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Universal Sports to Shut Down November 16

I remember when the channel was one of WVIT Hartford''s subchannels. It always seemed to me that there wasn't enough programming being produced for it. You'd get a track meet or a swim meet premiering on a Saturday and running at least twice a day for a week or two afterward. It had potential as a niche channel for the relatively few American viewers with an interest in international sports, or domestic sports outside the entrenched "big four" of football, baseball, basketball and hockey, but lack of content -- and the baffling decision to go from OTA subchannels to a paywalled Internet service -- doomed it.
 
WVIT-TV (NBC) channel 30 of New Britain/Hartford used to carry that on channel 30-2, I believe. Channel 30-3 was NBC Weather Plus. Today, COZI-TV is on channel 30-2. Of course WVIT-TV is owned by NBC itself.
 
I believe Universal Sports was a subchannel for all or most NBC O&O's at one time. Then they got too big for their britches and tried to become a mainstream cable network. Surprise, nobody cares about watching track meets or cycling on TV.
 
Back when Universal Sports was carried as a subchannel of our local KIAH (which was carried on our cable system) my wife would watch it quite a bit for its international ice skating coverage. Seems we see less skating on the sports channels these days, outside of U.S. events programmed opposite football or basketball.
 
nbcsn picking up track & field rights going forward with universal sports closing down?

USA Track & Field will probably have to buy time from whoever it can from here on in. Track & field (or "athletics," as it's known outside North America) is a very big deal in Europe, and gets a lot of attention just about everywhere else -- except the good old USA. Cycling is another big Euro sport that gets the "who cares" treatment here.
 
USA Track & Field will probably have to buy time from whoever it can from here on in. Track & field (or "athletics," as it's known outside North America) is a very big deal in Europe, and gets a lot of attention just about everywhere else -- except the good old USA. Cycling is another big Euro sport that gets the "who cares" treatment here.

I am sure some folks in Europe and other continents would treat cycling and track and field games the same way.
 
I am sure some folks in Europe and other continents would treat cycling and track and field games the same way.

In the same way that there are some folks here who ignore the NFL, even though that gets "a lot of attention" here. I feel like I'm missing your point.
 
For anyone interested in the Olympics, summer and winter, this is a disappointment. I'm surprised others have said above "no big deal." While there are plenty of sports channels on cable, there are few outlets for Olympic-style competitions, which often help athletes qualify for making the Olympic team. Every four years, we care about the young people who are representing our country, rooting for the U.S.A. to win the most medals. But with no Universal Sports, you won't see the competitions that lead up to the Olympics.

I also don't think anyone was being too big for their britches. I think NBC simply thought the subchannels of the O&Os were too important, later used for Cozi, to dedicate for Universal Sports, so it got shifted to cable.
 
For anyone interested in the Olympics, summer and winter, this is a disappointment. I'm surprised others have said above "no big deal." While there are plenty of sports channels on cable, there are few outlets for Olympic-style competitions, which often help athletes qualify for making the Olympic team. Every four years, we care about the young people who are representing our country, rooting for the U.S.A. to win the most medals. But with no Universal Sports, you won't see the competitions that lead up to the Olympics.

I also don't think anyone was being too big for their britches. I think NBC simply thought the subchannels of the O&Os were too important, later used for Cozi, to dedicate for Universal Sports, so it got shifted to cable.
I was shifted to satellite, not cable; Xfinity(which carried NBC O & O subchannels), Uverse(which did not), and the other major providers were shut out. And if you didn't have satellite service, then even with Universal Sports, you weren't seeing any Olympic-sports competitions.
The worst thing about Universal Sports is that once they were off cable. they suddenly began showing more than just he same figure skating event or track meet repeated 800 times a week. The people who wanted to see even more events couldn't watch them.
 
NBCU Buys Universal Sports Programming

NBCUniversal has acquired Universal Sports Network assets from World Championship Sports Network, effective immediately. Financial terms were not disclosed.

The wide array of exclusive media rights that were formerly held by Universal Sports, including agreements with international and national governing bodies for Olympic-sport events in swimming, track and field, gymnastics, figure skating, skiing, cycling, triathlon, volleyball, and more, will now join the NBC Sports Group portfolio.

NBC Sports Group will utilize NBCUniversal’s family of networks, including NBCSN and Universal HD, to televise events. NBC Sports Live Extra — NBC Sports’ live streaming product for desktops, mobile devices, tablets, and connected TVs — will live stream events, including some digital-only programming. Universal Sports Network will cease operations today.

Upcoming major events that NBC Sports will televise and stream include: the FIS Alpine World Cup season; the USA Swimming Arena Pro Swim Series; the IAAF World Indoor Championships; and the 2016 Boston Marathon.

A programming guide can be found here.

http://www.tvnewscheck.com/article/90057/nbcu-buys-universal-sports-programming
 
According to the guide on my cable, USN will officially cease to exist today at 3:00 PM PST. I can tell because from that time forward, it says "Off Air." So as of my typing this, 59 more minutes to go!
 
That's what has me scratching my head, too. Who is (or was) behind World Championship Sports Network?
Licensing agreement with NBC?

So the article says NBCU had an 8% stake.
Universal Sports Network, the mostly Olympic sports channel co-owned by InterMedia Partners and NBCUniversal, is shutting down November 16. NBCU, which holds an 8% stake in the channel, will pick up USN’s rights to the Olympic sports — the company has U.S. broadcast rights to the Olympic Games through 2032.
 
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