The revamp will also include in-depth interviews in addition to scores and highlights, and hosted by its sports anchors and analysts.[2] KNTV plans to begin the segments in June 2011.[3] The new segment, along with the unveiling of the new set, began on June 13, 2011.

Programming

CSN Bay Area is the main television channel for MLB's San Francisco Giants and the NBA's Golden State Warriors, and also shows select games from MLS's San Jose Earthquakes along with sister-network CSN California. The channel also broadcasts college sports, mainly involving the Stanford Cardinal and the California Golden Bears as well as sports involving the Pacific-10, Western Athletic, Mountain West and West Coast Conferences.

Until 2004, the network also broadcast games involving the NBA's Sacramento Kings and the WNBA's Sacramento Monarchs. Following the expiration of their contracts with the then-FSN Bay Area, the owners of the Kings and Monarchs went on to create CSN Bay Area's sister station, Comcast SportsNet West (now Comcast SportsNet California). The network was also home to MLB's Oakland Athletics up to the end of the 2008 baseball season, when they also moved to CSN California; similarly, the network was the home of the NHL's San Jose Sharks until the end of the 2008-09 NHL season when they also moved to CSN California. Until the demise of the Arena Football League, the network also occasionally broadcast games featuring the AFL's San Jose Sabercats.

CSN Bay Area carries FSN programming in lieu of an FSN affiliate due to being partially owned by Fox. This offers the regions access to a variety of college sports, notably ACC men's and women's basketball on Sundays, Pac-10 basketball on various nights, plus Big 12 and Pac-10 football on Saturdays during their respective seasons. They also air studio shows, such as The Best Damn Sports Show Period and the FSN Final Score, and simulcasted radio shows such as The Dan Patrick Show. This arrangement is to secure national coverage for its collegiate lineup of games.

Original programming

Every Thursday night, CSN Bay Area airs an out-of-market National Hockey League game, usually either from Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia or Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic.

Beginning with the Comcast SportsNet era, most Giants home games and California road games are preceded and followed by a half an hour plus show previewing and analyzing the day's game respectively. Although the Warriors and Sharks were still playing when CSN launched, their games did not feature pre-game and post-game shows (except a few Sharks playoff games which had pre-game shows, and the Warriors who already had their own pre-game show), but Sharks pre-game and post-games were introduced for their 2008-2009 seasons with former ESPN personality and Stanford grad Scott Reiss. The Warriors do not have a pre-game or post-game show, but Reiss and Matt Steinmetz do a short segment analyzing the Warrior's current game during halftime and after the game. In both cases (Warriors and Sharks), only home games have the feature, and only when a pre-game/post-game show would not conflict with another scheduled game.

On April 6, 2009, CSN Bay Area premiered their news show, Sportsnet Central. The half-hour news show will feature up-to-date scores, highlights and news of all the Bay Area teams (including those on CSN California, like the 49ers, Raiders, Sharks, A's and Kings). Reporters include current CSN Bay Area personalities Scott Reiss, Kate Longworth, Jaymee Sire, and Matt Morrison. The same day, the network also premiered Chronicle Live, hosted by Bay Area sports announcer Greg Papa (Giants pre-game and post-game host, Giants substitute play-by-play announcer and Raiders play-by-play caller), which features analysis and debates on hot topics on Bay Area sports, with the panel consisting of writers and experts mainly (but not exclusive) from the San Francisco Chronicle, Oakland Tribune and San Jose Mercury News.[4]

With the debut of the Sportsnet Central shows, all road games for the Giants and Sharks (when not overlapping another game) now have post and pre-game shows. Also, post-game shows, home or away are usually done from the San Francisco Sportsnet Central studios, with the exception of some home games which are done on-site. Previously, all home games were done on-site and road games did not feature pre or post game except for some Giants games in Southern California.

For the 2009-2010 season, Warriors pre and post-game live shows were added to the schedule.

Additional channels

CSN Bay Area also operates two additional channels for their programming. CSN Bay Area Plus is an overflow channel utilized for scheduling conflicts when more than one team broadcast by the station is playing at the same time.

Comcast SportsNet Bay Area HD

Comcast SportsNet Bay Area HD is the 1080i high definition simulcast feed of the network. Starting in 2010, all of the Warriors and Giants games, as well as most of the network's original programming, are broadcast in HD.[5]

Personalities

The logo of the network when it was FSN Bay Area.

  • Damon P. Andrews, SportsNet Central co-host and Golden State Warriors pre-game and post-game host
  • Shooty Babbit, A's studio analyst
  • Mindi Bach, Athletics pre-game and post-game host
  • Jim Barnett, Warriors color analyst
  • Dave Benz, Sportsnet Central co-host, Chronicle Live substitute host
  • Brodie Brazil, SportsNet Central Reporter and Sharks sideline reporter
  • Dan Dibley, Earthquakes sideline reporter
  • Shawn Estes, Giants Studio analyst
  • Ray Fosse, Athletics color analyst
  • Bob Fitzgerald, Warriors and SaberCats play-by-play announcer
  • Amy Gutierrez, Giants sideline reporter
  • Randy Hahn, Sharks play-by-play announcer
  • Bret Hedican, Sharks pre-game, intermission and post-game analyst
  • Jim Kozimor, SportsNet Central anchor, Earthquakes play-by-play announcer
  • Duane Kuiper, Giants play-by-play announcer
  • Glen Kuiper, Athletics play-by-play announcer and Warriors sideline reporter
  • Mike Krukow, Giants color analyst
  • Kate Longworth, Sharks, Athletics, and Giants sideline reporter
  • Matt Maiocco, 49ers reporter
  • Greg Papa, Chronicle Live host, Giants pre-game and post-game host, Giants substitute play-by-play announcer
  • Scott Reiss, Sharks pre-game, intermission and post-game host
  • Drew Remenda, Sharks color analyst
  • Bip Roberts, Giants studio analyst
  • John Shrader, Earthquakes color analyst
  • Jaymee Sire, Giants and Warriors sideline reporter, Sportsnet Central co-host
  • Mychael Urban, MLB Insider
  • Fernando Viña, A's Studio Analyst
  • Henry Wofford, A's and Warriors Pre/Post Game Host, Race Week Host, Sportsnet Central co-host

References

  1. ^ Authentic Opening Day
  2. ^ Comcast to provide sports content for KNTV San Francisco Chronicle.
  3. ^ Okanes, Jonathan (2011). "CSNBA to provide content for sports segments on NBC Bay Area". Inside Bay Area. http://www.insidebayarea.com/ci_17884778. Retrieved April 19, 2011.
  4. ^ http://bayarea.comcastsportsnet.com/about-us/press-releases/comcast-sportsnet-opens-new-era/[dead link]
  5. ^ CSN Bay Area GIANTS TV SCHEDULE
 Links to related articles
v · d · eSan Francisco Giants

Formerly the New York Gothams and the New York Giants · Based in San Francisco, California (Bay Area)

The Franchise

History in New York · History in San Francisco · Seasons · Records · No-hitters · Players · Managers · Owners and executives · Opening Day starting pitchers · First-round draft picks · Broadcasters

Ballparks

Polo Grounds · Oakland Park · St. George Grounds · Hilltop Park · Seals Stadium · Candlestick Park · AT&T Park
Spring Training: Payne Park · Flamingo Field · LSU Varsity Baseball Field · Al Lang Field · Phoenix Municipal Stadium · Scottsdale Stadium

Culture
Rivalries
Retired Numbers

3 · 4 · 11 · 20 · 24 · 27 · 30 · 36 · 42 · 44 · NY · NY

World Series Champions (6)

1905 · 1921 · 1922 · 1933 · 1954 · 2010

National League
Championships (21)

1888 · 1889 · 1904 · 1905 · 1911 · 1912 · 1913 · 1917 · 1921 · 1922 · 1923 · 1924 · 1933 · 1936 · 1937 · 1951 · 1954 · 1962 · 1989 · 2002 · 2010

Division Titles

Western: 1971 · 1987 · 1989 · 1997 · 2000 · 2003 · 2010 Wild Card: 2002

Minors

AAA: Fresno Grizzlies AA: Richmond Flying Squirrels A: San Jose Giants · Augusta GreenJackets · Salem-Keizer Volcanoes Rookie: AZL Giants · DSL Giants

 Seasons (129)
1880s-1890s

1883 · 1884 · 1885 · 1886 · 1887 · 1888 · 1889 · 1890 · 1891 · 1892 · 1893 · 1894 · 1895 · 1896 · 1897 · 1898 · 1899

1900s-1910s

1900 · 1901 · 1902 · 1903 · 1904 · 1905 · 1906 · 1907 · 1908 · 1909 · 1910 · 1911 · 1912 · 1913 · 1914 · 1915 · 1916 · 1917 · 1918 · 1919

1920s-1930s

1920 · 1921 · 1922 · 1923 · 1924 · 1925 · 1926 · 1927 · 1928 · 1929 · 1930 · 1931 · 1932 · 1933 · 1934 · 1935 · 1936 · 1937 · 1938 · 1939

1940s-1950s

1940 · 1941 · 1942 · 1943 · 1944 · 1945 · 1946 · 1947 · 1948 · 1949 · 1950 · 1951 · 1952 · 1953 · 1954 · 1955 · 1956 · 1957 · 1958 · 1959

1960s-1970s

1960 · 1961 · 1962 · 1963 · 1964 · 1965 · 1966 · 1967 · 1968 · 1969 · 1970 · 1971 · 1972 · 1973 · 1974 · 1975 · 1976 · 1977 · 1978 · 1979

1980s-1990s

1980 · 1981 · 1982 · 1983 · 1984 · 1985 · 1986 · 1987 · 1988 · 1989 · 1990 · 1991 · 1992 · 1993 · 1994 · 1995 · 1996 · 1997 · 1998 · 1999

2000s-2010s

2000 · 2001 · 2002 · 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010 · 2011 · 2012

v · d · eGolden State Warriors

Formerly the Philadelphia Warriors and the San Francisco Warriors • Founded in 1946 • Based in Oakland, California

The franchise

Franchise • Team History • All-Time roster • Seasons • Head coaches • Current season

Arenas
Head coaches

Gottlieb • Senesky • Cervi • Johnston • McGuire • Feerick • Hannum • Sharman • Lee • Attles • Bach • Attles • Bach • Karl • Gregory • Nelson • Lanier • Adelman • Carlesimo • St. Jean • Cowens • Winters • Musselman • Montgomery • Nelson • Smart • Jackson

General managers

Tyrell • Gottleib • Feerick • Vertlieb • Sterling • Attles • Nelson • Twardzik • St. Jean • Mullin • Riley

D-League affiliate
Retired numbers

13 • 14 • 16 • 24 • 42

Hall of Famers
NBA Championships (3)

1947 • 1956 • 1975

Conference Championships (5)

1947 • 1956 • 1964 • 1967 • 1975

Culture
Media

TV: Comcast SportsNet Bay Area • Radio: KNBR/KTCT • Announcers: Bob Fitzgerald • Jim Barnett • Tim Roye

v · d · eSan Jose Earthquakes
The Club
Stadiums

Spartan Stadium • Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum • Buck Shaw StadiumNew Earthquakes Stadium

Culture

Historical Earthquakes clubs • The Casbah • Club Quake • 1906 UltrasMascots

Rivalries

California Clasico • Heritage Cup

Owner: Earthquakes Soccer, LLCGeneral Manager: John DoyleHead Coach: Frank Yallop

Honors (7)

MLS Cup (2)
Western Conference
Championship (2)

2003 • 2005

Supporters' Shield

2005

Carolina Challenge Cup (2)

2005 • 2008

Seasons (14)

1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999 • 2000 • 2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2008 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011

v · d · eSan Jose Sharks
Franchise

FranchiseExpansion draftPlayersCoachesGMs • Seasons • RecordsDraft picksS. J. SharkieCalifornia Golden SealsCurrent season

Arenas
Affiliates
Coaches

Kingston • Constantine • Wiley • Sims • Sutter • Raeder • Wilson • McLellan

General managers

Ferreira • Grillo • Lombardi • Wilson

Broadcasters

TV

Radio

KUFX • Dan Rusanowsky • Jamie Baker

v · d · eOakland Athletics

Formerly the Philadelphia Athletics and the Kansas City Athletics • Based in Oakland, California (Bay Area)

The Franchise

History • SeasonsRecords • No-hitters • PlayersOwners and executives • Managers • BroadcastersAward winners and league leaders • First-round draft picks

Ballparks

Columbia ParkShibe ParkMunicipal StadiumO.co ColiseumCashman FieldCisco Field (proposed)
Spring Training: Barrs FieldTerry Park Ballfield • Wilmington Park • McCurdy FieldConnie Mack FieldMcKechnie Field • Scottsdale Stadium I • Phoenix Municipal Stadium

Culture

Philadelphia Athletics (football) • Philadelphia Baseball Wall of FameAthletics NationCharlie-O • Bash Brothers (Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire) • Stomper • $100,000 Infield"Holy Toledo!"BillyballCelebrationWhite CleatsMoneyball (book)Moneyball (film)

Lore

The Mack Attack • Kirk Gibson's 1988 World Series home run • 1989 Loma Prieta earthquakeDallas Braden's perfect game

Rivalries
Important figures

Hall of Fame
members

Wall of Fame
members

Franchise
record holders

Retired numbers

92427344243

World Series
Champions (9)

191019111913192919301972197319741989

American League
Championships (15)

190219051910191119131914192919301931197219731974198819891990

Minors
 Seasons (112)
1900s-1910s

1901 • 1902 • 1903 • 1904 • 1905 • 1906 • 1907 • 1908 • 1909 • 1910 • 1911 • 1912 • 1913 • 1914 • 1915 • 1916 • 1917 • 1918 • 1919

1920s-1930s

1920 • 1921 • 1922 • 1923 • 1924 • 1925 • 1926 • 1927 • 1928 • 1929 • 1930 • 1931 • 1932 • 1933 • 1934 • 1935 • 1936 • 1937 • 1938 • 1939

1940s-1950s

1940 • 1941 • 1942 • 1943 • 1944 • 1945 • 1946 • 1947 • 1948 • 1949 • 1950 • 1951 • 1952 • 1953 • 1954 • 1955 • 1956 • 1957 • 1958 • 1959

1960s-1970s

1960 • 1961 • 1962 • 1963 • 1964 • 1965 • 1966 • 1967 • 1968 • 1969 • 1970 • 1971 • 1972 • 1973 • 1974 • 1975 • 1976 • 1977 • 1978 • 1979

1980s-1990s

1980 • 1981 • 1982 • 1983 • 1984 • 1985 • 1986 • 1987 • 1988 • 1989 • 1990 • 1991 • 1992 • 1993 • 1994 • 1995 • 1996 • 1997 • 1998 • 1999

2000s-2010s

2000 • 2001 • 2002 • 2003 • 2004 • 2005 • 2006 • 2007 • 2008 • 2009 • 2010 • 2011 • 2012

v · d · eNBCUniversal LLC

A joint venture of Comcast (51%) and General Electric (49%)

Company Officials

Board of Directors

Stephen B. Burke (CEO) · Brian Roberts · Michael Angelakis · Jeffrey Immelt · Keith Sherin

Senior Corporate Executives

Stephen B. Burke (CEO) · Matt Bond · Lynn Calpeter (CFO) · Steve Capus · Richard Cotton · Dick Ebersol · Patricia Fili-Krushel · Robert Greenblatt · Bonnie Hammer · Ted Harbert · Mark Hoffman · Paula Madison · Ron Meyer · Adam Miller · Jeff Shell · Page Thompson · Lauren Zalaznick

Universal Studios
Universal Parks & Resorts
Broadcast TV assets
NBCUniversal
Television Networks

A&E Television Networks (15%) · Bravo · Chiller · Cloo · CNBC · MSNBC · Mun2 · Oxygen · ShopNBC (30%) · Syfy · Telemundo Puerto Rico · Universal HD · Universal Sports (50%) · USA Network · The Weather Channel[nu 4] · Weatherscan[nu 4]

Comcast Networks

E! · ExerciseTV (part owner) · G4 (88%) · Golf Channel · PBS Kids Sprout (part owner) · Style Network · Versus

Bay Area (45%)  · California  · Chicago (20%)  · Mid-Atlantic  · New England  · Northwest  · Philadelphia  · SNY (8%)  · The Mtn. (50%) · CSS (50%) · Comcast Sports Southwest  · New England Cable News  · Comcast Network

CNBC global channels
CNBC Europe branches

Class CNBC (20%) · CNBC Africa · CNBC Arabiya (according to CNBC Europe· CNBC-e · CNBC Nordic · TVN CNBC

CNBC Asia branches
Universal Networks
International

13th Street · Diva TV · Hallmark Channel (International) · KidsCo[nu 5] · Movies 24 · Steel[nu 6] · Studio Universal · Syfy · Universal Channel

Syfy global channels

Asia · Australia · Benelux · France · Germany · Japan · Latin America · Poland · Portugal · Romania · Russia · Spain · UK · US

NBCUniversal Television Group
NBC O&Os
Telemundo O&Os

KBLR · KDEN · KEJT-LP · KHRR · KNSO[nu 8] · KSTS · KTAZ · KTMD · KVDA[nu 8] · KVEA · KXTX · WKAQ · WNEU[nu 8] · WNJU · WSCV · WSNS

ShopNBC O&Os
Internet ventures:
Other assets:

EMKA, Ltd. · qubo[nu 11] · WSI Corporation[nu 4]  · International Media Distribution

Defunct properties:

NBC Weather Plus (2004–2008) · Trio (1997–2005)

See also:

Vivendi (former NBCUniversal stockholder and current parent company of Universal Music Group

  1. ^ Co-owned with Dentsu.
  2. ^ 50%, with Viacom's Paramount Pictures.
  3. ^ Combined operation with InterMedia Partners.
  4. ^ a b c Co-owned with Blackstone Group and Bain Capital.
  5. ^ Co-owned with Corus Entertainment and Cookie Jar Group.
  6. ^ Co-owned with Mediaset.
  7. ^ a b The stations are co-owned with LIN TV in a joint venture (76% owned by NBC, 24% owned by LIN).
  8. ^ a b c The stations are owned by NBCUniversal, but are controlled by ZGS Broadcast Holdings.
  9. ^ Co-owned with News Corporation and The Walt Disney Company.
  10. ^ Co-owned with Microsoft in a joint venture (82% owned by NBC, 18% owned by Microsoft).
  11. ^ Co-owned with Corus Entertainment, Classic Media, Nelvana, Scholastic Books and ION Media Networks.
v · d · eFox Sports
Current programs
American cable/satellite networks

Big Ten Network (49 %) • Fox College Sports • Fox Soccer • Fox Soccer Plus • Fox Sports Net • Fox Deportes • Fuel TVSpeed

Owned and operated
regional sports networks

Arizona • Detroit • Florida / Sun Sports • Houston • Midwest / Indiana / Kansas City • North / Wisconsin • Ohio • South / Carolinas / Tennessee / SportSouth • Southwest / Oklahoma • West / Prime Ticket

Affiliated regional sports networks

Root Sports (Northwest, Pittsburgh, Rocky Mountain / Utah) • Comcast SportsNet (Bay Area, Chicago, New England, Philadelphia, and Washington) • MSG NetworkMSG Plus

International sports networks
Others
Former programs
Defunct networks
v · Broadcast television in the San Francisco Bay Area including San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose, California
English channels

KTVU (2.1 Fox, 2.2 LATV)  · KRON (4.1 MNTV, 4.2 MNTV)  · KPIX (5.1 CBS)  · KBKF-LP 6 (Ind)  · KGO (7.1 ABC, 7.2 LWN HD, 7.3 LWN SD)  · KNTV (11.1 NBC, 11.2 Nonstop, 11.3 Uni Sports)  · KOFY (20.1 Ind, 20.4 AZA)  · KFTL-CA (28.1 HSN)  · KICU (36.1 Ind, 36.2 KBS/KEMS, 36.3 Estrella TV)  · KTVJ-LP 36 (Ind)  · KCNS (38.1 RTV)  · KBCW (44.1 CW)  · KKPX (65.1 ION, 65.2 Qubo, 65.3 ION Life)  · KTLN (68.1 TLN)

Public television

KQED (9.1 PBS, 9.3 PBS World)  · KQEH (54.1 PBS, 54.5 V-me)  · KCSM (60.1 Public Ind, 60.2 WV, 60.3 KCSM-FM simulcast)

Spanish channels

KDTV (14.1 UNI, 14.2 TFT)  · KMMC-LP 40 (Tr3s)  · KSTS (48.1 TEL)  · KFSF (66.1 TFT, 66.2 UNI)

Ethnic channels

KAXT 1.x (12 digital channels)  · KTSF (26.1 Ind, 26.2 NHK-D, 26.3 KBS World, 26.4 ICN, 26.5 Viet Today TV)  · KMTP (32.1 Ind)  · KCNS (38.2 Sino TV, 38.8 Saigon TV)

Stations serving
Diablo Valley/Tri-Valley

KTNC-TV (42.1 Estrella TV, 42.2 Estrella TV, 42.3 This TV)  · Tri-Valley Community Television

Stations serving
Santa Rosa

KRCB (22.1 PBS, 22.2 Create)  · KEMO-TV (50.1 AZA)

Stations serving
Ukiah/Mendocino County

KQSL (8.1 RTV)  · K09PM 9 (PBS)  · K17CG 17 (AZA)  · K21CD 21 (TEL)  · K29DF 29 (Ind)  · K31GK 31 (Ind)  · K39AG 39 (Fox)  · K41AF 41 (MNTV)  · K43AF 43 (CBS)  · KTJH-LP 44 (Ind)  · K45AH 45 (ABC)  · K47AL 47 (Ind)  · K51AQ 51 (The CW)  · K55GX 55 (PBS)  · K69DF 69 (PBS)

Defunct stations
Local cable channels

Comcast SportsNet Bay Area - Comcast SportsNet California - KHRT 15 (Hayward) - KCRT 28 (Richmond)

ATSC-M/H Mobile DTV
encrypted channels
are italicized

KTVU 2.1 (FOX)1  · KNTV 11.1 (NBC)  · KSTS 48.1 (TMD)  · KKPX 65.1 (ION)2
1Currently via KICU-TV, Coming to its own signal in 2011, 2 Coming in 2011

California television: Bakersfield • Chico-Redding • Eureka • Fresno • Los Angeles • Medford OR • Monterey • Palm Springs • Reno NV • Sacramento • San Diego • San Francisco • Santa Barbara • El Centro CA / Yuma AZ

v · SportsChannel America
Affiliates

Bay AreaChicago • Florida • Los AngelesNew YorkNew EnglandPhiladelphia

Programming

Professional wrestling

Related television networks
Owners
Related articles

Defunct television networks in the United States • Regional sports networkSports Plus Network

v · d · eNHL on SportsChannel America
Related programs
Related articles

Hawkvision • History of the NHL on United States television • Stanley Cup Finals television ratings

Affiliated networks

Commentators

Commentators by team

Chicago Blackhawks • Hartford Whalers • New York Islanders • Philadelphia Flyers

Key figures

CBC playoff feeds

Stanley Cup Finals

1989199019911992

All-Star Game

19891991 (rebroadcast third period from NBC's coverage)

Related events

NHL Entry Draft

1989199019911992

Seasons by team

Chicago Blackhawks

Hartford Whalers

1988–89 • 1989–90 • 1990–91 • 1991–92

New Jersey Devils

New York Islanders

1988–89 • 1989–90 • 1990–91 • 1991–92

Philadelphia Flyers

San Jose Sharks