FOX SPORTS (USA)

:''See also, Fox Sports (Australia) and ''Fox Sports Net.''
The Fox Sports logo used from 1999 to the present. Sometimes accompanied with searchlights, a typical Fox element.

'Fox Sports' is a division of the Fox Broadcasting Company (part of News Corporation). It was formed in 1994 with Fox's acquisition of broadcast rights to National Football League games and has single-handedly brought the Fox Broadcasting Company into notoriety with the Big Three of network television. Other properties have included the National Hockey League (1994-1999), Major League Baseball (1996-present), World League Football (later NFL Europe, then NFL Europa, now defunct) (1997-2005), college football's Cotton Bowl (1999-present), most of the Bowl Championship Series (BCS National Championship Game, Fiesta Bowl, Orange Bowl, and Sugar Bowl) (2007-present), and NASCAR (2001-present).
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FOX has become the exclusive home of the Daytona 500 after having alternated the event with NBC Sports throughout their first NASCAR contract. Also beginning in 2007 they will televise 4 Formula One races, including the United States Grand Prix and Canadian Grand Prix, plus two NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series races live. In addition, FOX covered the first 90 minutes of the 45th Rolex 24 at Daytona on January 27th. The Formula One and Rolex 24 events will use Speed Channel's, FOX's sister network, equipment and staff, and will be broadcasted under the SPEED on FOX banner.
Fox Sports has been the exclusive broadcaster of the World Series since 2000. A new contract announced on July 11, 2006, guarantees that Fox Sports will keep the World Series through the 2013 season. [1]
In addition to the broadcast division, Fox owns numerous regional U.S. cable sports channels under the Fox Sports Net banner, among others. These cable channels also include SPEED Channel, which provides additional NASCAR and F-1 coverage, and Fox Soccer Channel, which broadcasts the English Premier League and Major League Soccer, among other competitions.
The graphics and scoring bugs have won awards and changed the face of sports broadcasting in the United States. The opening notes of the NFL broadcast theme can be heard in every iteration of other Fox Sports broadcast themes. When the scoring bugs are upgraded, the previous versions are passed down to the various Fox Sports Net affiliates.
Fox Sports began airing programs in 720p HDTV starting on September 12, 2004 with select NFL games and the 2004 MLB Postseason. Most baseball and football games (including all postseason contests), all BCS games, and all NASCAR races carried by Fox Sports are aired in HD.

Contents
Programs throughout the years
Technological enhancements
Main competitors
Cable offshoots
See also
External links

Programs throughout the years


'Current broadcast rights'

National Football League: ''The NFL on FOX'', ''FOX NFL Sunday'', ''The OT'', 1994 -present


Super Bowls XXXI, XXXIII, XXXVI, XXXIX, XLII, & XLV

Major League Baseball: ''Major League Baseball on FOX'', 1996-present


1996, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, & 2007 World Series (FOX Sports holds the exclusive broadcast rights of the World Series through 2013.)

NASCAR: ''NASCAR on FOX'', ''SPEED on FOX'', 2001-present

College football


Bowl Championship Series: ''BCS on FOX'' (does not include Rose Bowl) 2007-present


Cotton Bowl 1999-present

Formula One 4 races including the United States Grand Prix and Canadian Grand Prix 2007-present
'Former broadcast rights'

National Hockey League: ''The NHL on FOX'', ''FOX NHL Saturday'', 1994-1999

NFL Europe 1997-2005

Technological enhancements



FoxBox (sports)

FoxTrax

Major League Baseball on FOX - Innovations

Main competitors



★ ''ESPN on ABC''

★ ''NBC Sports''

★ ''CBS Sports''

Cable offshoots



Fox College Sports

Fox Footy Channel

Fox Soccer Channel

Fox Sports Net

Fox Sports en Español

Fox Sports en Latinoamérica

Fox Sports World Canada

SPEED Channel

See also



List of Fox Sports announcers

NFL on television

Fox Broadcasting Company

Fox Sports Net

Fox College Sports

Fox Sports Radio

Fox Sports Website

External links



Fox Sports Website

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