ESPN2

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ESPN2
ESPN2 logo
Launched October 1, 1993
Owned by ESPN Inc.
(The Walt Disney Company (80%)
Hearst Corporation (20%))
Picture format 480i (SDTV)
720p (HDTV)
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language American English
Website ESPN2 Website
Availability
Satellite
DirecTV 209
Dish Network 142 (SD)
9425 (HD)
Cable
Available on most cable systems Check local listings for channels
Cox Cable 31 (in Las Vegas)

ESPN2 debuted on October 1, 1993, as a sister station of ESPN. Nicknamed "the deuce," ESPN2 was to be branded as a network for a younger generation of sports fans featuring edgier graphics as well as extreme sports like motocross, snowboarding, and BMX racing. This mandate was phased out by 2001, as the channel increasingly served as a second outlet for ESPN's mainstream sports coverage.

Contents

[edit] 1993-2001

One of several logos from ESPN2's early days. These "graffiti 2" logos were used until 2001.
One of several logos from ESPN2's early days. These "graffiti 2" logos were used until 2001.

[edit] Style

The original ESPN2 graphics featured the letters "ESPN" in several fonts, one of which was its traditional script, with the only consistency being the '2' that looked like spray painted graffiti. On-screen graphics used an odd font with random capital letters, as "tHis iS aN ExAMplE". No announcers wore ties and traditional sports had "deuce names", NASCAR was "Hell on Wheels", the NHL was "Fire on Ice", and so on.

[edit] SportsNight

The first program on ESPN2 was SportsNight, a sports news hybrid featuring Keith Olbermann and Suzy Kolber. The debut was noted by Olbermann's statement at the beginning of transmission: "Good evening, and welcome to the end of my career." Several notable ESPN personalities debuted on ESPN2's SportsNight, among them Stuart Scott and Kenny Mayne.

[edit] Experimental broadcasts

In its early years, ESPN2 was used for some experimental sports broadcasts. On September 18, 1994, ESPN covered the CART Bosch Spark Plug Grand Prix, and ESPN2 featured a live simulcast with an all on-board camera broadcast. ESPN2 featured several half-hour news programs focused on specific sports, such as NFL 2Night (football), NHL 2Night (hockey), and RPM 2Night (auto racing). In 1995, ESPN2 debuted a sports news ticker, dubbed the "BottomLine,"[1] which was present almost 24 hours a day, rather than just at the top and bottom of the hour as it has been done on ESPN. ESPN2's sports telecasts were also among the first to regularly use a scoring bug.

[edit] Not a success

Though the "ESPN2 Attitude" was one of the main inspirations for launching the X Games, this format was, in an overall sense, not successful. The so-called MTV Generation was not interested in sports pandered to them in this way, and traditional sports fans were turned off by the youthful gimmick, and several cable companies still refused to include ESPN2 in their basic lineups. The channel was then reformatted.

[edit] ESPN2 since 2001

Beginning in 2001, ESPN2 began to offer much of the same programming as ESPN, often airing spill over programs from "The Mothership." Graphics and announcer dress became nearly the same as ESPN, only using blue where ESPN uses red, plus the addition of the "2" at the end of the logo. The blue color scheme changed to red in 2007.

[edit] Programming

Sports events presented on ESPN2 tend to be alternative sports such as poker, billiards, lumberjacking, extreme sports and, more recently, drum and bugle corps. However, in recent years ESPN2 has broadcast increasingly more mainstream sporting events, including the East-West Shrine Game, much of the 2006 World Baseball Classic, many Major League Soccer, and NCAA Basketball games, WNBA on Tuesdays and Arena Football League games on Mondays. NASCAR Nationwide Series races on Saturday afternoons, and the Grand Slam Tennis tournaments the Australian Open, The French Open and Wimbledon. And beginning in 2009 the U.S Open

ESPN2's former flagship show, the morning sports/entertainment program Cold Pizza, achieved minimal success and saw several format and host changes. In January 2006, it was supplanted by the TV simulcast of ESPN Radio's Mike and Mike in the Morning (which moved from ESPNEWS) and moved to a later time slot (10a-12n EST). In May 2007, Cold Pizza moved from New York City to the ESPN headquarters in Bristol, and was renamed ESPN First Take. In February 2007, NASCAR Now made its debut on ESPN2. To cover NASCAR news, updates, and stats. Plus, NASCAR Now has special 1-hour called a "roundtable" editions on Monday's.

In 2003, ESPN2 began broadcasting Major League Lacrosse games. In March 2007, both agreed on a contract that will run until the 2016 season. [1]

Quite Frankly with Stephen A. Smith, a program that featured interviews with popular sports figures, had averaged extremely low ratings[2][3], and had also faced several time slot changes, until it was finally canceled in January 2007.

Every Saturday morning on ESPN2 is "Bass Saturday" where Bass Fishing programs are shown.

[edit] On-screen graphics

The "2" does not feature the signature stripe through the font like the other letters in the logo. ESPN's sports ticker, the "BottomLine", continues to run at the bottom of the screen, featured on all ESPN2 programs, whereas ESPN still only features the ticker during its highlights programs and at :18 and :58 on the hour during live game coverage. ESPN2 now appears in 89 million homes in the United States, eleven million fewer than ESPN.

[edit] Conversion to ESPN branding

On February 1, 2007, the sports-media blog Deadspin reported that ESPN2 branding will be soon dropped entirely, in favor of ESPN, for the channel's in-game graphics, similar to the current ESPN branding on ABC sports broadcasts. The ESPN2 brand would be retained only for identification between the two channels, such as in the BottomLine.[4] This change took place in full effect on February 12, 2007, as all on-air graphics (scorebox, transitional, mic flags, etc.) began using the ESPN logo rather than the ESPN2 logo. Another, more subtle change was made to the BottomLine, which is now red like the version of the BottomLine used on the main network; as expected, the ESPN2 logo remained on the BottomLine to further distinguish ESPN and ESPN2.

[edit] Simulcasting

ESPN2 has also simulcast many games with ESPN, in ESPN Full Circle where each ESPN network (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU) carries a different camera angle or commentary of big college matchups.

ESPN2 also simulcasts some ESPNEWS programming, often during local blackouts, and for a while provided a Sunday simulcast of ESPN Deportes' SportsCenter.

ESPN2 also often carries SportsCenter on days where the regular ESPN broadcast is overrun by a longer than expected sporting event. Several times ESPN has carried a special entitled "This is Sportscenter" which was a live behind the scenes look into the making of Sportscenter. The show aired for 2 hours, including the lead up to the broadcast at 11pm. This showed how segments were planned, stories written, and guests readied for interview. The finished sportscenter would air live on ESPN2 while the behind the scenes feed would air on ESPN. This special has aired only twice, the last being in 2004.

ESPN2HD, a high-definition simulcast of ESPN2, was available for the first time nationwide September 9, 2005, via DirecTV. ESPN flipped the switch on ESPN2HD at the Consumer Electronics Show in 2005.

Both ESPN and ESPN2 carried ABC News coverage of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

ESPN2 also aired the men's basketball SEC Championship Game in 2008 to most of the nation, since a storm destroyed the initial site of the tournament, causing the schedule to be rearranged in conflict with CBS's coverage of the Big Ten Championship Game. The game was produced by CBS. In SEC territory, the Big Ten game appeared on ESPN2.

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