SportsChannel's origins date back to 1976, when Cablevision launched
Cablevision Sports 3 (the "3" referencing its original channel slot on the provider), a sports network carried on the company's
New York City area system. The network originated the SportsChannel brand on March 1, 1979, when it changed its name to
SportsChannel New York. The network carried games from several New York area sports teams including the
New York Yankees and
New York Mets Major League Baseball franchises and the
NBA's
New Jersey Nets. One of the notable accomplishments from the channel's early days was inking one of the earliest cable deals with a pro sports team when they signed a contract to broadcast games on cable for the
National Hockey League's
New York Islanders in 1978 while still known as Sports 3. The network expanded to other regions with the launches and purchases of additional networks throughout the 1980s; the first expansion occurred when Cablevision signed a deal to televise the
Chicago White Sox in 1981. However, this new network would be short-lived as the White Sox launched
SportsVision the following season. Cablevision's subsidiary
Rainbow Media's purchased
Boston-based
PRISM New England in 1983, relaunching the network as
SportsChannel New England. Shortly after, Cablevision formed a partnership with
The Washington Post which gave the Post a 50% interest in SportsChannel. By the end of the year, the Rainbow/Washington Post partnership purchased
Philadelphia-based
PRISM and SportsVision, affiliating them with SportsChannel (although the SportsChannel Chicago brand would not reappear until 1989). The White Sox returned to Cablevison, now with the addition of the
Chicago Blackhawks and
Chicago Bulls. In 1984,
CBS entered the partnership in a deal that gave each of the three companies a one-third interest in three of the four networks and a one-sixth interest in SportsChannel New England (the other 50% was owned by the
Celtics and the
Whalers). The same deal would also give CBS a 50% interest in Rainbow's other networks, then-premium services
Bravo and
American Movie Classics. The partnership with the Washington Post and CBS would end in 1987 when both companies sold their shares back to Cablevision, citing delays in the deployment of cable television service in New York and other cities as the reason for exiting the partnership. Also, in 1987
SportsChannel Florida was launched, initially with programming from local college teams and out-of-market
MLB games that SportsChannel already had rights to through its other networks. While the Florida network got off to a slow start, this proved to be a great move as it gained rights to several
expansion teams in the years that followed.
The NHL and partnership with NBC In 1988, SportsChannel would make its largest television deal, gaining national television rights for the
National Hockey League from
ESPN. The three-year $51 million agreement also included rights to
playoff games. A national network
SportsChannel America (also the new name for the group of networks) was also launched on October 6, 1988, to make the games available to cable subscribers in areas without a SportsChannel affiliate.
Maryland-based
Home Team Sports and
Minneapolis-based
Midwest Sports Channel (independently owned and operated despite the similar sounding name) would also sign-up as affiliates. Later that year, Cablevision would also gain a new partner. In December 1988, NBC and Cablevision announced that they would form a joint venture to operate their respective cable networks, including SportsChannel. Through this partnership, SportsChannel launched five additional networks in the
Bay Area,
Cincinnati,
Cleveland,
Philadelphia, and
Los Angeles. The partnership also produced the
Olympics Triplecast, a
pay-per-view service providing additional coverage of the
1992 Summer Olympics. In 1991, the one year-old San Francisco-based SportsChannel Bay Area merged with rival
TCI's Pacific Sports Network to become SportsChannel Pacific. This would become the second regional sports network to affiliate both with SportsChannel and the
Prime Network (Home Team Sports had done so since 1988). SportsChannel Los Angeles later ceased operations at the end of 1992 due to financial issues, with all of its sports broadcast contracts being acquired by the competing
Prime Ticket.
Joint-venture with Prime and merger with Fox Sports Net In 1993, Rainbow and
Liberty Media formed
Prime SportsChannels America, a venture in which the companies pooled programming and advertising sales between SportsChannel and Liberty's Prime Network regional sports group. Through this partnership, the two companies formed the sports news service
NewSport, replacing SportsChannel America. On April 25, 1995, NBC sold its 50% interest in SportsChannel New York to Rainbow Media for US$93 million; NBC cited that "owning a piece of SportsChannel New York made less sense" after Cablevision and ITT purchased competing regional sports network,
MSG Network. NBC retained its ownership in the other networks. On June 30, 1997, Fox/Liberty Networks, a joint venture between
News Corporation and
Liberty Media, purchased a 40% interest in Rainbow's sports properties including the SportsChannel networks,
Madison Square Garden, the
New York Knicks and the
New York Rangers. Through the deal, the SportsChannel networks would be integrated into
Fox Sports Net, a group of regional sports networks launched in November 1996 through News Corporation's purchase of Liberty's
Prime Network group; SportsChannel New York would also be rebranded as Fox Sports New York, with Cablevision-owned MSG also becoming a separately branded FSN outlet. Weeks after the deal was announced, SportsChannel would discontinue its national programming in favor of Fox's programming and simultaneously discontinued NewSport, replacing it with
American Sports Classics, a network focusing on replays of past sporting events and historical sports documentaries. National Sports Partners, the venture formed through Cablevision's entry into the News Corporation/Liberty partnership to operate the existing and newly acquired owned-and-operated regional networks, later announced that it would relaunch the other SportsChannel networks under the "Fox Sports Net" banner. SportsChannel New York was the first to rebrand, as Fox Sports New York, on January 27, 1998. Five of the seven other remaining SportsChannel networks relaunched as member networks of Fox Sports Net later that week. Two of the SportsChannel networks would not become part of FSN, one of them not immediately, while a third was unable to carry FSN's national programming. After Comcast acquired a majority stake in Philadelphia-based entertainment company Spectacor to form
Comcast Spectacor in 1996 and announced plans to create its own regional sports network, Rainbow Media decided to shut down SportsChannel Philadelphia and sister premium service PRISM on October 1, 1997, with both networks' NBA and NHL contracts with the
Philadelphia 76ers and
Flyers being acquired by the new
Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia (which replaced SportsChannel Philadelphia on local cable systems and additionally became an FSN affiliate; PRISM was replaced by then-Liberty owned premium movie network
Starz). SportsChannel Florida was also unable to join Fox Sports Net at the same time as its sisters as
Wayne Huizenga, owner of the NHL's
Florida Panthers, owned a 70% controlling interest in the channel (with Rainbow Media as minority partner). Cablevision repurchased Huizenga's share of the network in November 1999, relaunching it as Fox Sports Net Florida on March 1, 2000, formally dissolving the SportsChannel brand two years after the national group effectively ceased operations. Though SportsChannel New England became known as Fox Sports New England in 1998, it was unable to broadcast FSN's national programming for a further two years because of a pre-existing contract Fox had signed with rival sports network
NESN back in 1996; Fox hoped to persuade NESN to break the contract early, but this did not occur. The contract expired on January 1, 2000, enabling Fox Sports New England to become a full FSN affiliate.
Aftermath On February 22, 2005, Cablevision acquired News Corporation's ownership interests in Fox Sports Chicago and Fox Sports New York, and a 50% interest in Fox Sports New England (with
Comcast retaining its existing 50% stake), in a trade deal in which News Corporation sold its interests in Madison Square Garden, the Knicks and Rangers in exchange for acquiring sole ownership of Fox Sports Ohio and Fox Sports Florida. However, News Corporation and Cablevision retained joint ownership of Fox Sports Bay Area. Fox Sports Chicago ceased operations in June 2006, after losing the regional cable television rights to local professional teams (including the
Chicago Bulls,
Blackhawks,
Cubs and
White Sox) two years earlier to the newly launched
Comcast SportsNet Chicago. In April 2007, Cablevision sold its interest in the New England and Bay Area networks to Comcast (the
San Francisco Giants later acquired part-ownership of the San Francisco-based network in February 2008); both networks became part of
Comcast SportsNet, with FSN New England relaunching as
Comcast SportsNet New England in July 2007 and FSN Bay Area relaunching as Comcast SportsNet Bay Area in March 2008. Cablevision later rebranded Fox Sports New York as MSG Plus on March 10, 2008. Cablevision formally exited the regional sports business when it spun-off all of its sports assets (including MSG and MSG Plus) into the
Madison Square Garden Company. This was new company was (and still is) headed by
James L. Dolan, the then-current CEO of Cablevision and son of Cablevision founder
Charles Dolan. While Cablevision was sold to
Altice in 2016, Dolan still runs the two New York-area sports networks to this day. ==Networks==