Syndicated package of college sports telecasts
For the cable TV channel operated by ESPN, see
ACC Network
.
ACC Network
was a
syndicated
package of
college sports
telecasts featuring
football
and
basketball
events from the
Atlantic Coast Conference
, produced by
Raycom Sports
, the sports syndication unit of
Montgomery, Alabama
-based
Raycom Media
(now owned by
Gray Television
).
The package stemmed from a joint venture between Raycom and
Jefferson-Pilot Teleproductions
, which acquired the rights to ACC basketball in 1982 under the banner Raycom/JP Sports. In 2004, Jefferson-Pilot's ACC football package (which began in 1984) was also moved under Raycom/JP Sports. Jefferson-Pilot was acquired by
Lincoln National Corporation
in 2006, who would in turn sell its media assets to Raycom in 2006. In 2010,
ESPN
acquired the rights to ACC basketball and football, but continued to sublicense games to Raycom Sports to continue the syndicated package, which was relaunched under the
ACC Network
brand. Broadcast games were shown locally on
over-the-air broadcast stations
,
regional sports networks
, as well as streaming on
ESPN3
and
WatchESPN
.
[1]
[2]
In July 2016, ESPN announced an extension of its contract and plans to launch an
ACC cable channel of the same name
in 2019, and took ownership of the ACC rights that were previously sublicensed to Raycom. In anticipation of the new channel, the "ACC Network" branding during its syndicated telecasts was phased out in 2018. Although ESPN will continue to subcontract Raycom Sports resources for the new channel, Raycom's final syndicated ACC telecast?the
2019 ACC men's basketball championship game
?aired March 16, 2019.
History
[
edit
]
ACC men's basketball
had been broadcast by Raycom/JP Sports, a joint venture of Raycom Sports and Jefferson-Pilot Teleproductions, since the 1982?83 basketball season. The roots of the current package date to 1957, when
Greensboro
businessman C.D. Chesley hastily assembled a five-station network to broadcast
North Carolina
's appearance in that year's Final Four.
[3]
The Tar Heels went on to win the national championship, and Chesley expanded to a full-season package for the 1957?58 season. Chelsey retained the rights until his retirement in 1981, and then
Baltimore
-based Metrosports had the ACC rights just for the 1981?82 season.
The first ACC basketball telecast by Raycom/JP Sports was an early-season game between the
Virginia Cavaliers
and the
Duke Blue Devils
on the night of December 8, 1982.
[4]
[5]
It was uncertain whether this first broadcast was going to happen at all until the 9 p.m. tip-off; many East Coast network affiliates were unexpectedly carrying national coverage of a
hostage situation at the Washington Monument
, tying up the
AT&T network lines
required for Raycom to distribute the game.
[6]
Jefferson-Pilot Teleproductions was the sole producer of
ACC football
beginning with the 1984 football season, but the Raycom/JP Sports joint venture began to include ACC football for the 2004 season.
[7]
In 2006, JP Sports' parent company, the Jefferson Pilot Corporation, merged with
Lincoln National Corporation
, taking the broadcasting and sports broadcasting divisions with it. JP Sports became Lincoln Financial Sports, thereby renaming the joint venture Raycom/LF Sports. Lincoln announced the sale of its media assets to Raycom Media in November 2007, making Raycom Sports the sole producer of all ACC projects and, from January 2008 until March 2009,
SEC men's basketball
and football.
In 2010, ESPN acquired rights to ACC football and basketball, replacing Raycom. In a discussion between ACC commissioner
John Swofford
and then-ESPN president
John Skipper
, Swofford acknowledged Raycom's long-standing relationship with the conference, and requested that it continue to be involved in some way. ESPN negotiated a sublicensing agreement with Raycom, which would allow it to continue producing a syndicated package of ACC football and basketball broadcasts. As a condition of the deal, they were rebranded under the new on-air title
ACC Network
. As part of the agreement, Raycom also agreed to operate the ACC's website and digital properties. It was suggested that ESPN agreed to Raycom's involvement, so it would not create conflicts with the
SEC Network
?
ESPN Regional Television
's then-new package of syndicated
Southeastern Conference
football and basketball games, established after ESPN replaced Raycom as the SEC's main rightsholder besides CBS.
[8]
[9]
Raycom began syndicating the ACC Network beyond the ACC footprint sometime between 2010 and 2013.
[5]
Beginning with the 2014–2015 academic season, following the discontinuation of ESPN's syndicated SEC package after the launch of the
SEC Network
cable channel, Raycom expanded the ACC Network's distribution up to 84% of the entire United States.
[2]
[10]
On July 21, 2016, ESPN announced a 20-year extension of its ACC rights, and that it would launch a new ACC cable network, also known as
ACC Network
, in 2019, with its accompanying digital platform ACC Network Extra launching in the 2016–17 season. As part of the establishment of the channel, ESPN acquired Raycom Sports' previous package of games.
[11]
[12]
[13]
Beginning with the
2018 ACC football season
, the ACC Network branding was dropped, and the telecasts began to use the Raycom Sports branding for the final season.
Raycom Sports will continue its role as the ACC's in-house digital media partner, and ESPN will subcontract production resources from Raycom Sports for the new channel.
[14]
Raycom's final syndicated ACC telecast was the
2019 ACC men's basketball tournament
final.
[15]
Raycom Sports continues to produce select ACC games, however instead of being syndicated to OTA stations, these games were first syndicated to
regional sports networks
under the
ACC on Regional Sports Networks
branding, and later sublicensed to
The CW Sports
, effectively returning such coverage to some of those CW affiliates that were formerly ACC Network affiliates.
Distribution
[
edit
]
United States
[
edit
]
Upon its final season, ACC Network included:
- 35 CW affiliates (including WTTO in Birmingham, WCCT in Hartford, WTOG in Tampa, WUPA in Atlanta, WNOL in New Orleans, WKBD in Detroit, KPLR in St. Louis and KMYS in San Antonio)
- 32 MyNetworkTV affiliates (including WUXP in Nashville, WDCA in Washington, WNDY in Indianapolis, WUAB in Cleveland, and WCGV in Milwaukee)
- 20 independent stations (including WLNY in New York and KTXA in Dallas)
- 12 Fox affiliates (including WOFL in Orlando and WXIX in Cincinnati)
- 11 CBS affiliates (including WFOR in Miami, WJZ in Baltimore and WBTV in Charlotte)
- 10 NBC affiliates (including WRAL in Raleigh)
- 9 ABC affiliates (including WHAS in Louisville, WPVI in Philadelphia and WTAE in Pittsburgh)
Outside of the U.S., the telecasts could be received in Canada via historic
superstations
still carried on cable, such as Boston's
WSBK-TV
, and during its final seasons,
WPCH-TV
in Atlanta (the former WTBS), as well as over-the-air signals receivable in border markets.
Programming besides live games
[
edit
]
Primary source:
[16]
- ACC Football Blitz
- pre-game in-studio show
- ACC Basketball Tip-off Show
- Kings of the Court
On-air personalities
[
edit
]
ACC Basketball
[
edit
]
Color analysts
[
edit
]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"ACC Properties - ACC"
.
theacc.com
. Archived from
the original
on June 11, 2017
. Retrieved
April 4,
2018
.
- ^
a
b
Press Release (July 1, 2014). "
ACC Network Has Expanded National Reach
" Raycom Sports. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
- ^
Rosen, Ron (May 13, 1981).
"Chesley TV Era Over"
.
The Washington Post
. Retrieved July 20, 2022.
- ^
2007 ACC Tournament Official Program
, page 24.
- ^
a
b
Haygood, Daniel (Spring 2013).
"Through Part of Seven Decades, From C.D. Chesley to Raycom Sports, ACC Basketball has Gaines Exposure Through Partnerships, Distribution, Innovation"
(PDF)
. ACC Sports Journal. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on May 20, 2014
. Retrieved
June 23,
2013
.
- ^
Wilkerson, Brant (March 11, 2019).
"Signing off: Raycom Sports will air its final ACC tournament this week"
.
Greensboro News and Record
.
- ^
ACCSlicks.pdf
Archived
October 9, 2014, at the
Wayback Machine
Raycom Sports
. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
- ^
Smith, Michael; Ourand, John (October 5, 2010).
"History with ACC secures future for Raycom"
.
Washington Business Journal
. American City Business Journals
. Retrieved
September 1,
2017
.
- ^
Smith, Michael (October 4, 2010).
"History with ACC secures Future for Raycom"
(PDF)
. Sports and Business Journal
. Retrieved
March 14,
2015
.
- ^
"ACC Network will be syndicated in 90 million homes"
.
nbcsports.com
. July 19, 2014
. Retrieved
April 4,
2018
.
- ^
"Art of the deal: How Swofford, ACC, ESPN reached agreement to launch ACC Network"
.
The News & Observer
. Retrieved
September 18,
2017
.
- ^
"ACC, ESPN announce new television deal, including launch of ACC Network"
.
syracuse.com
. Retrieved
September 18,
2017
.
- ^
"ESPN-backed ACC Network launches in 2019"
.
ESPN.com
. Retrieved
September 18,
2017
.
- ^
bwilkerson-new@greensboro.com, Brant Wilkerson-New.
"Raycom takes new role as ACC Network plans to debut"
.
Greensboro News and Record
. Retrieved
March 13,
2019
.
- ^
"The pilot sails no more: After four decades, ACC's longtime TV partner signs off"
.
Raleigh News & Observer
. Retrieved
March 17,
2019
.
- ^
"Raycom/Jefferson Pilot ACC Syndicated Package Promotional Brochures (1990-2013)"
(PDF)
.
raycomsports.com
. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on March 4, 2016
. Retrieved
April 4,
2018
.
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