Fox Soccer Plus

Fox Soccer Plus
Launched March 1, 2010
Owned by Fox Entertainment Group
(21st Century Fox)
Picture format 720p (HDTV)
480i (SDTV)
Slogan Your Passion is Our Passion
Language English
Headquarters Houston, Texas, U.S.
Replaced Setanta Sports USA (unconnected, now defunct)
Sister channel(s) Fox Sports
Fox Sports 1
Fox Sports 2
Fox Sports Networks
Fox College Sports
Big Ten Network
Website www.foxsports.com/soccer
Availability
Satellite
DirecTV (US) 621-1 (HD) (part-time)
621 (SD)
Dish Network (US) 391 (SD only)
Cable
Verizon FiOS 1009 (SD only)
Time Warner
Brighthouse
Cablevision
Check local listings for availability and channel numbers
IPTV
AT&T Uverse 1653 (HD)

Fox Soccer Plus is an American sports channel dedicated to soccer and rugby. It was formed as a spin-off of the now-defunct Fox Soccer when its owner Fox Entertainment Group re-acquired rights from competitor Setanta Sports USA in January 2010, putting the latter channel out of business. It launched on March 1, 2010.[1]

Despite the September 2013 replacement of Fox Soccer with FXX, Fox Soccer Plus remains operational, supplementing soccer and rugby coverage on sister channels Fox Sports 1 and Fox Sports 2.

Coverage rights

Soccer

The channel airs soccer matches from the UEFA Champions League, England's FA Cup,[1] Germany's Bundesliga, UEFA Europa League, Scottish Premier League and the Australian A-League. Moreover, Fox Soccer Plus has acquired the rights to a handful of English national team matches, for both the senior and junior squads.

Rugby Union

Fox Soccer Plus has picked up rights to major rugby competitions in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Fox Soccer Plus has rights to the Europe-wide Heineken Cup plus England's Aviva Premiership and the Pro 12 in the Celtic nations and Italy (although RaboDirect Pro 12 League matches are non-existent in Fox Soccer Plus' schedule for the first six weeks of the season).

Rugby League

In 2010 it secured the rights to broadcast the 2010 Rugby League Four Nations.[2] As of 2013, they are also broadcasting some National Rugby League and Super League matches, including highlight shows (the syndicated NRL Full Time for the Australian league, Boots N' All for the European league) and full live coverage of both Grand Finals and the State of Origin series. The coverage of these events are "untouched", meaning it includes all pre-match activities and does not obscure the Sky Sports or Nine Network branding.

Australian Rules Football

Fox Soccer Plus has announced that they will continue their coverage of Australian rules football through the 2016 season. The announcement, reported January 16, 2014 on the Australian Football Association of North America website says that Fox Soccer Plus told AFANA that the network will broadcast a minimum of two live games per week in HD and coverage will continue through the end of the 2016 season. The same website post says Fox has also committed to show all playoff matches, leading up to and including the Grand Final. Additional games will air on the Fox Sports 2 network each week but not the Grand Final. [3]

Former

Fox Soccer Plus' coverage of Italy's Serie A and France's Ligue 1 ended in May 2012, after coverage of both moved to BeIN Sport starting with the 2012-2013 season.[4]

Fox Soccer Plus formerly held rights to all major properties in the SANZAR countries—the Tri Nations involving the national teams of South Africa, New Zealand and Australia; Super Rugby, involving franchises from each of these countries; South Africa's Currie Cup; and New Zealand's ITM Cup.[5] However, in 2011, Fox Soccer Plus lost broadcasting rights for Super Rugby and Tri Nations to DirecTV.[6]

Carriage

Fox Soccer Plus is available nationally on DirecTV[7] and Dish Network,[7] and regionally on Verizon FiOS,[7] Time Warner Cable,[7] Brighthouse Networks,[8] Cablevision,[9] and AT&T Uverse.[10]

High Definition

Fox Soccer Plus's 720p HD feed is available nationally on DirecTV (part-time),[11] and regionally on Time Warner Cable,[12] Brighthouse Networks,[8] AT&T U-verse,[10] and Cablevision.[13]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, February 02, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.