[BA]ESPN Unveils College Baseball Schedule
http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/news/050324espn.html
ESPN Unveils College Baseball Schedule
By Will Kimmey
March 24, 2005 ESPN, SEC DON'T AGREE
The National Hockey League's loss is college baseball's gain, as ESPN
will televise regular-season games for the first time since 1990 in
part as replacement programming.
ESPN unveiled a 2005 college baseball schedule that includes 29 games
beginning April 8, with 16 games on ESPN or ESPN2 and 13 on its
newest channel, ESPNU. At least two more games were planned but had
not been confirmed.
ESPNU also will show games from two NCAA regional sites, and will
televise super-regional games that are not seen on ESPN or ESPN2.
College Sports Television planned to show 16 games plus one NCAA
regional after finding success in showing the Stanford regional in
2004.
ESPN put together an impressive schedule, with highlights including
2004 College World Series champion and current No. 1 team Cal State
Fullerton against Tony Gwynn's San Diego State club, '04 CWS finalist
Texas against Alex Gordon and Nebraska, and Louisiana State against
preseason No. 1 Tulane.
The advent of ESPNU and the exposure it provides college baseball
should feed the sport's growth. It gets an initial boost from the
ESPN and ESPN2 games as the network seeks replacement programming for
time slots vacated when the NHL canceled its season.
"It comes at a time of need for us right out of the blocks," said
Burke Magnus, ESPNU's vice president and general manager.
Magnus ranks baseball just behind football and basketball on the
ESPNU priority list, terming it an "emerging sport" that he thinks
can follow a similar path to that of women's basketball. ESPN began
showing the women's Final Four in 1996 and subsequently added
regular-season and postseason games as time has passed. The 2004
final between Connecticut and Tennessee set a record as ESPN's
most-watched basketball game ever--men's or women's, college or
professional. It averaged about 3.8 million households and held the
record for nearly a month before a Pacers-Pistons NBA playoff game.
"Five or six years ago, women's basketball was not a TV property at
all," Magnus said. "Now, by the time of the tournament, it's a big
deal. The philosophy we took in women's basketball was to put the
championship game on the biggest possible stage, and it all flows
back from that."
ESPN acquired the rights to televise the CWS in its entirety
beginning in 2003, the same year it also showed super-regionals for
the first time. ESPN's coverage of the CWS championship series drew
an average of 1.3 million households in 2004, a 7.4-percent increase
from 2003.
The in-season coverage should help those numbers increase, and that
coverage will expand in 2006, when ESPN plans to begin showing
college baseball in mid-March (and possibly earlier). It should have
a more diverse selection of games as well, after this year's schedule
wasn't settled until after the NHL's cancellation. Many leagues had
previous agreements with local or regional cable networks before ESPN
entered the marketplace.
ESPNU is available on DirecTV and Adelphia cable, and Magnus said he
expects deals with more cable companies to happen in the spring.
--
If you're not have fun in baseball,
you miss the point of everything.
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 59.105.45.35
Prospect 近期熱門文章
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章
16
31