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ESPN Goal Line & Bases Loaded

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Defunct American sports television channel
Television channel
ESPN Goal Line & ESPN Bases Loaded
CountryUnited States
HeadquartersBristol, Connecticut
Programming
LanguageAmerican English
Picture format720p (HDTV)
Ownership
OwnerESPN Inc.
(The Walt Disney Company (80%)
Hearst Communications (20%))
Sister channels
History
LaunchedSeptember 4, 2010 (2010-09-04)
ClosedJanuary 13, 2020 (2020-01-13)(final program)
June 30, 2020 (2020-06-30)(contractual sunsetting)

ESPN Goal Line & ESPN Bases Loaded was a gametime-onlycable channel operated byESPN which operated from the start of the2010 college football season until the end of the2019 college football season. The channel was active during twocollege sports seasons; duringcollege football season as ESPN Goal Line and through theNCAA Division I Softball Championship forcollege softball andNCAA Division I Baseball Championship forcollege baseball as ESPN Bases Loaded. In both cases, the coverage provided live look-ins and analysis of multiple games in progress. The coverage switched between games to show interesting defensive plays and scoring drives, such as offensive teams entering thered zone (football) or withrunners in scoring position (baseball/softball).

Goal Line aired during the regular season on Saturdays from 3:00 p.m.ET to approximately 11:30 p.m. It also ran throughout theplayoffs as an alternate feed forMegacast coverage, usually as a "datacast" feed of extended data. The network was occasionally simulcast onESPNews in the late afternoon or early evening when that channel was not carrying its own games. Bases Loaded operated during the early rounds of the NCAA Softball & Baseball Championship.

At its launch, the channel was made available to customers ofTime Warner Cable andBright House Networks systems,[1] and became available soon after to customers ofVerizon FiOS TV.[2] In addition, the channel is also carried onDish Network,Comcast,Cox Communications,Charter Communications,Sling TV,Cablevision,Hulu andDirecTV. During the network's downtime, it would promote the next week or event that would air with a still card and a loop ofESPN's college football theme of the time as background audio; cable providers were disallowed from using the channel space for other purposes.

The channel formerly operated a third iteration of the service in the same channel space during thecollege basketball season known asESPN Buzzer Beater, which broadcast on Wednesday nights and Saturdays from December to early March. In July 2017, ESPN announced that it had discontinued Buzzer Beater, in order to "shift resources to better position ourselves for the long-term". The Goal Line and Bases Loaded services were not affected by this change.[3]

Officially, the network's last program was the2020 College Football Playoff National Championship on January 13, 2020, when it again carried the DataCast channel for ESPN's Megacast coverage.

Network closing

[edit]

The 2020 version of Bases Loaded would never occur, due to thecoronavirus pandemic causing the cancellation of the2020 NCAA baseball andsoftball seasons, including their associatedbaseball andsoftball tourneys; the cancellation was announced on March 12, 2020. One day after on March 13,Disney Media Distribution sent notice to providers that the network would be discontinued on June 30, 2020, with notice of it relayed to customers between late May and mid June.[4] The discontinuation was thought of as a foregone conclusion, as ESPN pushes viewers to its streaming service,ESPN+, which allows the customer the choice of following any ESPN/ABC-aired game at their own pace, along with overall network cutbacks of extraneous wireline networks and connected on-air staff. With no other programming to promote, the channel space merely carried a looping video of the ESPN logo and audio of the network's default NCAA championship theme in the background after March 13, until the network feed was quietly dropped at 11:59 p.m. ET on June 30, 2020.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Humes, Mike (September 3, 2010)."ESPN and Time Warner Cable Launch New College Football Live Cut-In and Highlights Channel – ESPN Goal Line".ESPN Press Room. Archived fromthe original on June 5, 2014. RetrievedApril 24, 2022.
  2. ^Szalai, Georg (October 7, 2010)."FiOS inks carriage deal with Disney, ESPN".The Hollywood Reporter. RetrievedApril 24, 2022.
  3. ^"ESPN Shutters One of Its Channels to Cut Costs".The Wrap. 19 July 2017. Retrieved24 July 2017.
  4. ^"Re: Notice of Discontinuation of ESPN Goal Line and ESPN Bases Loaded". Letter from ESPN to the National Cable Television Cooperative. 13 March 2020. Archived fromthe original on 15 June 2020. Retrieved15 June 2020.

See also

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External links

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