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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Carriage agreements  





3 Programming  



3.1  List of programs broadcast by NBA TV  







4 High definition  





5 Personalities  



5.1  Studio hosts and play-by-play  





5.2  Studio analysts and color commentators  





5.3  Contributors  





5.4  Other hosts  





5.5  Former hosts and analysts  







6 NBA TV International  





7 Past playoff broadcast criticism  





8 See also  





9 References  





10 External links  














NBA TV






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


NBA TV
CountryUnited States
Broadcast areaNationwide
HeadquartersAtlanta, Georgia, U.S.
Programming
Language(s)English
Picture format1080i HDTV
(downscaled to letterboxed 480i for the SDTV feed)
Ownership
OwnerNational Basketball Association
(operated by TNT Sports)
Sister channelsMLB Network
Motor Trend
History
LaunchedNovember 2, 1999; 24 years ago (1999-11-02)
Former namesNBA.com TV (1999–2003)
Links
WebsiteNBAtv
Availability

NBA TV is an American sports-oriented pay television network owned by the National Basketball Association (NBA) and operated by Warner Bros. Discovery through TNT Sports. Dedicated to basketball, the network features exhibition, regular season and playoff game broadcasts from the NBA and related professional basketball leagues, as well as NBA-related content including analysis programs, specials and documentaries. The network is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. The network also serves as the national broadcaster of the NBA G League and WNBA games. NBA TV is the oldest subscription network in North America to be owned or controlled by a professional sports league, having launched on November 2, 1999.

As of November 2023, NBA TV is available to approximately 37,000,000 pay television households in the United States-down from its 2013 peak of 61,000,000 households.[1]

History

[edit]

The network launched on 2 November 1999[2]asnba.com TV; the channel, which was renamed to the second and current name on 11 February 2003, originally operated from studio facilities housed at NBA EntertainmentinSecaucus, New Jersey. The network signed a multi-year carriage agreement with three of the U.S.'s five largest cable providers, Cox Communications, Cablevision and Time Warner Cable, on June 28, 2003; this expanded the network's reach to 45 million pay television households in the U.S., in addition to distribution in 30 countries worldwide. After Time Warner shut down the sports news network CNN/SI in 2002, many cable providers replaced that network with NBA TV.

The network mainly launched with two purposes; to serve as a barker channel for the league's out-of-market sports package NBA League Pass, along with featuring statistical and scoring information which was more easily accessible in the pre-broadband age, and it featured mainly archival content from the NBA Entertainment archives in its upper pane to fill programming time. As time went on, the network added more programming, including international basketball leagues and programming from FIBA usually unseen in the American market. The programming mix and channel format changed around the same time of the CNN/SI shutdown.

On October 8, 2007, it was reported that the National Basketball Association would transfer the channel's operations to Time Warner's Turner Sports division (operated by the company's Turner Broadcasting System subsidiary).[3]

Turner took over the channel's operations on October 28, 2008, and began using the same announcers and analysts used on TNT's NBA telecasts.[4] Analysis and news programming also received an upgrade, with production of the programs being relocated to Studio B at Turner Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, located adjacent to Studio J, where TNT's post-game program Inside the NBA is broadcast. The repeats of NBA games on TBS and TNT began in 2009, as NBA Classics.

Carriage agreements

[edit]

On April 16, 2009, DirecTV announced that it had reached a carriage agreement with the NBA to continue carrying NBA TV, moving it (and out-of-market sports package NBA League Pass) from the satellite provider's Sports Pack add-on tier to its lower-priced Choice Xtra base package on October 1, 2009. DirecTV believed the move will make the channel available to an additional eight million subscribers.[5]

On June 4, 2009, Comcast announced that it had reached an agreement with the NBA to move the channel from the cable provider's Sports Entertainment Package to its basic level Digital Classic package, by the start of the 2009–10 NBA season. Like DirecTV, Comcast estimated that an additional eight million customers would effectively gain access to the channel.[6] Verizon FiOS added the channel and NBA League Pass to its systems on September 23, 2009.[7] The network also signed new multi-year agreements with Time Warner Cable, Cablevision and Dish Network on October 22, 2009, as well as a renewal agreement with Cox Communications earlier in the year.[7]

With all of the above carriage deals, the NBA estimates that it would increase NBA TV's overall subscriber reach to 45 million pay television homes.[8] On October 29, 2010, AT&T U-verse reached a carriage deal to carry the channel's standard and high definition feeds.[9]

NBA TV is not available to legacy Charter Communications customers using outdated billing plans, which carried the network as NBA.com TV prior to 2004, due to unknown carriage conflicts; NBA League Pass was likewise unavailable on Charter until a broader rollout for the 2020–21 season began (on May 18, 2016, Charter acquired Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks for $78.7 billion, which both carried the network). NBA TV has been available to Charter households where available since February 2017, if a customer switches to the new 'Spectrum' billing plan which united Charter, Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks under the Spectrum branding (this is all likely unrelated to Charter's inherited naming rights of the Charlotte Hornets' home arena, the Spectrum Center).

As of June 2023, the channel was available in 38.6 million homes in the United States.[10]

Programming

[edit]

NBA TV offers news programs devoted to basketball daily, in addition to programs showcasing the lives of individual basketball players, documentaries focusing on a particular NBA team during the season and archived broadcasts of well-known games.

NBA TV carries at least 90 regular season games per season, which typically air four days a week during the NBA season (mainly on Mondays, Thursdays and Saturdays, although occasional Wednesday, Friday and Sunday games may air in the event that ESPN does not hold rights to coverage on those nights), as well as some first-round playoff games. It also carries its own coverage of the NBA draft.

Live games on NBA TV are subject to local blackout restrictions, since NBA TV (despite being owned by the league) does not hold the exclusive broadcast rights to any of its games. Games carried by NBA TV are also carried by each team's local rights holder, either a regional sports network or a broadcast television station.

The network also shows international games, typically on Saturday evenings, with special emphasis on the Euroleague and the Maccabi Tel Aviv team from Israel. In April 2005, NBA TV televised the Chinese Basketball Association finals for the first time.[11]

The channel's flagship program is NBA Gametime Live, a program focusing on news headlines within the NBA and related leagues (including the WNBA and G League), highlights and look-ins at games currently in progress presented by a host and studio analysts. The show airs live six days a week, deferring any TNT game nights outside the playoffs to repeating that evening's edition of Inside the NBA. An edited 90-minute version of the broadcast is repeated during the overnight and early morning hours.

On October 11, 2017, it was announced that the Players Only franchise, which made its debut last season on TNT, will show live games on NBA TV, starting October 24, 2017 and every Tuesday after that, for the first half of the 2017–18 season before transitioning to TNT for the remainder of the regular season starting January 23, 2018.[12] After the cancellation of Players Only in 2019, Tuesday (first half) and Monday (second half) night games on NBA TV were rebranded as NBA TV Center Court, with Brian Anderson handling the Tuesday night games and Spero Dedes the Monday night games. They are joined alongside Greg Anthony and Dennis Scott.[13] With TNT moving its marquee games to Tuesdays in 2021 during the NFL regular season (thus avoiding competition with Thursday Night Football), NBA TV Center Court was moved to Monday nights for most of the season, though it would continue to air select broadcasts on Tuesdays when TNT has other programming commitments.

Beginning 2021, NBA TV began to broadcast a package of men's and women's Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) college basketball games in February as an observance of Black History Month. This marked NBA TV's first broadcasts of college basketball games.[14][15]

List of programs broadcast by NBA TV

[edit]

High definition

[edit]

NBA TV HD is a 1080i high-definition simulcast feed of NBA TV that is available on most providers. All studio programs and original programs are shot in HD, and all live games and recent game rebroadcasts are televised in HD. The high-definition version of this channel was launched in 2007.

Personalities

[edit]

The studio host and analysts vary on each night's broadcast of NBA Gametime.

Studio hosts and play-by-play

[edit]

Studio analysts and color commentators

[edit]

Contributors

[edit]

Other hosts

[edit]
The Starters (2006–2019)
NBA Inside Stuff (2013–2016)

Former hosts and analysts

[edit]

NBA TV International

[edit]

NBA TV International is a feed of NBA TV available in countries outside the United States, utilizing the same studio for analysis and commentary segments and taped programming (except for FIBA events and highlights), but largely airs a different lineup of games than the U.S. channel. NBA TV International shows one or two live regular season games per day, with the delayed coverage of selected playoffs that not broadcast live by NBA TV, all conference semis, finals and the Finals, as well as All-Star live games and contests and most nationally televised U.S. games (such as those seen on ABC, TNT, ESPN and US feed of NBA TV); the rights to those games are instead sold to domestic television networks in each territory. As of 2022, NBA TV International can be seen in 100 countries via the following partners:

NBA TV Canada, the Canadian version of the channel, carries some of the same game broadcasts as the flagship U.S. service, ESPN, and TNT instead of the secondary game package found on NBA TV International.

On 16 October 2010, NBA Premium TV was launched in the Philippines. It was a redirect broadcast of NBA TV and aired locally televised and nationally televised games in the United States. It went defunct on 1 October 2019, almost 9 years after it existed.

In February 2012, NBA TV International was made available on NBA.TV as an internet subscription channel outside the United States.

OnbeIN Channels Network in the Arab world, NBA TV is not available, though beIN Sports NBA airs some of the same games.

On 31 July 2020, the Philippine version of the channel, NBA TV Philippines, was launched.[17]

Past playoff broadcast criticism

[edit]

NBA TV was criticized in the past for its first-round playoff coverage merely passing down the broadcast of a game from a regional sports network for national broadcast, amplifying the chosen team's broadcast and bias for said team to a national level.[18][19] Beginning with the 2011–12 playoffs, NBA TV began to produce a full and neutral national broadcast for those games.[20]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "U.S. cable network households (universe), 1990 – 2023". wrestlenomics.com. May 14, 2024. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  • ^ "NBA.com TV - On-Air Talent". NBA.com. August 15, 2000. Archived from the original on August 15, 2000. Retrieved February 1, 2022.
  • ^ "The Cavs Are Playing Poker – Basketball News & NBA Rumors". Hoopsworld.com. Archived from the original on February 6, 2009. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  • ^ "Turner promotes NBA digital menu". October 6, 2008. Retrieved October 15, 2008.
  • ^ NBA TV scores multiyear distribution deal with DirecTV – Pact gives network berth on DBS leader's choice xtra package Multichannel News April 16, 2009
  • ^ NBA TV jumps to broader Comcast carriage – Pro Hoops Network moves from sports tier to MSO's digital classic Multichannel News June 4, 2009
  • ^ a b NBA digital signs deal with FiOS for NBA TV and NBA League Pass TVWeek.com September 23, 2009
  • ^ NBA TV secures new agreements with TWC, Cablevision and Dish – League-owned network to reach 45 million homes this season Broadcasting and Cable October 22, 2009
  • ^ AT&T U-Verse tips off carriage of NBA TV – league-owned network available on telco's U300 package, HD tier Multichannel News October 29, 2010
  • ^ Robert Seidman (June 4, 2023). "How many homes the sports networks are available in". Internet Compost.
  • ^ "NBA.com – Chinese Basketball Association Coverage Expands to U.S." NBA.com. Archived from the original on October 20, 2018. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  • ^ release, Official. "NBA TV to feature 106-game schedule during 2017–18 season". NBA.com. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  • ^ release, Official. "NBA TV to Feature 107 Game Schedule, Including a New Tuesday Night Marquee Game of the Week – NBA TV Center Court – for 2019-20 Season". WarnerMediaGroup.com. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  • ^ "NBA TV to showcase HBCU games in Celebration of Black History Month". www.nba.com. Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  • ^ Myerberg, Paul. "NBA TV will televise two HBCU basketball games in honor of Black History Month". USA TODAY. Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  • ^ "Turner Newsroom: NBA.com Host Kyle Montgomery". Archived from the original on October 15, 2011. Retrieved March 11, 2011.
  • ^ "NBA games return to Philippine television via Cignal-Smart collab". Spin.ph. Retrieved January 7, 2021.
  • ^ Yoder, Matt (April 27, 2011). "Gary Neal's Buzzer Beater And The Sounds Of Silence". Awful Announcing. Bloguin. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
  • ^ Yoder, Matt (April 23, 2011). "Should NBATV Use Local Announcers For Playoff Games?". Awful Announcing. Bloguin. Retrieved May 2, 2011.
  • ^ Hiestand, Michael (April 22, 2012). "Hiestand: NFL draft loses some spontaneity". USAToday.com. Archived from the original on June 1, 2014. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
  • [edit]
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