Sports broadcasting contracts in Canada

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article refers to Sports broadcasting contracts in Canada. For broadcasting rights lists of other countries, see Sports television broadcast contracts.

Athletics[]

Australian-rules football[]

  • Australian Football League: TSN2, TSN.ca, RDS2, RDS.ca and WatchAFL[1]

Baseball[]

Major League Baseball[]

  • Sportsnet, as its parent company Rogers Communications is the owner of its sole Canadian franchise, the Toronto Blue Jays, holds national rights to Major League Baseball in Canada, including assorted games from U.S. regional sports networks, the MLB All-Star Game, and the postseason (although coverage of the latter two are relegated to MLB's U.S. broadcast partners, and MLB International). Games air across Sportsnet and its sister national services Sportsnet One and Sportsnet 360. Select Blue Jays and other U.S. teams' games can be broadcast on TVA Sports (Sportsnet's French-language partner).
  • Rights to ESPN's Monday Night Baseball, Wednesday Night Baseball, and Sunday Night Baseball are held by TSN and RDS (French)
  • In French, postseason games are equally split between RDS and TVA Sports. The World Series is on RDS.
  • Games available on U.S. over-the-air channels available in Canada on cable or satellite, such as national games on Fox, and local coverage on superstations such as WPIX (New York Yankees and New York Mets, occasionally via Buffalo and/or Rochester network affiliates as well), KTLA-TV (selected Los Angeles Dodgers games). MLB Network is also available on some providers.
  • The MLB Extra Innings subscription package is available through most Canadian television providers, as well as MLB.tv.

International[]

  • KBO League: TSN (sub-licensed from ESPN)[2]

Basketball[]

National Basketball Association[]

The NBA's Canadian marketing arm is managed by Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, parent company of the Toronto Raptors. In turn, MLSE is majority-owned by Bell Canada and Rogers Communications; as such, coverage is mostly shared between their co-owned TSN and Sportsnet networks, along with the MLSE-owned NBA TV Canada. Toronto Raptors games are primarily aired by TSN, TSN2 and RDS, with selected games airing on Sportsnet, Sportsnet One, or Sportsnet 360.[3] Ancillary Raptors content, including game encores, air on NBA TV Canada.

All broadcasters air assorted non-Raptors games throughout the season (TSN promoted that it would air 148 regular-season games in total during the 2017-18 season);[4] NBA TV Canada typically airs selected games and simulcasts of games from U.S. broadcasters (most often from its U.S. counterpart). All remaining games are available through the NBA League Pass out-of-market sports package.

TSN and NBA TV have the Canadian TV rights to broadcast the NBA Summer League and NBA G League.

TSN, Sportsnet and NBA TV have the Canadian TV rights to broadcast the WNBA.[5]

U.S. college basketball[]

TSN owns the Canadian broadcast rights to the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament through a deal with ESPN International. CBS coverage of the tournament is also available in Canada. TSN also simulcasts regular-season games from ESPN.

Coverage of games is also available from U.S. networks carried in Canada, such as Big Ten Network and CBS Sports Network, along with broadcast network coverage. An out-of-market sports package offered by some providers includes other games from U.S. outlets that are not otherwise available in Canada.

International basketball[]

DAZN holds broadcast rights to the Canadian national men's basketball team and FIBA tournaments.[6] TSN holds the broadcast rights to the Basketball Africa League.[7]

Canadian basketball[]

  • CEBL: CEBL.tv, CBCSports.ca

Cricket[]

Asian Television Network owns the vast majority of Canadian cricket rights, with marquee events typically airing live on CBN, and selected events and other programming airing on ATN Cricket Plus. ATN also owns the rights to the ICC Cricket World Cup, this tournament is broadcast on pay-per-view throughout Canada.

International cricket[]

Domestic cricket[]

Curling[]

  • Curling Canada:
    • Tim Hortons Brier: TSN and RDS
    • Scotties Tournament of Hearts: TSN and RDS
    • Canada Cup of Curling: TSN and RDS
    • Continental Cup of Curling: TSN and RDS
    • World Curling Championships: TSN and RDS[9]
    • Olympic Trials (Men's and women's): TSN and RDS
    • Olympic Trials (Mixed doubles): CBC Sports
  • European Curling Championships: TSN
  • Grand Slam of Curling: Sportsnet, CBC[10][11][12]
  • Provincial championships:
    • Alberta: Sportsnet
    • British Columbia: CBC Sports
    • Manitoba: Sportsnet
    • Ontario: Title Sports Live
    • Saskatchewan: SaskTel, YouTube

Cycling[]

  • Tour de France, Vuelta a Espana & other ASO races: FloSports
  • Giro d'Italia and other RCS races: GCN+

Extreme sports[]

  • X Games: TSN
  • : DAZN

Golf[]

  • TSN and RDS holds rights to all four of the Men's major golf championships—the Masters Tournament, the U.S. Open and other USGA tournaments, the Open Championship (weekend rounds) and other R&A tournaments, and the PGA Championship. Both channels also broadcast the biennial tournaments: Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup. Other events include the Augusta National Women's Amateur, Senior PGA Championship, Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship and Latin America Amateur Championship.
    • U.S. network coverage of the Masters and Open Championship are simulcast by CTV for simsub purposes.
  • Golf Channel is available on Canadian television providers, and the majority of its programming, including early-round coverage of PGA Tour events and the Open Championship, the European Tour, and LPGA, is carried in the country without blackouts.
  • TSN and CTV 2 carry weekend round coverage of selected PGA Tour events.[13]
  • CHCH will carry 16 PGA events weekend coverage including 2 WGC events.[14]
  • RDS carries live coverage of PGA Tour events carried by U.S. network television (weekend rounds).
  • The streaming service GolfTV launched in Canada in 2019, as part of Discovery Inc.'s new international rights deal with the PGA Tour. It carries streaming coverage of all PGA Tour events (including early-window PGA Tour Live blocks) and other ancillary content.[15][16][17]

Gridiron football[]

Canadian football[]

Canadian Football League[]

  • TSN – all games including playoffs and Grey Cup
  • RDS – all Montreal and all Ottawa games, as well as select additional games throughout the season, the playoffs and the Grey Cup.

Canadian university football[]

As of 2019, CBC Sports and TVA Sports broadcasts the national U Sports playoff games, namely the Mitchell Bowl, the Uteck Bowl, and the Vanier Cup, succeeding Sportsnet (who aired it from 2013 to 2018).[18]

TVA Sports carries many QSSF games. In 2016, Sportsnet's sister broadcast network City began broadcasting a four-game U Sports Game of the Week package.[19][20] Games not covered by these contracts are often carried by local cable community channels.

In 2015, Global aired a Hardy Trophy semi-final and championship game as part of the Shaw TV (Shaw Cable) Canada West conference package (at the time, Shaw directly owned Global).[21] As of the 2017-18 season, Canada West conference rights are held by the three major IPTV providers in Central Canada—Bell MTS Fibe TV, SaskTel MaxTV and Telus TV (including a regular season package and playoff coverage).[22][23]

American football[]

National Football League[]

Contracts are current as of the 2020 NFL season.

  • CTV – Sunday afternoon games, most playoff games, and the Super Bowl.
  • TSN – Sunday afternoon games. Airs all primetime game packages, including Sunday Night Football, Monday Night Football, and Thursday Night Football. Additional Sunday afternoon games, and playoff games interfering with other major events carried on CTV, may air on one or more of the TSN feeds.
  • Through its relationship with the network, TSN also carries ESPN's NFL studio programming, including NFL Live, Sunday NFL Countdown, and Monday Night Countdown.
  • CTV2 simulcasts Sunday Night Football and Thursday Night Football games with TSN.[24]
  • NFL RedZone is available via TSN for TV Everywhere and TSN Direct subscribers.
  • RDS / RDS2French-language coverage.[24]
  • DAZNNFL Game Pass and streaming of all games, NFL Network, NFL RedZone, and additional archive content, as part of its service.[25][26] DAZN also distributes the NFL Sunday Ticket service in Canada; while DAZN initially planned to only distribute a digital out-of-market product in Canada, the company backtracked and revived Sunday Ticket following user complaints over the quality of its streams.[27][28][29]

Due to Canadian regulations that permit stations from different areas to be carried in the same market, several games may be available in each of the Sunday timeslots through a combination of domestic and American stations from different areas, without a subscription to Sunday Ticket. By contrast, outside a handful of areas where multiple neighbouring network affiliates are available, no more than three games may be aired in a given U.S. market on any Sunday afternoon (up to four games in week 17).

U.S. college football[]

Many ESPN College Football games are aired by TSN's feeds, including the regular season and most bowl games (which were, in the past, shared with Sportsnet 360, and not withstanding conflicts with other programming such as the World Junior Hockey Championship), and all College Football Playoff bowls. TSN also carries some of ESPN's studio programming, such as College GameDay.

Coverage of games is also available from U.S. networks carried or available for streaming in Canada:

An out-of-market sports package offered by some providers includes other games from U.S. outlets that are not otherwise available in Canada (such as Fox Sports Networks, and ESPN games not picked up by the TSN channels). FloSports and Stadium also carry several FCS conferences such as Colonial Athletic Association, Gulf South Conference and Patriot League.

Hockey[]

National Hockey League[]

Rogers Communications is the sole national rightsholder of the NHL in Canada until the end of . Most national telecasts air on Sportsnet properties, and include, but are not limited to:[30][31][32]

  • Hockey Night in Canada: Exclusive national window for Canadian teams on Saturday nights, multiple games airing across CBC Television, Citytv, and Sportsnet channels.
    • In rare circumstances, due to non-hockey programming conflicts, the Sportsnet regional channels may air different games.[33] However, all four Sportsnet regional channels are available nationwide through the digital services of most providers.
  • Scotiabank Wednesday Night Hockey; Exclusive national Wednesday-night game on Sportsnet.
  • Rogers Hometown Hockey: National Monday-night game on Sportsnet, with a travelling pre-game show broadcast from various Canadian cities.
  • Simulcasts of most-U.S. games from regional sports networks, NHL on ESPN, and NHL on TNT coverage (primarily on Wednesday nights), including TNT's new Sunday-afternoon games and the Winter Classic, as well as other outdoor games excluding the Heritage Classic.
  • Stanley Cup Playoffs coverage; early rounds divided between CBC and Sportsnet. All games from the conference finals onward are simulcast by both networks.
  • Canadian distribution and marketing rights to the NHL.tv (Rogers NHL Live) and NHL Centre Ice services, which carries out-of-market games and U.S. nationally televised games not aired by Sportsnet channels.
  • Hockey Night in Canada: Punjabi Edition: Coverage of selected Hockey Night in Canada games with Punjabi language commentary on Omni Television.[34]
  • Since 2019, the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network (APTN) simulcasts selected Hometown Hockey games with commentary in the Plains Cree language.[35]

French-language rights were sub-licensed to Quebecor Media; all coverage airs on TVA Sports. La super soirée LNH serves as the flagship broadcast on Saturday nights, typically featuring the Montreal Canadiens.[36][37]

Regional[]

Canadian teams also contract with local or regional broadcasters for selected pre-season and regular season games not covered by the national contracts. These deals are separate from the national rights deal, and may cover up to 60 regular-season games per season. Rights are current as of the 2020–21 NHL season.

  • Vancouver Canucks: Sportsnet Pacific
  • Edmonton Oilers: Sportsnet West
  • Calgary Flames: Sportsnet West
  • Winnipeg Jets: TSN3
  • Toronto Maple Leafs: Sportsnet Ontario (16 games), TSN4 (26 games) (English)
    • Rights to the Maple Leafs' regional telecasts are divided equally between TSN and Sportsnet (whose parent companies own a joint majority stake in the team's parent company). Of Sportsnet's 26 regional Leafs games, ten are broadcast nationally in conjunction with Rogers' national NHL rights, with Molson Canadian as presenting sponsor.
    • The team-owned Leafs Nation Network airs replays and other ancillary coverage of the team.
  • Ottawa Senators: TSN5 and RDS/RDS2
  • Montreal Canadiens: TSN2 and RDS

Each team's regional game broadcasts are restricted to viewers of that team's designated home broadcast region as assigned by the NHL. Outside said region, these broadcasts are made available exclusively through NHL Centre Ice (TV) or Rogers NHL Live (streaming). If the originating channel is available outside a team's region (e.g. out-of-market Sportsnet feeds), the game broadcasts must be blacked out in these other areas. Sportsnet also operates part-time channels for the Canucks, Flames, and Oilers in case of scheduling conflicts: these channels are tied to the Sportsnet One licence. During the period that it held the rights, Sportsnet used City station CJNT as the overflow channel for Canadiens games instead.

Under previous (2002–14) rights deals with RDS, the Canadiens forwent a separate regional rights contract (at the time of its establishment, RDS was the only national French-language sports channel in Canada) and allowed all of its games to be broadcast nationally in French in conjunction with RDS's package. With the transition to TVA Sports as national rightsholder, the Canadiens chose to negotiate a 12-year regional rights deal with RDS (the team is partially owned by the channel's parent BCE Inc.) in the team's designated broadcast region.[38][39]

U.S. teams in close proximity to the Canada–US border are now also able to sell Canadian regional broadcast rights to their games. As of the 2013–14 season, Bell Satellite TV and Bell Fibe TV own regional rights to Buffalo Sabres broadcasts for portions of Canada within a 50-mile radius of First Niagara Center, approximately stretching from Niagara Falls to the community of Stoney Creek in Hamilton. Sabres game broadcasts are available to Bell TV subscribers in this region at no extra cost, and moreover are no longer available as part of the NHL Centre Ice package through other providers serving this region.[40] The Detroit Red Wings, whose market borders on Windsor, Ontario, is presumably able to sell similar rights but has not yet done so.

As with other sports properties, game broadcasts on U.S. terrestrial stations carried in Canada, such as the ABC broadcast network's national rights package.

Canadian Hockey League[]

As of the 2021-22 season, the national CHL package is divided between TSN and CBC Sports.[41] Many regular-season games are aired locally by community channels.

  • TSN and RDS hold rights to the Memorial Cup and other national CHL-organized events
  • TSN will broadcast 30 national games from across the CHL's leagues.[41]
  • RDS will broadcast 20 national games from across the CHL's leagues.[41]
  • CBC Television will carry a package of six games on Saturday afternoons in October and November.[42]
  • CBC will stream a weekly "game of the week" package beginning in November.[42]

Other events[]

  • TSN and RDS hold broadcast rights to national championships and most international events sanctioned by Hockey Canada, including but not limited to IIHF world championships, the Telus Cup (men's U18), Centennial Cup (men's junior A), Esso Cup (women's U18) and the Allan Cup (senior). In 2020, TSN renewed its rights through the 2033-34 season.[43]
  • Spengler Cup: TSN
  • Champions Hockey League: TSN
  • American Hockey League: Toronto Marlies games are carried by Leafs Nation Network, and occasionally simulcast by TSN networks. Laval Rocket home games are carried by RDS. Sportsnet has historically broadcast the AHL All-Star Classic.

Horse racing[]

Mixed martial arts[]

Motorsports[]

FIA[]

Stock car[]

  • TSN and RDS hold rights to the NASCAR Cup Series and Xfinity Series. It also airs coverage of NASCAR's Canadian circuit, the NASCAR Pinty's Series (with coverage usually aired in a pre-recorded format).
  • Fox Sports Racing generally carries practice and qualifying sessions (simulcast from FS1 or FS2 for events during Fox's half of the season. It also carries all NASCAR Truck Series races.

IndyCar[]

  • IndyCar Series: Sportsnet; all races except for the Indianapolis 500 and Honda Indy Toronto on Sportsnet World and Sportsnet Now+.[49]

FIM[]

International Motor Sports Association[]

Other[]

Multi-sport events[]

  • 2020 Summer Olympics: CBC and Radio-Canada
    • Coverage also simulcast on Sportsnet, TSN, and TVA Sports networks.

Professional Wrestling[]

  • WWE: Sportsnet 360 carries Raw and SmackDown, NXT and other ancillary programming (including WWE Vintage Collection and WWE Main Event). Rogers Media handles Canadian distribution of WWE Network.
  • All Elite Wrestling: TSN
  • Impact Wrestling: Fight Network, GameTV
  • New Japan Pro-Wrestling: The Roku Channel

Rugby[]

Rugby Union[]

International[]

  • Rugby World Cup: TSN and RDS
  • The Rugby Championship: TSN
  • Six Nations Championship: DAZN
  • Rugby Europe Championship: FloSports
  • Pacific Nations Cup: TSN
  • World Rugby Sevens Series: CBC Sports

Club[]

  • Super Rugby: TSN
  • Gallagher Premiership: Sportsnet World
  • United Rugby Championship: Sportsnet World
  • Top14: Canal+ International[51]
  • European Rugby Champions Cup: ECR TV
  • European Rugby Challenge Cup: ECR TV
  • Major League Rugby: TSN (Toronto Arrows), (rest of league)

Rugby League[]

  • National Rugby League (Select matches): Sportsnet World
  • Super League (Select matches): Sportsnet World

Skiing[]

  • Alpine Skiing World Cup: CBC Sports
  • Alpine Skiing World Championships: CBC Sports

Soccer[]

Major League Soccer[]

TSN is the English-language rightsholder of Major League Soccer in Canada, under a contract most recently extended in 2017 to 2021. The deal includes a national window on Fridays and Saturdays, and selected Saturday games simulcast on CTV.[52] Through separate rights deals negotiated with individual teams, TSN also holds rights to all Toronto FC and Vancouver Whitecaps FC matches (there are no regional blackouts on these games, meaning that these games air nationally as well).[52] All other matches are available on the streaming service DAZN.[53]

As of the 2017 season, TVA Sports is the French-language national rightsholder, and is the broadcaster of all CF Montréal matches.[52][54]

North American/Canadian Soccer[]

  • CONCACAF Gold Cup: OneSoccer[55]
  • CONCACAF Champions League: OneSoccer
  • CONCACAF League: OneSoccer
  • CONCACAF Nations League: OneSoccer
  • Leagues Cup: TSN and TVA Sports[56]
  • Campeones Cup: TSN and TVA Sports
  • Canadian Soccer Association-organized events, including national-team FIFA World Cup Qualifiers: OneSoccer
  • Canadian Premier League: OneSoccer
  • Canadian Championship: OneSoccer
  • Liga MX: OneSoccer (two matches per week)

South American Soccer[]

International soccer[]

  • FIFA tournament broadcast rights are held by Bell Media through 2026. The FIFA World Cup and Women's World Cup are split between CTV and TSN, with RDS carrying French-language coverage.
    • Other FIFA tournaments are generally carried by TSN and RDS.
  • FIFA Club World Cup: fuboTV[58]
  • FIFA World Cup qualifiers:
    • CONCACAF: OneSoccer (Canada matches), TSN (USA home matches)
    • CONMEBOL:
    • AFC: Select first and second round matches on Mycujoo
    • CAF: Youtube
    • UEFA: TSN, UEFA.tv (English) and RDS (French)
  • African Cup of Nations: beIN Sports
  • International Champions Cup: DAZN
  • Women's International Champion's Cup: DAZN

European Soccer[]

As with other sports properties, game broadcasts on U.S. terrestrial stations carried in Canada, such as selected Premier League games aired on the NBC broadcast network as part of NBC's U.S. rights package, are not subject to blackout for Canadians receiving those stations over-the-air or through a cable/satellite package.

Asian Soccer[]

Swimming[]

  • International Swimming League: CBC Sports
  • World Swimming Championships: CBC Sports

Tennis[]

  • TSN and RDS hold rights to all Grand Slams, as well as the ATP Tour (Masters 1000 and 500, excluding the Canadian Open)
  • ATP Finals: TSN and RDS
  • Canadian Open: Sportsnet and TVA Sports
  • ATP Cup: TSN and RDS
  • ATP Tour 250: TSN
  • Next Generation ATP Finals: TSN and RDS
  • WTA Finals: DAZN, TSN, TVA Sports
  • WTA 1000: DAZN, TSN, TVA Sports
  • WTA 500: DAZN, TVA Sports
  • WTA 250: DAZN
  • Fed Cup: Sportsnet and TVA Sports
  • Davis Cup: Sportsnet and TVA Sports

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