Sky Sports first started broadcasting sports news bulletins when it began broadcasting the
Premier League in the autumn of 1992. Initially, they took the form of a brief
Football Update before being expanded into a 30-minute programme called
Sky Sports Centre. These programmes were generally broadcast on weekdays at 6pm and 10pm. Sky Sports News began broadcasting internal test runs on 10 August 1998 with
Mike Wedderburn and
Kelly Cates launching the channel with the first edition of
Good Morning Sports Fans. The service became officially available to the public on 1 October, the launch date of BSkyB's Digital Satellite service, and was BSkyB's first digital only channel. On 10 April 2000, Sky Sports News relaunched as
Sky Sports.com TV, to tie with the launch of the SkySports.com website. The channel scrapped its ".com TV" look, and on 1 July 2001, Sky Sports News launched another graphics change. A major part of this was the standardisation, i.e., a more corporate look across the Sky channels. The channel also scrapped its slogan and just paid attention to the fact of the news. From 2002, Sky Sports News was available free to view on digital terrestrial TV. From April 2002, Sky Sports News had another face-lift, the channel stayed in the same studio, but with a silver look replacing the old wooden bench, and there was a promise of being first for breaking news, along with much more useful information. In 2004, Sky Sports News changed its image, with a more open blue look to the channel. The titles featured players such as
Frank Lampard,
Tim Cahill,
Thierry Henry and
Ryan Giggs passing the football to each other and unveiling the Sky Sports News logo. Programmes such as
Sky Sports Centre were dropped, and replaced with shows such as
Sky Sports Now,
Sky Sports Today,
Sports Saturday,
Sports Sunday,
Through the Night,
News HQ at 5,
News HQ at 6,
Goals Express, ''Today's Goals Now
and Sky Sports News at Ten, with the exception of Good Morning Sports Fans
, Gillette Soccer Special and Sky Sports News at Ten'', some of these programme titles have been retired or renamed. On 20 May 2007, SSN broadcast the
Conference National play-off final between
Exeter City and
Morecambe. This was the first live match to be shown on the channel since certain European games involving British teams were shown to provide exclusivity when competing with the then operational
OnSports (owned by
ITV) as Sky Sports News was not available at that time via digital terrestrial platforms. This was due to all other Sky Sports channels being occupied by live sport. This enabled
Freeview viewers to watch a live match on Sky Sports. The station also had live coverage of
Wales v
New Zealand on 26 May 2007 and the
La Liga tie between
Espanyol and
Barcelona in December 2007.
Virgin Media dispute On 1 March 2007,
Virgin Media removed
Sky's basic channels including
Sky One,
Sky Two,
Sky News, Sky Sports News,
Sky Travel and
Sky Travel Extra, from their Television Services after a dispute between Virgin Media and BSkyB caused by the expiry of their carriage agreement and their inability to reach a new deal, after attempts were made to reach an agreement. At Midnight, Sky Sports News was removed, with its EPG slot being renamed derisively as "OLD SKY SPORTS SNOOZE" (it was removed with a public apology by
Richard Branson hours later). As a direct rival to Sky Sports News, Virgin Media and Setanta Sports launched
Setanta Sports News on 30 November 2007. A deal was eventually reached between Virgin and Sky resulting in Sky Sports News returning to the Cable platform on 13 November 2008 on channel number 517. From 1 September 2009, the channel was made available to subscribers of the Sports Pack, in addition to being available in the News & Events Pack.
2010–present Sky Sports News was removed from Freeview on 23 August 2010 and replaced with Sky3+1, a one-hour timeshift
Sky3. Approval for the DTT change was needed from the regulator
Ofcom, which told Sky and multiplex licence holder
Arqiva that the move "would not unacceptably diminish the capacity of the services broadcast to appeal to a variety of tastes and interests." Sky claimed that the move back to pay TV allowed them to improve the channel through increased editorial investment. The channel also previously used a different piece of music for each news programme, the most well-known of these being
Republica's "
Ready to Go", "
The Time Is Now" by
Moloko, "
Surface to Air" by
The Chemical Brothers, "
Shooting Star" by
Deepest Blue, and "
Club Foot" by
Kasabian. Sky Sports News was rebranded as
Sky Sports News HQ on 12 August 2014. As part of the change the channel moved to Sky channel 401. At the same time the channel introduced an updated studio including new features, overhauled graphics and a new theme. Following the rebrand of the Sky Sports channels in July 2017, the channel returned to its original name:
Sky Sports News. == Sky Sports News HD ==