LakeCleElum |
08-20-2013 07:14 AM |
Goodbye Speed Channel - I Never got the Memo
All of this started Aug. 17th. I thought it was just a change for the weekend. But no, Speed is now Fox Sports so they can compete with ESPN??????? I already have more Fox Sports channels than I can count.
Speed had taken a sudden left turn the past few years, but there were still a few shows and events I watched.
From the Net:
Shutdown of Speed and relaunch as Fox Sports 1
Main articles: Fox Sports 1 and Fox Sports 2
Logo of Fox Sports 1, replaced SPEED on August 17, 2013.
On March 5, 2013, Fox Sports announced that it would relaunch Speed as Fox Sports 1 on August 17, 2013. Fox has directly positioned the channel to be a major competitor to ESPN: studio programs featured on the channel will include the daily sports news program Fox Sports Live (which will compete directly against ESPN's SportsCenter), Crowd Goes Wild (originally titled Rush Hour), a new early-evening program hosted by Regis Philbin, and Fox Football Daily (a companion program to Fox NFL Sunday). The new network will also feature Major League Baseball games and coverage of select post-season games (beginning in 2014; the Fox network will air significantly fewer games as a result), and select NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races will be moved to the network as early as 2015.[11][12] College football and basketball games from the Big East,[13] Big 12, Conference USA and Pac-12 conferences, soccer matches from the UEFA Champions League, Europa League and CONCACAF Champions League along with rights to the Men’s and Women’s FIFA World Cup tournaments. Ultimate Fighting Championship events and live fights will also be featured on the new network.[2]
On August 17 at 6:00 AM EDT, NASCAR play-by-play announcer Mike Joy gave his final words before Speed was relaunched as Fox Sports 1:
For 18 years, it’s been our honor and privilege to present motorsports and automotive-related programming to you on the network that began as Speedvision, became Speed Channel and is now known as Speed. From the visionaries who started this network, from maintenance to management, from the talent to the truck drivers, we’ve shared your passion for motorsports over lo these many years. We love that you care as much about your cars as family, God and country. And so do we.
But now it’s time to switch off the ignition and turn in the keys. This is the end of Speed in America. We hope you’ll follow us on our new journey to Fox Sports 1 because all your favorite live NASCAR programming and much more is coming along with us.
So now, it’s goodnight and farewell to America’s motorsports authority. Speed.[14]
While Fox Sports 1 effectively replaced Speed, Fox was required to re-negotiate its carriage deals with the television providers to carry the new network due to its change in scope. While there was uncertainty over whether Fox Sports 1 would have sufficient carriage on launch, as it had not yet reached deals with three of the United States' four largest television providers (DirecTV, Dish Network, and Time Warner Cable) only a month before its launch. However, all three finally agreed to terms three days before the scheduled launch.[15] For any remaining television providers that do not reach a deal to carry Fox Sports 1, Fox planned to offer a "watered-down" version of Speed (with a loop of reality programs and no live events) on an interim basis to fulfill existing carriage contracts until they signed on for Fox Sports 1. In international markets such as Canada, a similar feed was established that retains motorsports programming simulcast from Fox Sports 1 and Fox Sports 2.
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