Beginning with the
2002–03 season,
RDS secured exclusive French language rights to the NHL. The deal, reached with the Canadiens and not directly with the league, was meant to ensure a consistent home for all Canadiens games; as a general-interest network, Radio-Canada cannot give up so much airtime to Canadiens games. The announcement drew the ire of, among others, then-
Heritage Minister Sheila Copps, who suggested that the network would somehow be violating its conditions of licence by not airing
La Soirée du hockey. In fact, there is no specific mention in the CBC's licence from the CRTC (or any other legal document governing the CBC) that the CBC's networks carry coverage of NHL games, nor that there be parity between the two networks' carriage of such games. Radio-Canada soon reached an agreement to produce the Saturday night games, to remain branded
La Soirée du hockey, to be
simulcast on both SRC and RDS.
Le Hockey du samedi soir For reasons that are unclear, the SRC production agreement was terminated after the
2004 playoffs. Instead, RDS began to produce its own Saturday night broadcasts, titled
Le Hockey du samedi soir. These were simulcast on SRC—but only outside
Quebec, where RDS has limited distribution—for two further seasons through 2006. At that point, French-language rights to NHL hockey became fully exclusive to RDS. ==Present day==