| Country | United States |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | Colorado Nevada Wyoming Utah Southern Idaho westernKansas westernNebraska westernSouth Dakota parts ofCalifornia Mohave County, Arizona Worldwide (via satellite) |
| Headquarters | Denver, Colorado |
| Programming | |
| Language | English |
| Picture format | 720p (HDTV) 480i (SDTV) |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| Parent |
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| History | |
| Launched | November 15, 1988; 37 years ago (1988-11-15) |
| Closed | December 31, 2023; 22 months ago (2023-12-31) |
| Former names | Prime Sports Network (1988–1989) Prime Sports Network- Rocky Mountain (1989–1995) Prime Sports Rocky Mountain (1995–1996) Fox Sports Rocky Mountain (1996–1999) Fox Sports Net Rocky Mountain (1999–2004) FSN Rocky Mountain (2004–2011) Root Sports Rocky Mountain (2011–2017) AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain (2017–2023) |
AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain was an Americanregional sports network owned byWarner Bros. Discovery through itsTNT Sports unit as part of theAT&T SportsNet brand of networks.[1] Headquartered inDenver, Colorado,[2] the network broadcast regional coverage of sports events throughout theRocky Mountain region, mainly focusing on professional sports teams based in theDenver metropolitan area, Utah and Nevada.
SportsNet Rocky Mountain was available oncable providers throughoutColorado,Utah,Nevada,Wyoming,Montana,Central &Eastern Idaho, northernNew Mexico, westernKansas, westernNebraska, westernSouth Dakota, parts ofCalifornia, including all ofSan Bernardino County andMohave County, Arizona; it was also available nationwide onsatellite viaDirecTV.[3]
SportsNet Rocky Mountain was originally launched on November 15, 1988, as thePrime Sports Network, ajoint venture betweenBill Daniels,United Cable (controlled byTCI), andHome Sports Entertainment. The first live event ever shown on the network was aDenver Nuggets –Los Angeles LakersNBA game. The network was originally broadcast from 5 p.m. to midnight weekdays and 11 a.m. to midnight on weekends. Additional programming included theDenver Zephyrs (minor-league baseball), college games from theBig Eight, theWestern Athletic and theMissouri Valley conferences, andUniversity of Denver hockey. Additionally, there was coverage of skiing, hunting, fishing, rodeo, boxing, tennis, and golf.[4]
The network was one of the original members of thePrime Sports Network, a group of regional sports networks formed in 1989 as a partnership between Bill Daniels and TCI. It was officially renamedPrime Sports Network- Rocky Mountain to avoid confusion with the group which now had the same name. However, it still was often referred to on-air as "Prime Sport Network" or simply "PSN". In spring 1995, the network was renamedPrime Sports Rocky Mountain as part of a larger rebranding of Prime's RSNs.
In October 1995,News Corporation, which formed a sports division for theFox network two years earlier after it obtained the broadcast rights to theNational Football Conference and sought to create a group of regional sports networks, acquired a 50% interest in the Prime Network from TCI parentLiberty Media.[5] Later that year on November 1, News Corporation and Liberty Media relaunched the Prime Network affiliates as part of the newFox Sports Net group, with the Denver-based network officially rebranding asFox Sports Rocky Mountain.[6] The channel was rebranded asFox Sports Net Rocky Mountain in 2000, as part of a collective brand modification of the FSN networks under the "Fox Sports Net" banner; subsequently in 2004, the channel shortened its name toFSN Rocky Mountain, through the networks' de-emphasis of the "Fox Sports Net" brand.
On December 22, 2006, News Corporation sold its interest in FSN Rocky Mountain and sister networksFSN Utah,FSN Northwest andFSN Pittsburgh to Liberty Media, in an asset trade in which News Corporation also traded its 38.5% ownership stake in satellite providerDirecTV for $550 million in cash and stock, in exchange for Liberty Media's 16.3% stake in the company.[7] On May 4, 2009, DirecTV Group Inc. announced it would become a part of Liberty's entertainment unit, part of which would then bespun off into the separate company under the DirecTV name, in a deal in which Liberty would increase its share in DirecTV from 48% to 54%, with Liberty ownerJohn Malone and his family owning a 24% interest. DirecTV would operate its newly acquired FSN-affiliated networks throughDirecTV Sports Networks,[1] a new division formed when the split off from Liberty Media was completed on November 19, 2009.[8]
On December 17, 2010, DirecTV Sports Networks announced that its four Fox Sports Networks-affiliated regional outlets – FSN Rocky Mountain, FSN Pittsburgh, FSN Northwest and FSN Utah – would be relaunched under the "Root Sports" brand.[9] The network officially rebranded asRoot Sports Rocky Mountain on April 1, 2011, withThe Dan Patrick Show as the first program to air under the new brand. For nominal purposes, the Root Sports networks continued to carry programming distributed mainly to the Fox Sports regional networks to provide supplementary sports and entertainment programming.
On June 12, 2017, AT&T Sports Networks announced that the network, along with Root Sports Southwest, Root Sports Pittsburgh, and Root Sports Utah, will rebrand under the nameAT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain, with all network programming and on-air talent remaining intact.[10][11] The name change took effect on July 14, 2017.
On October 1, 2021, AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain, along with sister networks AT&T SportsNet Pittsburgh, and Root Sports Northwest, was removed from Dish Network satellite and Sling streaming TV services.[12]
On February 24, 2023, Warner Bros. Discovery announced that it would leave the RSN business.[13][14] Originally scheduled for a winddown by March 31, WBD andMajor League Baseball would later agree to sustain RSN operations through the end of the MLB season.[15] In August, John Ourand of theSports Business Journal reported that AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain was likely to be shuttered, and that the Rockies were considering a deal withAltitude Sports and Entertainment or assigning their local television rights to MLB.[16] The Rockies eventually decided in 2024 to air their games locally with assistance from MLB. It was later confirmed that the network will shut down by the end of 2023, with full-time employees laid off on October 6.[17] The network was subsequently rebranded asSportsNet Rocky Mountain for its last few weeks of service, removingAT&T's name from the product entirely. The channel's final two months on the air comprised broadcasts of some national andsyndicated sports programs, including some SSN Sports shows,Sports Stars of Tomorrow and theWorld Poker Tour among others.
The network's coverage for Rockies telecasts, as well as both NBA and NHL teams, included pregame and postgame shows, game replays, classic game re-airs, and additional insider programming. For the Rockies and Golden Knights, the network produced a weekly in-season magazine program for each team (The Club: Colorado Rockies andKnight Life, respectively), whereas insider programming for the Jazz was more sporadic, consisting of occasional special features such as the 2018Hot Rod Hundley documentary.[18]
The channel lost the broadcast rights to the Nuggets and Avalanche in 2004 when the owner of both teams,Stan Kroenke, launched the competing regional sports networkAltitude Sports and Entertainment. On March 4, 2023, following the announcement thatWarner Bros. Discovery would exit theRSN business, the Knights signed an exclusive multi-year over-the-air agreement with theE.W. Scripps Company'sKMCC-TV andKTNV beginning with the2023–24 season, ending the team's broadcasts on AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain after six seasons.[19] The Utah Jazz announced on June 20, 2023 that they too would be leaving the network in favor of moving their games back toKJZZ-TV, as well as some games and services also being aired onKUTV and utilizing their own streaming service created byKiswe called "Jazz+".[20] A simulcast of these games air on former sister networkRoot Sports Northwest in Montana, Idaho, and parts of Oregon and Washington.[21] The Las Vegas Aces are now aired onKVVU, and Rockies telecasts moved to a platform operated byMLB.tv for the 2024 season.[22][23][24]
On May 23, 2017, it was announced that the network had acquired the regional cable rights to the newVegas Golden Knights NHL expansion team. These telecasts are available in all of Nevada, and parts of Arizona, and California, including all ofSan Bernardino County, as well as Utah, Wyoming, and Idaho. The games are also made available on sister networkRoot Sports Northwest in northern Idaho and Montana.[27][28][29]
In June 2018, AT&T SportsNet acquired rights to the newly relocatedLas Vegas Aces of theWNBA.[30]
In late 1989, TCI launched Prime Sports Network-Utah as a replacement from their game-only Jazz Cable Network. Although it originally was considered a separate network, at some point it began to operate as a subfeed with almost identical programming. The main feature of this Utah-based network had always beenUtah Jazz basketball games. Over the years it was known asPrime Sports Intermountain West,Fox Sports Utah and finallyRoot Sports Utah. When AT&T took over the network all Utah branding was dropped and it now operates as a true subfeed. Jazz games produced by AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain were also available in Idaho and Montana on sister network Root Sports Northwest.
D Denotes person is deceased.