ESPNU | |
Picture Format: | 720p (HDTV) Downgraded to letterboxed 480i for SDTV feed |
Owner: | The Walt Disney Company (80%) Hearst Communications (20%) |
Parent: | ESPN Inc. |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Area: | Nationwide International |
Headquarters: | Bristol, Connecticut |
Sister Channels: | |
Online Serv 1: | WatchESPN or ESPN app |
Online Chan 1: | WatchESPN.com |
Online Serv 2: | Sling TV |
Online Chan 2: | Sports Extra Package |
Online Serv 3: | YouTube TV |
Online Chan 3: | base package |
Online Serv 4: | Hulu + Live TV |
Online Chan 4: | base package |
Online Serv 5: | DirecTV Stream |
Online Chan 5: | Max package |
ESPNU is an American multinational digital cable and satellite sports television channel owned by ESPN Inc., a joint venture between The Walt Disney Company (which owns a controlling 80% stake) and the Hearst Communications (which owns the remaining 20%). The channel is primarily dedicated to coverage of college athletics, and is also used as an additional outlet for general ESPN programming. ESPNU is based alongside its sister networks at ESPN's headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut.
, ESPNU is available to approximately 36,000,000 pay television households in the United States-down from its 2014 peak of 75,000,000 households.[1]
The network was launched on March 4, 2005, with its first broadcast originating from the site of Gallagher-Iba Arena on the Oklahoma State University campus in Stillwater, Oklahoma. The network's first live event was a semifinal game of the Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball tournament between Southeast Missouri State University and Eastern Kentucky University. The network was launched as a response to rival College Sports Television (CSTV) (now CBS Sports Network). ESPN was also being investigated by the U.S. Justice Department on allegations of "warehousing" collegiate sporting events from certain conferences, or signing a deal with a conference for all their games, but only televising a small number and not allowing the conference to make other arrangements for television broadcasts.
ESPN and XOS Technologies entered into a partnership for college athletics websites to compete directly with CSTV's growing internet presence. On August 28, 2006, ESPNU launched a new SportsCenter spin-off focusing entirely on college sports. The program, SportsCenterU, was originally scheduled to be broadcast from ESPN's headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut, however ESPN instead chose to originate the show from Charlotte. Mike Hall was the program's lead anchor until August 2007, when he left for the new Big Ten Network. He was replaced by Mike Gleason and Lowell Galindo. The two are joined on-set by color commentators that vary depending on the sports season.
The same day as SportsCenterUs debut, ESPNU launched the website ESPNU.com. The site included live-streaming of college sports events, a multimedia player dedicated to college sports, podcasts and ESPN Motion clips of studio programming from the ESPNU television network.
ESPNU expanded its live programming to water polo by broadcasting its first-ever water polo match between the women's teams of Princeton University and Bucknell University on March 28, 2009, from DeNunzio Pool in Princeton, New Jersey.
In addition to its collegiate sports coverage, ESPNU has simulcast ESPN Radio's midday program over its airwaves since 2008, with the exception of a brief period between 2011 and 2012. The program airing for the majority of that time was The Herd with Colin Cowherd, which has since moved to Fox Sports Radio and is simulcast on Fox Sports 1. Following Cowherd's departure and several weeks of guest hosts taking over the timeslot, The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz became the permanent replacement for The Herd.
On April 26, 2017, as part of a larger series of company-wide cuts, it was announced that ESPNU's studio operations would be re-located from Charlotte to ESPN's main headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut. Less than 10 employees were laid off as part of the cuts. SEC Network and ESPN Events continue to operate out of Charlotte.[2]
On August 8, 2017, ESPNU aired a marathon of lesser-known and unconventional non-college sports as "ESPN 8: The Ocho"—an homage to a fictitious eighth ESPN channel portrayed in the film , which aired events that were "almost a sport".[3] [4] The stunt was reprised the following year on ESPN2.[5]
On August 31, 2017, as part of an extension of ESPN's agreements with the service, Sirius XM's channel College Sports Nation was relaunched as ESPNU Radio. The channel carries audio simulcasts of ESPN college sports studio programming, as well as other programs and event coverage.[6] [7] The co-branding agreement ended on February 4, 2023.[8]
On May 19, 2009, ESPN announced it had reached a carriage agreement with Comcast, which allows the cable provider to carry ESPNU on a widely distributed digital cable tier, instead of a less popular sports tier.[9] ESPNU was added to most Comcast systems in time for the start of the 2009–10 college football season. This ended several years of negotiations and somewhat of a feud between Comcast and ESPN over carriage of ESPNU.
On that same date, ESPNU reached a new carriage agreement with DirecTV, which moved the channel from the satellite provider's add-on "Sports Pack" to its basic "Choice" package on July 1, 2009, swapping channels and packages with ESPN Classic.[10] Cablevision added ESPNU to its systems on March 23, 2010.[11]
ESPNU is carried on PlayStation Vue,[12] and Sling TV.[13]
Outside the United States, ESPNU became available in Mexico in 2017.[14]
On August 4, 2009 Dish Network sued ESPN for $1 million in a federal lawsuit, alleging that ESPN breached its contract by not extending the same carriage terms that the programmer provided to Comcast and DirecTV for ESPNU and ESPN Classic. The lawsuit claims ESPN violated the "Most Favored Nations" clause.[15]
The next day, ESPN announced it would fight the lawsuit and said in a press release: "We have repeatedly advised Dish that we are in full compliance with our agreement and have offered them a distribution opportunity with respect to ESPNU and ESPN Classic consistent with the rest of the industry. We will not renegotiate settled contracts and will vigorously defend this legal action, the apparent sole purpose of which is to get a better deal."[16]
Dish Network moved the channel from its "Classic Gold 250" package to its "Classic Bronze 100" package on September 30, 2009. However, it claimed that the move had nothing to do with the lawsuit.[17]
See also: ESPN College Football, College Basketball on ESPN and List of ESPN sports properties. ESPNU has rights to sporting events from the following collegiate athletic conferences:
(play-by-play, 2005–present) ESPNU College Football
(host, 2005–present) Honor Roll
(host and play-by-play, 2005––present) SportsCenterU and ESPNU College Football Primetime
(host, reporter and play-by-play, 2006–present) ESPNU College Football and ESPNU College Basketball
(host, 2006–present) Summer House
(reporter, 2008–present) ESPNU reporter
(play-by-play, 2010–present) ESPNU play-by-play
(play-by-play, 2012–present) ESPNU play-by-play
(reporter, 2013–present) ESPNU reporter
(host, 2006–present) ESPNU host
(host, 2005–present) ESPNU host SportsCenterU
(reporter, 2006–present) ESPNU reporter
(reporter, 2005–present) ESPNU reporter
(reporter, 2012–present) ESPNU reporter
(play-by-play, 2006–present) ESPNU play-by-play
(analyst, 1993–present) ESPNU College Hockey
(analyst, 2016–present) ESPNU College Hockey
(analyst, 2003–present) ESPNU College Football
(analyst, 2005–present) ESPNU College Football
(analyst, 2005–present) ESPNU College Football Primetime
(analyst, 2005–present) ESPNU Inside the Polls
(analyst, 2005–present) ESPNU College Football Primetime
(analyst, 2005–present) ESPNU College Football Primetime
(analyst, 2006–present) ESPNU College Football Primetime
(analyst, 2006) ESPNU College Football
(play-by-play, 2005–present) ESPNU College Football Primetime
(analyst, 2005–present) ESPNU College Football
(analyst, 2011–present) ESPNU College Baseball
(analyst, 2006–present) SportsCenterU and ESPNU Recruiting Insider and ESPNU College Baseball
(analyst, 2003–present) ESPNU College Baseball
(analyst, 2011–present) ESPNU College Baseball
(analyst, 2003–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(analyst, 1985–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(analyst, 2000–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(analyst, 2007–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(analyst, 2005–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(analyst, 2003–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(analyst, 2003–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(analyst, 2003–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(analyst, 2003–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(analyst, 2006–present) ESPNU College Basketball
(host, 2008–2015) ESPNU Host
(analyst, 2005–) ESPNU Inside the Polls and ESPNU College Basketball
(host, 2005–2007) SportsCenterU, ESPNU Recruiting Insider, ESPNU Inside the Polls and ESPNU Coaches Spotlight
(play-by-play, 2005) ESPNU College Football
(analyst, 2005) ESPNU College Football Primetime
(reporter, 2005–2013) ESPNU Reporter
(analyst, 2005) ESPNU College Football