Fox Sports 1 - Future Competition For ESPN?

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hacheman@therx.com
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Will you give them a shot?




Fox Sports 1 aims to get ESPN watchers to switch channels

With Fox Sports 1's coming launch, Fox is looking for what it considers will be solid returns from the ever-expanding universe of TV sports coverage.

By Joe Flint
August 9, 2013

"I think it's time for ESPN to get a little competition, don't you?"

That tough talk is coming from an unlikely source — 81-year-old Regis Philbin. The former daytime television talk show host and David Letterman foil is one of the faces of Fox Sports 1, the cable network launching Saturday that is the latest David looking to knock off ESPN's Goliath.
Given that Philbin is more accustomed to speaking to housewives and is more than twice as old as the viewers Fox Sports 1 is hoping to attract, his hiring seems unusual to say the least


"It is a bit out of left field, but that's what we do," said Fox Sports Co-President Eric Shanks of the hiring of Philbin to host "Crowd Goes Wild," an afternoon round table that will also feature former Baltimore Raven Trevor Pryce, Wall Street Journal columnist Jason Gay and Katie Nolan, best known for her racy sports-related YouTube videos.

PHOTOS: Fox Sports 1 studios and anchors
Even Philbin acknowledged surprise when the offer came. "I never thought I would be on an hour-long sports show," he said, adding he wasn't even aware Fox was launching the channel when he was asked to meet with Shanks.
Since then, the hard-core Notre Dame football and New York Yankees fan has been taking a crash course on the rest of the sports world. "From now on I'm going to have to keep my eye on everything," he said, adding that he'd spent the day reading about Ryan Braun, the Milwaukee Brewers slugger suspended for using performance-enhancing drugs.

The launch of Fox Sports 1 and smaller sister channel Fox Sports 2 highlights the dominant and growing role sports is playing in the modern television industry. At a time when broadcast and cable networks are struggling to keep viewers in front of the television and off the Internet, sports has become their surefire antidote to Web surfing and cord-cutting.

Fox, which has made a career out of taking on giants, first with its broadcast network and later with its cable news channel, will be starting this fight with one hand tied behind its back. Fox Sports 1 still doesn't have distribution deals locked up with some of the nation's biggest pay-TV operators, including Time Warner Cable and DirecTV. There's a good chance that when Fox Sports 1 goes live Aug. 17 with a NASCAR race that much of Los Angeles won't be able to see it (or the sports on CBS for that matter, but that's another story).

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And the competition is formidable. "It is not a hill they have to climb, it's the Grand Canyon," said Mark Shapiro, a former ESPN executive. "ESPN has built such a big moat around itself the Russian army of the Cold War couldn't get in."

Moreover, while no one in sports broadcasting likes to hear it, there is not exactly a shortage of product out there. When ESPN launched in 1979, the consensus was there weren't enough sports or fans to sustain a 24-hour cable network.

Flash forward 34 years and now the sports that critics used to make fun of ESPN for carrying in its early days have networks of their own. There's a channel devoted to fishing. Another aimed at horse racing enthusiasts. Even big game hunters have two networks targeting them.
There are more than 20 national sports networks that don't have the letters E-S-P-N in their names. The NFL, Major League Baseball, the NHL and NBA all have their own channels on top of the billions they rake in selling their games to other national and local outlets. Tennis and golf also rate their own networks. Several college conferences including the Big-12 and Pac-10 have launched their own channels.

INTERACTIVE: Fall 2013 TV preview
The big broadcast networks and cable channels also have a heavy diet of sports. CBS, NBC and Fox all carry the NFL—and at a hefty price; the league it is estimated now pockets $7 billion a year from media. There are scores of local sports channels as well. In Los Angeles alone, the Angels, Lakers and Dodgers are on separate channels.

And that ever expanding universe, more than beating ESPN, is what is motivating Fox. "In the shaky swampy world of television programming, the one solid granite-like area is sports," said David Hill, a senior executive vice president of Fox Sports 1 parent 21st Century Fox and the self-proclaimed father of the new network.

Hill, who ran Fox Sports for decades and now oversees among other things "American Idol" and "The X-Factor," is known as an innovative producer. It was Hill who first came up with what now seems like an obvious idea to have the score and time left in a game superimposed on the TV screen. He put microphones inside bases to bring fans closer to the action.

"We spend more time and effort on audio than anyone else," he said proudly. "Close-up audio is far more emotive than close-up video.
Shanks said Fox Sports 1 has hired a couple of hundred people in front of the camera and behind the scenes. The majority of the shows will be done on the Fox lot in Century City where a huge new soundstage was recently completed. Shanks, who started in production at CBS Sports, said the trick is to give fans an "information pill with a little bit of sugar."

Keeping it light
Philbin is not the only unusual hire Fox Sports 1 has made. Its flagship show "Fox Sports Live" — a nightly three-hour recap of the day's highlights and news — will be anchored by Jay Onrait and Dan O'Toole, two unknowns imported from Canada, where they hosted "SportsCentre" for the TSN sports channel there.

The pair are known for their morning zoo style, poking fun at the absurdities of sport with an ironic sensibility inspired by Conan O'Brien and Letterman. While some sportscasters these days are obsessed with statistics and overanalysis, Onrait and O'Toole want to keep it light.
"We're not good enough broadcasters to be serious," cracked the lanky Onrait, who resembles a young Vince Vaughn.

The two have been compared to Dan Patrick and Keith Olbermann, whose stint as hosts of ESPN's "Sports Center" in the 1990s helped make that cable channel part of the zeitgeist.

Shanks said there is a simple litmus test for Fox Sports 1 personalities: "Do you want to hang out and have nachos with our guys?"

PHOTOS: Hollywood Backlot moments
But Fox Sports 1 will need more than a pair of wise-cracking Canadians and a spry octogenarian to bring ESPN to its knees. Not only does ESPN have a more than 30-year head start, it also has just about every major sport including the National Football League locked up for the next several years. While Fox has football on its broadcast network, a cable package may remain a dream for the time being. Wednesday, Fox did seal a high profile deal to telecast the U.S. Open men's and women's golf championships.

ESPN is the engine that drives its parent Walt Disney Co., making close to $10 billion annually in subscriber fees and advertising revenues. It is often, especially during football season, one of the most-watched cable networks. Last season's "Monday Night Football" games averaged 13 million viewers.
Hill knows changing the habits of sports fans won't be easy.

"The first thing we have to battle is inertia," he said "For 30 years people have been watching ESPN. We understand that. We know it. We get it."
Fox isn't going into the fight completely unarmed. It has rights to NASCAR, a big chunk of college football, ultimate fighting, lots of soccer and starting next year Major League Baseball. "We're starting from a pretty strong position," Hill said. On his wish list are the NBA and the NFL. The former may be attainable in the next few years, but the latter could be locked up into the next decade.

ON LOCATION: Where the cameras roll
Hill and Shanks point to Fox News as evidence that there is room not only for it to exist but to perhaps one day even topple ESPN.
"Would you pick this point in time to go into a business that people think is mature and people think, 'Gosh, do you need another national multi-sport network?' and the question is, did people think there was enough news when CNN was giving people 24 hours of news every day?" Shanks asked.
The addition of a new sports channel will give media buyers something to leverage against ESPN. "Competition is good," said Sam Armando, a senior vice president in Chicago at SMGx, a media buying firm. While Armando doesn't think Fox Sports 1 will immediately challenge ESPN, it has enough big sports to get a serious look from advertisers.

ESPN President John Skipper isn't sweating Fox Sports 1 and doesn't think the Fox News analogy works. "There is a dramatic difference," Skipper said. "If CNN had exclusive rights to the inauguration, election results and weather, Fox News wouldn't have snuck up and whupped them."
ESPN hasn't built an empire by ignoring its rear view mirror. Over the past few years, it has been shelling out billions to lock up several marquee events, including the Bowl Championship Series. Besides its roster of professional sports including the NFL, baseball and basketball, ESPN has rights to practically all the big college football conferences and marquee golf and tennis events, including Wimbledon.

"We bought up a lot of beachfront property," Skipper said.

Still, it'd be foolish to dismiss Fox Sports 1. CBS made that mistake 20 years ago when Rupert Murdoch swooped in with a big checkbook and outbid it for rights to the NFL. That deal lifted the Fox network into the big leagues and was a wake-up call to everyone else.
Hill is optimistic that Fox Sports can get on the map quickly. "It will take us two or three years to create a visible and emotional bookmark in people's minds to say, 'I'm going to switch on Fox Sports 1.'"
 

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FOX Sports Media Group (FSMG) made television history, officially unveiling plans to launch a new, national, multi-sport network called FOX Sports 1. The announcement was made by FSMG Co-Presidents and COOs Randy Freer and Eric Shanks. Set to debut on Saturday, Aug. 17, just as FOX Sports kicks off its 20th anniversary year, FS1 is available in over 90 million homes, making this the biggest sports cable network launch in history, and one of the largest network launches ever. At the outset, FS1 boasts nearly 5,000 hours of live event, news and original programming annually.

“Our ‘secret,’ admittedly a very poorly kept one, is now revealed,” Shanks said. “Fans are ready for an alternative to the establishment, and our goal for FS1 is to provide the best in-game experience possible, complemented by informative news, entertaining studio shows and provocative original programming.”A robust schedule of live events forms the backbone of FOX Sports 1’s programming from Day 1, with college basketball, college football, NASCAR, soccer and UFC all on tap between launch and year’s end. In fact, the schedule on Aug. 17 features live events morning, noon and night including a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race from Michigan and “UFC on FS1 1” in prime time. In 2014, FSMG’s new rights agreement with MLB takes effect, bringing regular and postseason games to FS1.
“As a company we haven’t been afraid to innovate and take well-calculated risks,” Freer added. “We’ve devoted significant resources over the last few years to acquire and/or extend multi-platform rights with a wide variety of leagues and governing bodies well into the next decade, enough to give us a rich schedule right out of the box.”
More people consume and care about sports than ever before, so to satisfy that voracious demand, FSMG deems the time is now to launch FS1. For example, when FOX Sports launched in 1994, late Sunday afternoon NFL on FOX games ranked as the 26th highest-rated program on television. Today, FOX’s national doubleheader games rank No. 1 for three years running.
[h=3]FOX Sports 1 Programming Highlights[/h]COLLEGE BASKETBALL – Dozens of exclusive prime time games on Monday and Thursday nights, plus Saturday and Sunday coverage of the Big 12, Pac-12 and Conference USA.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL – Led by Notre Dame at Stanford, the Big Ten Championship Game and Pac-12 Championship Game (2014) on FOX, dozens of exclusive, live games from the Pac-12, Big 12 and Conference USA on Thursday nights and Saturdays; triple- and quadruple-headers on Saturdays; Saturday pre- and postgame coverage.
MLB – Beginning in 2014, select League Championship Series and Division Series games; regular-season games over 26 Saturdays; live game-in-progress look-in show.
NASCAR – Select NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races as soon as 2015; NASCAR Camping World Truck Series races; NASCAR Sprint All-Star race; all SpeedWeeks events leading up to the Daytona 500 including: Daytona 500 Qualifying, Sprint Unlimited at Daytona (2014, 2017-22) and the Budweiser Duel, now in prime time; NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NCWTS Practice and Qualifying sessions; NASCAR RaceDay, providing pre- and post-race coverage; NASCAR Victory Lane, a weekly wrap-up show; and Race Hub, a daily mid-day studio show with the latest from drivers, owners and garages.
SOCCER – Tuesday/Wednesday/Thursday afternoon coverage of the world’s most prolific club soccer competitions, the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League, and CONCACAF Champions League featuring many of the world’s greatest and most successful clubs; the world’s oldest soccer competition, the FA Cup; CONCACAF Gold Cup; CONCACAF Qualifiers, FIFA Women’s World Cup coverage in 2015 and 2019; FIFA Men’s World Cup coverage in 2018 and 2022; delayed matches in prime time; weekly magazine and highlights shows.
UFC – Featured on Wednesday nights; live FIGHT NIGHTS through 2014, the first is scheduled for launch night, Saturday, Aug. 17; FOX event preliminary cards; UFC Tonight, the weekly authority for UFC news and information; 14 Saturday pay-per-view preliminary cards; hundreds of hours of library programs and events.
In addition to live events and studio programs, FS1 introduces FOX SPORTS LIVE, a 24/7 news franchise providing around-the-clock coverage through regularly scheduled programs, hourly updates and an information-rich ticker that provides a network agnostic sports event television schedule. Thousands of hours of news programming are expected annually from newly minted sets including a nightly program at 11 p.m. ET or immediately following events. A morning newscast is expected to launch in January 2014 in conjunction with FSMG’s expansive coverage of Super Bowl XLVIII.

“Building credibility and trust with our audience is paramount, so naturally we’ll provide the staples, like news, scores and highlights, but we’ll do it in a FOX Sports way,” Shanks said. “Just as FOX NFL SUNDAY reinvented the pregame show, FOX SPORTS LIVE breaks new ground in the way sports news is presented. We already have the home-team advantage of significant audiences watching local games on our 22 regional sports networks as a platform to launch our new national news.”
Complementing FS1’s live events and news coverage at launch are several original programs, highlighted by RUSH HOUR, hosted by Regis Philbin, airing live weekdays (5-6 p.m. ET). Originating in New York City, Regis leads the charge along with a panel of sports professionals, celebrity guests and die-hard fans in this brand new, unpredictable, talk show. Following RUSH HOUR live every day is FOX FOOTBALL DAILY (6-7 p.m. ET), an extension of FOX NFL SUNDAY, the most-watched NFL pregame show for 19 straight years. FOX FOOTBALL DAILY, hosted by NFL on FOX personalities, including Terry Bradshaw, Howie Long, Jay Glazer, Gus Johnson, Erin Andrews and Mike Pereira, provides a daily dose of news, interviews and commentary from pro and collegiate football worlds. Both shows are expected to premiere at launch in August. Earlier this year, FSMG unveiled a unique and groundbreaking documentary franchise titled BEING:, a deep look into today's greatest athletes, teams and sports icons via unprecedented access. The first subject to appear this fall on FS1 is BEING: MIKE TYSON, the most feared man ever to step in a boxing ring. The multi-episode series is now in production.
FSMG’s experimentation with the “double box” commercial format, intended to keep viewers engaged throughout breaks, is expected to be an FS1 staple. Custom commissioned research conducted this year by Innerscope in concert with FOX Sports advertisers, along with data from IAG and Nielsen, demonstrates how the “double box” format adds value compared to the traditional full-screen break: IAG reported a 62% increase in brand recall; younger viewers are more likely to view “double box” commercials, according to Nielsen minute-by-minute ratings; Innerscope’s engagement score for “double box” commercials ranked +13% higher than average; and viewers see advertiser logos more than three times longer in “double box” versus standard format.
Launching together with FOX Sports 1 will be FOX Sports GO, a groundbreaking mobile sports experience for iPhone, iPad, Android devices, and web. FOX Sports Go will offer more than 1,000 live games and events from across FOX Sports, FOX Sports 1 and FOX Sports’ 22 regional sports networks, as well as scores, highlights, news, stats, and analysis. The live games and events will be available to subscribers of participating cable, satellite and telco providers at no additional cost.
 

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Nevermind, re-read the article. They don't. I'd give them a chance if directv has it. Haven't really liked sports center for a decade or so.
 

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i cant see directv not carrying the network
 

Word.
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Well I'll be pissed if they don't have it next saturday for the first ufc event/launch. Directv will get several calls for me next weekend complaining, which won't solve anything but will make me feel better. Haha
 

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I had thought that the speed channel was becoming fox sports 1, so if you have the speed channel already you will have Fox Sports 1 when it launches.
 

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fox sports one also has the contract to the new big east basketball conference. The games will be done by Gus Johnson and Bill Rafferty.
 

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I had thought that the speed channel was becoming fox sports 1, so if you have the speed channel already you will have Fox Sports 1 when it launches.

Speed charges 23 cents/month. Fox 1 is charging 80 cents/month. Like the PAC 12 Network, this will not end well. Station is a joke already with the hire of Urlacher, he mumbles all of the time and is not interesting.
 

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With as many people who claim to HATE ESPN i will give them a shot.


Will be a tough road but they don't need the market share that ESPN does


Will be the new CNN/FOX news debate
 

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Its great for the sports bettor, the more sports I can get nationally in HD the better. NBCsports gives me my hockey, premiere league soccer, and WSOF. Espn, has a bit of everything. What exactly does Fox bring to the table? I'd like a bit more of everything, but would be happy watching UFC fights without paying 50 bucks if that's their plan.
 

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I flip on ESPN for college gameday then its CBS for the SEC or FOX Big 12 or Pac12 for the games

never watch SC or NFL pregame Sundays its NFL Net
 
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can't wait for this network. i don't know how any real sports fan (especially gambler) can take espn seriously. i have not voluntarily watched sportscenter in at least a year, and other than live events and college gameday, i never put the network on. its awful.
 

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Today in 1994 - Fox aired its 1st NFL game (exhibition - SF vs Denver)
 

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From Sports business daily- Just five days before the launch of FS1, Fox Sports still has yet to cut deals with at least three of the four biggest distributors: DirecTV, Dish Network and Time Warner Cable. The three distributors said they are still in discussions with Fox to carry the channel, which launches Saturday. Distributors that do not cut a deal for FS1 by Saturday will continue to carry Speed, though it will be a stripped down version of the motorsports channel. Fox Sports provided the Tribune listings service with the programming lineup for Speed for the first nine days after FS1's launch, and it features a mix of re-runs and paid programming. In the week after FS1 launches, Speed will open primetime at 8:00pm ET with shows like "Faster Than," "Car Science" and "Pumped." The 9:00pm hour has shows like "Drag Race High," "Stuntbusters" and "Wrecked." The 10:00pm hour has shows like "Pinks," "Speedmakers" and "Hard Parts." Primetime for Aug. 17, when FS1 launches, will feature re-airs of "Pumped," "Wrecked" and "Hard Parts." Fox Sports has little reason to make Speed a high-quality channel after Aug. 17, since it wants distributors to agree to take the more expensive FS1. Distributors pay around $0.23 per subscriber per month for Speed, according to figures from SNL Kagan. Fox is seeking $0.80 per subscriber per month for FS1 initially -- a rate that would increase to around $1.50 toward the end of the multiyear carriage deals it is seeking.
 
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From Sports business daily- Just five days before the launch of FS1, Fox Sports still has yet to cut deals with at least three of the four biggest distributors: DirecTV, Dish Network and Time Warner Cable. The three distributors said they are still in discussions with Fox to carry the channel, which launches Saturday. Distributors that do not cut a deal for FS1 by Saturday will continue to carry Speed, though it will be a stripped down version of the motorsports channel. Fox Sports provided the Tribune listings service with the programming lineup for Speed for the first nine days after FS1's launch, and it features a mix of re-runs and paid programming. In the week after FS1 launches, Speed will open primetime at 8:00pm ET with shows like "Faster Than," "Car Science" and "Pumped." The 9:00pm hour has shows like "Drag Race High," "Stuntbusters" and "Wrecked." The 10:00pm hour has shows like "Pinks," "Speedmakers" and "Hard Parts." Primetime for Aug. 17, when FS1 launches, will feature re-airs of "Pumped," "Wrecked" and "Hard Parts." Fox Sports has little reason to make Speed a high-quality channel after Aug. 17, since it wants distributors to agree to take the more expensive FS1. Distributors pay around $0.23 per subscriber per month for Speed, according to figures from SNL Kagan. Fox is seeking $0.80 per subscriber per month for FS1 initially -- a rate that would increase to around $1.50 toward the end of the multiyear carriage deals it is seeking.


That will be bad if no deal is in place for sat tv.......never easy
 

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It's only a matter of time before DTV adds it. These guys are going to broadcast entire UFC cards plus other major events so I can't see DTV not carrying it.
 

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