Seattle Mariners Root Sports held the regional television rights to the
Seattle Mariners of
Major League Baseball, producing and televising over 150 live regular season games (out of 162 total), along with 30-plus-minute pregame and post-game shows that air before and after all telecasts produced by the network. Other Mariners programming on the network included live Spring Training games,
Mariners All Access, which included both weekly editions during the regular season and several other in-season and off-season specials each year, and
Mariners Mondays, a three-hour weekly program that aired during the winter months that highlighted memorable games and moments from the past season. Prime Sports Network began Mariners' broadcasts in
1994, with sixteen of the scheduled 88 televised games; the remainder were broadcast over-the-air on
KSTW. A
players' strike canceled the last quarter of the season and the first several weeks of the season.
Seattle Seahawks Root Sports carried shoulder programming for the
NFL's
Seattle Seahawks, airing head coach
Pete Carroll's weekly press conference, branded as
Seahawks Press Pass, and the team's weekly magazine program,
Seahawks All Access. Utah Jazz and Vegas Golden Knights Until 2023, Root Sports carried
Utah Jazz and
Vegas Golden Knights games and related programming produced by then-sister network
AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain on cable providers in Idaho and Montana. DirecTV and streaming providers had access to those games by tuning to AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain. On October 25, 2023,
Sinclair and the Jazz announced a territory expansion where Root Sports will continue to air Utah Jazz games produced by
KJZZ-TV. Prior to the
2023–24 NBA season, Jazz games were also produced by AT&T Sports Rocky Mountain. Due to territory rights, neither Portland Trail Blazers nor Seattle Kraken games will air in these areas of Idaho and Montana. Golden Knights games left Root Sports in 2023 to pursue over-the-air broadcasting in partnership with
Scripps Sports, as well as an OTT subscription service called KnightTime+; this arrangement covers Root Sports' territory. However, the Jazz continued to air games on Root Sports Northwest, simulcasting broadcasts produced by the team for KJZZ-TV and the Jazz+ streaming service. After the announcement of Root Sports' shutdown, the Jazz would announce that they would extend Jazz+ coverage into areas formerly served by Root Sports.
Teams by media market Collegiate programming The network is the regional home of
Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball, producing and airing all regular season contests not picked up by a national network, as well as the team's coaches show,
The Mark Few Show. The network also airs ''Talkin' Huskies
, Talkin' Cougars
, Talkin' Ducks
and Talkin' Beavers'', insider programs featuring the teams of
Washington,
Washington State,
Oregon and
Oregon State, respectively.
Former programming •
Seattle SuperSonics basketball until the NBA franchise
relocated to
Oklahoma City (as the
Oklahoma City Thunder) in 2008 •
WNBA games from the
Seattle Storm, before those games moved over-the-air to former sister television station
KING-TV (on its 5.2 digital subchannel) and
KONG-TV • Athletic events from the
Pac-12 Conference (most often featuring
Washington,
Washington State, Oregon, or Oregon State) until those were moved to the
Pac-12 Network in 2012 and
Fox Sports 1 in 2013. • Seattle Seahawks preseason football games •
Seattle University Redhawks men's basketball •
Western Athletic Conference football and basketball • The
Western Hockey League (2008—2015) •
Seattle Sounders FC and
Portland Timbers soccer matches, full game replays, studio and insider programming (currently airs on
Apple TV) •
Big Sky Conference football (now aired by Scripps TV affiliates) •
Great Northwest Athletic Conference men's and women's basketball •
Mountain West Conference football and men's basketball •
Washington Interscholastic Activities Association football and basketball, including championship games •
Oregon School Activities Association high school football championships
Seattle Kraken Root Sports held the regional television rights to the
Seattle Kraken of the
National Hockey League. Root Sports was announced as the team's inaugural regional television partner on January 26, 2021. Coverage included live broadcasts of 70-plus regular season games each year, as well as preseason and first-round playoff contests, pregame and postgame shows, game replays, and the weekly magazine program
Inside Kraken Hockey. On April 25, 2024, the Kraken announced that they would be leaving Root Sports in favor of broadcasting over-the-air through a deal with
Tegna and its Seattle stations
KING-TV and
KONG-TV, along with streaming through
Amazon Prime Video.
Portland Trail Blazers The
Portland Trail Blazers of the
NBA reached an agreement to carry games on Fox Sports Net Northwest beginning in the 2002–03 season, replacing the unpopular BlazerVision
pay-per-views and team-run Action Sports Cable Network. This lasted until 2007, when the team signed with Comcast SportsNet Northwest (now
NBC Sports Northwest). When the Trail Blazers' contract was up for renewal in 2016, Root Sports outbid NBC Sports Northwest for the rights through the 2020–21 season. However, the team declined and renewed with NBC Sports Northwest instead, as Root Sports could not guarantee a carriage agreement with
Comcast (NBCSNW's parent company). All Trail Blazers telecasts are produced in-house by the team. Additional team content aired on the network includes pre- and post-game shows, game replays, and the weekly magazine program
The Trail. On August 14, 2024, the Trail Blazers announced that they would be leaving Root Sports, though a replacement broadcaster had not been named at that time. The Trail Blazers would later launch the
Rip City Television Network in collaboration with the
Sinclair Broadcast Group to air games throughout the Oregon and Washington areas.
Fox Sports Net/Bally Sports/FanDuel Sports Network affiliation After breaking off from
Fox Sports Net in 2011, Root Sports Northwest continued as a longtime affiliate of what is now the
FanDuel Sports Network family of networks, carrying some college football, syndicated outdoors and golf programming from it as part of its schedule, though in its last year of existence, it did not add any further programming which began to air in a simulcast with the separate network
FanDuel TV. ==On-air staff==