Origins The channel originated sometime in 1982 as WCCO II, a local cable channel owned by
Midwest Radio and Television (later Midwest Communications), and created as a project by
CBS affiliate
WCCO-TV (channel 4, now an
owned-and-operated station of the network) that broadcast a slate of local and general entertainment programming. On March 1, 1989, it was relaunched as the
Midwest Sports Channel. That same year, the channel acquired rights to
Minnesota Twins broadcasts. MSC's main draws in its early days were games from the Minnesota Twins and
Minnesota North Stars. The channel also served as an affiliate of
SportsChannel America, filling much of its broadcast day with a mix of national programs and
paid programming from the channel, and incorporated
sports news tickers provided by the channel. MSC was largely considered a
premium channel until the early 1990s, and did not even have full cable coverage in the
Minneapolis–St. Paul metropolitan area until it was added by
Continental Cablevision's St. Paul system on its expanded basic cable lineup in 1994. During the North Stars' 1991
Stanley Cup Playoff run, Midwest Sports Channel declined to exercise an option to carry the North Stars' home games (as the SportsChannel America package which MSC carried did not include rights to in-market home games). Instead the North Stars cut a revenue-sharing deal with a group of 11 cable companies to televise the games as a
pay-per-view events at a then very expensive price of $12.95 a game. The following season the North Stars parted ways with Midwest Sports Channel and instead signed a new contract with
Prime Sports Midwest to televise 17 games out-of-market while in-market viewers would be offered the games on pay-per-view through the same revenue sharing agreement with local cable operators that was used for the previous season's playoffs. The price for these games were $9.95 each with an option to purchase the entire package at a reduced rate. Additionally, 25 games were televised on
KMSP-TV.
Ownership changes and affiliation with FSN In 1992, CBS acquired the Midwest Sports Channel, through its purchase of
Midwest Communications (which it previously had 47% ownership). For the 1992-93 season MSC once again televised some North Stars games, but the channel lost the broadcast rights permanently when the North Stars relocated to
Dallas after the end of the season. MSC expanded its lineup of professional sports events in 1995, after it landed a television contract with the
Minnesota Timberwolves to hold the regional cable rights to the team's games for the 95-96 season. The following year, the
Wisconsin Sports Network (a gametime-only network broadcasting
Milwaukee Brewers and
Bucks games), which had been owned by
Time Warner Cable's Milwaukee franchise and
Group W (whose corporate parent,
Westinghouse, had just merged with CBS), was folded into MSC, giving the network a broader reach throughout the Midwest, in addition to the rights to the Brewers and Bucks contracts, and a sizeable stable of local outdoor programs. In 1997, the Midwest Sports Channel became an affiliate of the recently created
Fox Sports Net. Shortly after completing its merger with CBS, on June 10, 2000,
Viacom announced that it would sell the Midwest Sports Channel and
Baltimore-based regional sports network Home Team Sports. On July 11, 2000,
Comcast acquired the Midwest Sports Channel from CBS.
News Corporation, which was a minority owner in the network and wanted to acquire the channel outright, attempted to block the deal,(as it would have been reworked into a
Comcast SportsNet), filing a lawsuit on July 21 to stop the sale of MSC and Home Team Sports. On September 7, 2000, as part of a settlement between the two companies, Comcast traded its equity interest in Midwest Sports Channel to News Corporation in exchange for exclusive ownership of Home Team Sports (which subsequently joined
Comcast SportsNet as
Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic). Through its existing content agreement with the channel, WCCO continued to broadcast a replay of its 10:00 p.m. newscast daily at 4:30 a.m. as an encore until the sale to Fox was finalized. In 2000, MSC acquired the television rights to the
Minnesota Wild, an
NHL expansion team which began play that year; the deal was struck by Fox in May shortly before the lawsuit against Comcast was filed as part of its plans to start a Minnesota-based regional sports network. With the acquisition of the Wild broadcasts, MSC adopted FSN-branded graphics, with announcers frequently using the phrase "...live on MSC, Fox Sports Net style" during its game broadcasts. This culminated in the channel's official rebranding as
Fox Sports Net North in April 2001, coinciding with the start of
that year's Minnesota Twins season and the opening of
American Family Field (Then named Miller Park) as the home stadium of the Milwaukee Brewers; the new branding was heavily promoted on-air, on billboards and on bus advertisements. One side effect to the rebranding were resulting reductions to the network's budget; Fox also let the contracts to some events expire, forcing the network to depend more on programming from FSN's national schedule (such as the
National Sports Report and
You Gotta See This!). In October 2003, Minnesota Twins owner
Carl Pohlad attempted to launch a competing regional sports network, to be named
Victory Sports One, which would broadcast all Twins games as well as local college and high school sport events. The channel was also expected to carry a number of locally produced sports shows, the centerpiece of which would be
Kent Hrbek Outdoors. Victory Sports One launched in November 2003, however the effort folded in May 2004 after six months due to financial and cable carriage issues; after VS1 ceased operations, Fox Sports Net North absorbed most of the channel's programming including the television rights to the Twins. As a result, Fox Sports Net launched a new "local fans first" initiative, launching the daily regional news program
Minnesota Sports Report and adding regular broadcasts of high school sport events. In April 2006, still lacking a local news program after CBS Sold the channel (the now-defunct
Minnesota Sports Report originated from
FSN West and
FSN West 2's studios in
Downtown Los Angeles), FSN North launched
FSN Live, a first-of-its-kind program serving as both a sports news show, and a pre-game and post-game analysis program for the channel's game broadcasts.
FSN Live is usually broadcast live and on-location from sports events televised by the channel, though
FSN Live originates from the FSN North studios in Minneapolis whenever the focused team is playing on the road. Regardless of the origin of
FSN Live, the pregame show usually features a preview of the game from the announcers and a pregame press conference by the head coach or manager. Meanwhile, the postgame show includes an interview with the player of the game, postgame analysis from the announcers and the head coach or manager's postgame press conference. On April 4, 2007, FSN North spun off its Wisconsin subfeed into FSN Wisconsin (now
FanDuel Sports Network Wisconsin), a separate channel carrying
Milwaukee Brewers and
Milwaukee Bucks games as well as other events sourced from its former parent channel. Wild broadcasts are available throughout Wisconsin. In 2009, FSN North rebranded as
Fox Sports North as part of a network-wide rebranding of the Fox Sports regional networks. On May 3, 2019,
Sinclair MLB Local Media beginn Broadcast Group and
Allen Media Group (via
Diamond Sports Group, now Main Street Sports Group) acquired the Fox Sports Networks from
Disney for $10.6 billion, as part of a divestment mandated during Disney's
acquisition of 21st Century Fox. On March 31, 2021, the channel was rebranded as
Bally Sports North as part of a sponsorship of the channels by casino operator
Bally's Corporation.
Bankruptcy, closure On February 15, 2023, Diamond Sports Group failed to make a $140 million interest payment, instead opting for a 30-day grace period to make the payment. On March 14, 2023, Diamond Sports Group filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. During its bankruptcy, Diamond missed a payment to the
Minnesota Twins. On April 5, 2023,
Major League Baseball, on behalf of the Twins, filed an emergency motion asking the bankruptcy judge to order Diamond to pay the Twins fully or give its media rights back to the MLB. Diamond argued that because of
cord-cutting the contract rate for the media rights of the teams was too high. A hearing on the matter was set for May 31, 2023. As an interim, on April 19, the bankruptcy judge ordered Diamond Sports to pay 50% of what the Twins were owed. On June 1, 2023, after a two-day hearing, the bankruptcy judge ordered Diamond to pay the Twins fully within five days. On October 9, 2024, the Minnesota Twins announced that they would move their regional broadcasts to
MLB Local Media beginning in the 2025 season. FanDuel Sports Network North subsequently carried its final live telecast (and, in addition, the final live telecast across the chain as a whole) on April 30, which saw the
Minnesota Wild defeat the
Dallas Stars to win their first-round series. ==Programming==