J
Joseph_Gallant
Guest
In recent years, hometown fans of the other five Canadian-based NHL teams (Montreal Canadiens, Ottawa Senators, Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers, and Vancouver Canucks) have occassionally complained that Saturday-night games of their hometown teams were not broadcast on CBC, but instead, the Toronto Maple Leafs were.
By looking over the 2005/2006 NHL team-by-team schedules, I was able to determine how many Saturday-night games of each Canadian-based team would not be seen in the team's home city on CBC:
Calgary Flames: 11 games on "HNIC", 7 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC".
Edmonton Oilers: 12 games on "HNIC", 4 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC".
Montreal Canadiens: 8 games on "HNIC", 15 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC" (but it should be noted that the RDS French-language cable sports network will carry all Montreal games).
Ottawa Senators: 13 games on "HNIC", 8 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC".
Toronto Maple Leafs: 27 games on "HNIC", no Saturday-night (other than January 28th, when CBC apparantly will not broadcast "HNIC"; see below) games not on "HNIC".
Vancouver Canucks: 14 games on "HNIC", 2 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC".
Note: CBC apparantly will not carry "HNIC" on Saturday night, January 28th; therefore, January 28th was not included among the list of Saturday nights when a Canadian-based NHL team would be playing a game not shown on the CBC. The only two Canadian-based NHL teams who will play that night are Montreal and Toronto, who will play each other at Toronto's Air Canada Center.
It is true that Toronto is not just Canada's TV market, but it's dominant market: One-fourth of Canada's total population resides within the Toronto television market.
Still, shouldn't the CBC try to cover every Saturday-night game of a Canadian-based NHL team for local telecast in that team's home market?? Ys, CBC might sometimes be doing four or five games on a particular Saturday-night, but there would be fans in Montreal, Ottawa, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver who would be grateful that their hometown team was on "HNIC" every time they play on a Saturday night, and will tune-in to follow their local team. That along could boost "HNIC"'s ratings a bit.
By looking over the 2005/2006 NHL team-by-team schedules, I was able to determine how many Saturday-night games of each Canadian-based team would not be seen in the team's home city on CBC:
Calgary Flames: 11 games on "HNIC", 7 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC".
Edmonton Oilers: 12 games on "HNIC", 4 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC".
Montreal Canadiens: 8 games on "HNIC", 15 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC" (but it should be noted that the RDS French-language cable sports network will carry all Montreal games).
Ottawa Senators: 13 games on "HNIC", 8 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC".
Toronto Maple Leafs: 27 games on "HNIC", no Saturday-night (other than January 28th, when CBC apparantly will not broadcast "HNIC"; see below) games not on "HNIC".
Vancouver Canucks: 14 games on "HNIC", 2 Saturday-night games not on "HNIC".
Note: CBC apparantly will not carry "HNIC" on Saturday night, January 28th; therefore, January 28th was not included among the list of Saturday nights when a Canadian-based NHL team would be playing a game not shown on the CBC. The only two Canadian-based NHL teams who will play that night are Montreal and Toronto, who will play each other at Toronto's Air Canada Center.
It is true that Toronto is not just Canada's TV market, but it's dominant market: One-fourth of Canada's total population resides within the Toronto television market.
Still, shouldn't the CBC try to cover every Saturday-night game of a Canadian-based NHL team for local telecast in that team's home market?? Ys, CBC might sometimes be doing four or five games on a particular Saturday-night, but there would be fans in Montreal, Ottawa, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver who would be grateful that their hometown team was on "HNIC" every time they play on a Saturday night, and will tune-in to follow their local team. That along could boost "HNIC"'s ratings a bit.