J
Joseph_Gallant
Guest
The Chicago Sky women's basketball team, which will play in the WNBA beginning next season, will have home games (other than those on national TV) broadcast on noncommercial WTTW-11.
The announcement has proven to be controversial, acording to this Robert Feder column in the Chicago Sun-Times.
Yes, some public-TV stations have broadcast high-school tournaments and college sports. Here in New England, Maine PBS does extensive coverage of the state high-school basketball playoffs, while CPTV in Connecticut (most regular-season games of U/Conn women's basketball) and NHPTV in New Hampshire (ten regular-season home games of University of New Hampshire men's hockey) both cover college sports. CPTV has covered U/Conn women's basketball since 1994; NHPTV's relationship with UNH men's hockey goes back even further, all the way to 1972.
I feel the only way that a Public-TV station should even televise professional sports would be if:
(1) No local commercial station is interested in covering the team.
(2) All costs of production of the games are paid for by business and corporate underwriting, so funds from other areas of the station's operation are not diverted to cover the games.
The likely reason WTTW will only do home games is to hold down production expenses. By only doing home games, WTTW will save money in not having to fly announcers and producers to away games (and related hotel bills), as well as not having to buy satellite circuits to send away games back to Chicago. And if WTTW has it's own large multi-camera remote truck, the station would be able to use it on home games for a small fraction of the cost of renting such a truck for away games.
I believe the only other time I can recall a PBS member station doing professional sports was in the 1970's, when the Hartford Whalers (then still in the World Hockey Association) had some games broadcast on CPTV. When the team first moved to Hartford, commercial station WFSB-3 carried televised games, but within a couple of years, CPTV was the home of the Whalers. I believe the Whalers moved back to commercial TV by the time the NHL and WHA "merged" in 1979.
The announcement has proven to be controversial, acording to this Robert Feder column in the Chicago Sun-Times.
Yes, some public-TV stations have broadcast high-school tournaments and college sports. Here in New England, Maine PBS does extensive coverage of the state high-school basketball playoffs, while CPTV in Connecticut (most regular-season games of U/Conn women's basketball) and NHPTV in New Hampshire (ten regular-season home games of University of New Hampshire men's hockey) both cover college sports. CPTV has covered U/Conn women's basketball since 1994; NHPTV's relationship with UNH men's hockey goes back even further, all the way to 1972.
I feel the only way that a Public-TV station should even televise professional sports would be if:
(1) No local commercial station is interested in covering the team.
(2) All costs of production of the games are paid for by business and corporate underwriting, so funds from other areas of the station's operation are not diverted to cover the games.
The likely reason WTTW will only do home games is to hold down production expenses. By only doing home games, WTTW will save money in not having to fly announcers and producers to away games (and related hotel bills), as well as not having to buy satellite circuits to send away games back to Chicago. And if WTTW has it's own large multi-camera remote truck, the station would be able to use it on home games for a small fraction of the cost of renting such a truck for away games.
I believe the only other time I can recall a PBS member station doing professional sports was in the 1970's, when the Hartford Whalers (then still in the World Hockey Association) had some games broadcast on CPTV. When the team first moved to Hartford, commercial station WFSB-3 carried televised games, but within a couple of years, CPTV was the home of the Whalers. I believe the Whalers moved back to commercial TV by the time the NHL and WHA "merged" in 1979.