Various NHL arenas(game telecasts and some pregame, intermission segments, and occasional postgame) ESPN's
Bristol, CT studios (pregame, intermission segments, and occasional postgame)
The broadcasts of
National Hockey League (NHL) games produced by
ESPN have been shown on its various platforms in the United States, including ESPN itself,
ABC,
ESPN+,
ESPN2,
ESPNEWS,
ESPNU, and
Hulu. Since 2021, games have been broadcast under the ESPN Hockey Night branding, while those on ESPN+ have used the ESPN+ Hockey Night branding.
ESPN first televised NHL games in the
1979–80 season, initially by sub-contracting rights from individual franchises. After the NHL shifted to only having one exclusive rightsholder, ESPN acquired the NHL's national television rights in
1985 to replace
USA Network (which had
previously aired NHL games in parallel with ESPN). ESPN lost the rights to
SportsChannel America in
1988.
ESPN regained the NHL's U.S. television rights from
1992 through the
1999–2000 season, with the coverage branded under the blanket title ESPN National Hockey Night. ESPN also sub-licensed a package of network television broadcasts to
ABC (sister via ESPN parent
The Walt Disney Company) under the NHL on ABC branding until
1994, when the NHL sold a broadcast television package to
Fox Sports. In
1999, ESPN renewed its contract through the
2004–05 NHL season, with ABC returning as broadcast television rightsholder to replace Fox.
The 2004–05 season was canceled due to a
lockout of the NHL Players Association. ESPN had reached a two-year agreement to serve as cable rightsholder in a reduced capacity beginning in the
2005–06 season (with a smaller package of regular season games and playoff coverage primarily on
ESPN2, and the first two games of the Stanley Cup Finals), alongside new broadcast rightsholder
NBC. After the lockout, ESPN opted out of the contract. They were instead acquired by
Comcast, with telecasts moving to Versus (later renamed
NBCSN); it held the
cable rights (which were later unified with NBC's broadcast television rights after Comcast's
purchase of
NBC Universal) through the
2020–21 season.[2]
On March 10, 2021, the NHL announced that it would return to ESPN networks under a seven-year contract beginning in the 2021–22 season. ESPN's subscription streaming service
ESPN+ provides the majority of the network's regular season NHL coverage, carrying a package of exclusive national games, and holding streaming rights to all out-of-market games (replacing the NHL.tv service). ESPN also broadcasts a package of games. ESPN and ESPN2 share coverage of the
Stanley Cup playoffs with
TNT and TBS — which also includes exclusive rights to the Stanley Cup Finals for ABC in even-numbered years.
During this time,
USA also
broadcast National Hockey League games. To prevent overexposure, the NHL decided to grant only one network exclusive rights. In April 1982, USA outbid ESPN for the NHL's American national television cable package ($8 million for two years).[13][14] In 1984, the NHL asked ESPN for a bid, but then gave USA the right to match it, which it did.[5]
After the 1984–85 season, the NHL Board of Governors chose to have USA Network and ESPN submit sealed bids. ESPN won by bidding nearly $25 million for three years, about twice as much as the USA had been paying. The contract called for ESPN to air up to 33 regular season games each season as well as the
NHL All-Star Game and the Stanley Cup playoffs.[5][15] The network chose
Dan Kelly and
Sam Rosen to be the network's first play-by-play announcers,
Mickey Redmond and
Brad Park were selected to be the analysts, and
Tom Mees and
Jim Kelly were chosen to serve as studio hosts. ESPN designated Sundays as ESPN Hockey Night in America, but also aired select midweek telecasts. ESPN aired its first game, an opening-night matchup between the
Washington Capitals and
New York Rangers, on October 10, 1985.[16][17]
At the end of the
1987–88 season, ESPN lost the NHL television rights to
SportsChannel America, who paid $51 million ($17 million per year) over three years, more than double what ESPN had paid ($24 million) for the previous three years.[18][19][20][21] SportsChannel America managed to get a fourth NHL season for just $5 million.[22][23][24][25][26] SportsChannel America was only available in a few major markets (notably absent though were
Detroit,
Pittsburgh and
St. Louis[27])[28][29][30] and reached only a 1/3 of the households that
ESPN did at the time.[31][32][33] In the first year of the deal (
1988–89), SportsChannel America was available in only 7 million homes, compared to ESPN's reach of 50 million.[34] By the
1991–92 season, ESPN was available in 60.5 million homes, whereas SportsChannel America was available in only 25 million.[35][36][37]
Second return to ESPN and ABC's involvement: 1992–1999
When the SportsChannel deal ended in
1992, the league returned to ESPN for another contract that would pay US$80 million over five years.[4][38][39] Until the
2001–02 NHL season, weekly regular season games were broadcast on Sundays (between
NFL and
baseball seasons), Wednesdays,[40] and Fridays,[26] and were titled Sunday/Wednesday/Friday Night Hockey. Before 1999, these telecasts were non-exclusive, meaning they were blacked out in the regions of the competing teams, and an alternate game was shown in these affected areas.
During the Stanley Cup playoffs, ESPN and ESPN2 provided almost nightly coverage, often carrying games on both channels concurrently.[41] Games in the first two rounds were non-exclusive, while telecasts in the Conference Finals and Stanley Cup Final[42][43][44] were exclusive (except in 1993[45] and 1994). Beginning in the
1993–94 season, up to five games per week were also shown on
ESPN2, branded as NHL Fire on Ice.[46]
Sister broadcast network
ABC also
aired NHL games during the first two seasons of the contract, in the league's first network television broadcasts since
NBC's previous contract in the 1970s.[47] In the first season, this included selected playoff games,[48][49] and later expanded to include a package of regular season games in the second season.[50] These telecasts were produced by ESPN and were officially considered to be
time-buys on ABC by
ESPN Inc.[47] This arrangement ended in the
1994–95 season, when the NHL began a new contract with
Fox as its broadcast television partner.[51]
Final years, and including ABC full-time: 1999–2004
In 1998, ESPN renewed its contract through 2004 for $600 million, beginning in the
1999–2000 season. Under the new contract, ESPN was permitted two exclusive telecasts per team per season, while ABC would also return as broadcast television rightsholder to replace Fox.[52][53][54][55]
ESPN's terms of the deal included: up to 200 games a year split between ESPN and ESPN2, the All-Star Skills Challenge, the majority of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, and the first two games of the Stanley Cup Finals, while ABC's terms included: rights to the
NHL All-Star Game, 4 to 5 weeks of regular season action, with three games a week, 6 weekends of Stanley Cup Playoff action, and the rest of the Stanley Cup Finals.
Beginning in
1999–2000 season, ESPN was permitted two exclusive telecasts per team per season. When ESPN started broadcasting
NBA games on Wednesday and Friday nights in
2002, the weekly hockey broadcasts were moved to Thursday and the broadcasts were renamed to ESPN Thursday Night Hockey.
Following the 2003–04 season, ESPN was only willing to renew its contract for two additional years at $60 million per year.[56] ABC refused to televise the Stanley Cup Finals in prime time, suggesting that the Finals games it would telecast be played on weekend afternoons (including a potential Game 7).
Disney executives later conceded that they overpaid for the 1999–2004 deal, so the company's offer to renew the television rights was lower in 2004.[57]
Before the
2004–05 lockout, the NHL had reached two separate deals with
NBC (who would replace
ABC as the NHL's national U.S. broadcast television partner) and ESPN.[58][59][60] ESPN offered the NHL $60 million to renew its contract, carrying about 40 games (only fifteen of which would be during the regular season), mostly on ESPN2.[61][62][63][64][65] However, ESPN opted out of the contract following the lockout, and the NHL reopened negotiations;
Comcast offered over $200 million for a three-season deal to
air games on
OLN (a channel that was later rebranded as Versus to reflect its expansion from an outdoor recreation format to mainstream sports),[66] which ESPN declined to match.[67][68] After Comcast acquired a majority stake in
NBC Universal in 2011, it renewed both the broadcast television and cable rights to the league via
NBC Sports through the 2020–21 season.[69][66]
Additionally, ESPN brought back current
St. Louis Blues color commentator
Darren Pang, who was the network's secondary color commentator from 1999 to 2004, for their coverage, as an ice-level reporter for select games.[73]John Saunders, who had hosted ESPN and ABC's NHL coverage from 1987 to 1988 and again from 1992 to 2004, was tapped to lead the studio coverage,[72] however, due to his unexpected death a month after ESPN announced their complete roster,[74] Cohn, who was originally going to do features for ESPN, was tapped to replace Saunders.[75]
ESPN+ involvement: 2018–present
After its 2018 launch, ESPN's subscription streaming service
ESPN+ added an NHL studio program, a free daily regular season game courtesy of NHL.tv (which is operated by Disney subsidiary
BAMTech), and a Stanley Cup Playoffs documentary series (replacing one produced as part of
Showtime's All Access franchise).[76] As part of the NHL.tv deal, ESPN+ started a nightly hockey show, In the Crease, hosted by
Linda Cohn and
Barry Melrose.[77]
Third return to ESPN and ABC: 2021–present
In the years before the end of NBC's latest contract with the NHL, the league explored options for splitting its national broadcast rights, similar to the television deals of the
NFL,
NBA and
MLB. This included selling packages to streaming services, aiming to maximize the value of its broadcast rights.[78] On March 10, 2021, Disney, ESPN, and the NHL announced that a seven-year agreement was reached for ESPN to hold the first half of its new media rights beginning in the
2021–22 season;[79][80][81][82][83][84][85][86]
ESPN will hold rights to at least 25 exclusive national games per season, which can air on either ESPN, ESPN2, or ABC, including exclusive rights to opening night games. Games on ABC stream on
ESPN+.[87]
In 2021 ABC aired the Thanksgiving Showdown, Since 2023 the network holds rights to the
Stadium Series Annually.
75 exclusive national games per season will be streamed exclusively on ESPN+, and will not be carried on linear television.[88] These games will also be available to
Hulu subscribers.[87][89][90]
ESPN+ will stream all
out-of-market games, as well as on-demand versions of all nationally televised games.[91]
ESPN, ESPN2, and ABC will share in coverage of the Stanley Cup playoffs, holding rights to "half" of the games in the first two rounds, and one conference final per season. ESPN/ABC will have the first choice of which conference final series to air. The remaining half will air on
TNT and TBS.[92][93]
Exclusive rights to the Stanley Cup Finals will alternate between ABC and TNT;[92][93] ESPN will have the ability to air
simulcast coverage with alternate feeds on its other channels and platforms.
ESPN2 airs a weekly studio program dedicated to the NHL, The Point (which is hosted by
John Buccigross),[94] and ESPN will hold various highlights and international rights.
On June 24, ESPN/ABC officially announced that six-time
Stanley Cup ChampionMark Messier had signed a multi-year deal to join ESPN in a studio analyst role.[99][100][101] Messier's signing was the first announced signing made by ESPN, and potentially was made as a counter to TNT signing Messier's former teammate
Wayne Gretzky, who was also recruited by ESPN. On June 28, Marchand reported that three-time Stanley Cup Champion
Chris Chelios would also join ESPN/ABC as a studio analyst.[102] The same day, The Athletic reported that current Hockey Night in Canada color commentator/reporter
Cassie Campbell-Pascall would also join the network.[103]
ESPN formally confirmed its commentator teams on June 29, 2021. ESPN's
college football #2 play-by-play man
Sean McDonough would be the network's lead play-by-play announcer;
Monday Night Football's
Steve Levy would lead studio coverage and contribute to occasional play-by-play commentary. Hextall and Wischusen were officially named as play-by-play commentators, as well as
SportsCenter's
John Buccigross, who will also contribute as an alternate studio host, and serve as the host for The Point. ESPN legend
Barry Melrose, Messier, and Chelios were named strictly as studio analysts while Ferraro, Boucher,[102] Weekes, Campbell-Pascall, Callahan, Mleczko,
ESPN New York's
Rick DiPietro, and
2018 gold medalistHilary Knight would contribute as booth, ice-level, and studio analysts. 2016
Isobel Cup champion
Blake Bolden was added to join insiders
Emily Kaplan and
Greg Wyshynski as insiders and rinkside reporters.[104]Linda Cohn continued her duties hosting In the Crease, while also gaining roles as a rinkside reporter, backup studio, and game break host. On August 4, 2021, ESPN announced that they added the most recent Blue Jackets coach and Stanley Cup-winning coach
John Tortorella as an extra studio analyst.[105][106]
On September 16, after ESPN released their slate of games for the 2021–22 season, SportsCenter anchor and ESPN Social host
Arda Ocal announced that he too would host select game broadcasts.[107] On October 2, former referee
Dave Jackson joined the network as a rules analyst, an NHL first.[108] Early into the 2021–22 season, ESPN added former NBC analyst
Dominic Moore, who had hosted the
Expansion Draft with Weekes and ESPN College Football personality
Chris Fowler.
Laura Rutledge, host of
NFL Live and
SEC Nation, joined the NHL on ESPN team for their coverage of the
2022 NHL All-Star Game, in a celebrity interviewer role. After preparing for and playing in the
2022 Winter Olympics in
Beijing, Knight made her ESPN debut on the March 10, 2022, episode of "The Point", coincidentally on the first anniversary of ESPN regaining the rights to broadcast the NHL. Bolden, who has been working as a pro scout for the
Los Angeles Kings since 2020, made her official ESPN on-air debut a week later. After the regular season kicked into high gear, Knight and Bolden were the only two who still had to make their on-air debuts with ESPN.
Occasionally, other well-known ESPN personalities like
Jeremy Schaap,
Kevin Connors,
Michael Eaves, and
Max McGee will be added in fill-in roles on The Point and In the Crease.
Mike Monaco,
Roxy Bernstein, and
Caley Chelios, daughter of Chris, have also filled in on game coverage. Subban and TSN's
Gord Miller, Ferraro's broadcast partner for Maple Leafs games on TSN, joined ESPN for the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Tortorella left ESPN after their first season to become the new head coach of the
Philadelphia Flyers.[109] After holding two stints with ESPN during the playoffs, the network announced that Subban would be joining their coverage full-time beginning with the
2022–23 season, holding both studio analyst and color commentator roles. This came after his most recent retirement announcement.[110][111][112]
ESPN also confirmed that
Spanish language coverage of the NHL would air on
ESPN Deportes and
ESPN Latin America.
Kenneth Garay and Eitán Benezra would be the main play-by-play commentators, while Carlos Rossell and Antonio Valle contribute analysis and color commentary.[104]Rigoberto Plascencia was later added as another play-by-play announcer.
For the 2021–22 season, ESPN aired 18 games (billed as ESPN Hockey Night),[87][113] while 75 exclusive national games per season would be streamed exclusively on ESPN+.[88] For the 2021–22 season, most of these games (billed as ESPN+ Hockey Night)[113] aired on Tuesday and Thursday nights, with selected games on Friday nights.[87] These games will also be available to
Hulu subscribers. ESPN's first broadcasts were an opening night
doubleheader, with the
Pittsburgh Penguins at the defending Stanley Cup champions
Tampa Bay Lightning, and the
Seattle Kraken at the
Vegas Golden Knights in the
Kraken's first regular-season game in franchise history.[114][87]
Typically, games aired on ESPN, excluding ESPN+ games, are simulcast in Canada on the
Sportsnet channels, using the ESPN feed. However, on January 17, 2022,
TSN, which is partly owned by ESPN, simulcast the ESPN+ feed of the
Arizona Coyotes–
Montreal Canadiens game because of a huge snowstorm in Canada, which prevented the Canadiens' broadcast team from traveling south to Glendale to broadcast the game.[115]
For the 2022–23 season, out-of-market games on ESPN+ – which did not carry any specific branding in the inaugural season – were branded as "NHL Power Play on ESPN+".[91] ESPN (34) and ESPN2 (1) aired a combined at least 35 games (billed as ESPN Hockey Night),[113] while ABC aired 15 games under the ABC Hockey Saturday package, which will consist of 4 doubleheaders, the
2023 NHL Stadium Series, and one late-season tripleheader beginning the weekend after the All-Star break.[87][113][89]
For the 2023–24 season, ESPN+/Hulu airs at least 50 exclusive games. Among linear broadcasts, 19 games will be on ABC, featuring four double-headers, both
NHL Stadium Series games, and two triple-headers on February 17 and April 13. ABC will also air the
2024 Stanley Cup Finals. ABC Hockey Saturday for this season began on January 13, preceding
Super Wild Card Saturday of the
NFL playoffs, unlike past years when its slate began after the NHL All-Star Game, and ESPN air the rest.[90]
On June 5, 2023, it was announced that Chelios' contract would not be renewed.[118] as part of Disney's $5.5 billion cost cutting.[119] On 12 September 2023, TNT hired
Brian Boucher away from ESPN to serve as Keith Jones' replacement on the top team, thus reuniting with former NBC partners Kenny Albert and Eddie Olczyk.[120] On October 10, 2023, ESPN announced that Barry Melrose would retire from the network to spend more time with his family after being diagnosed with
Parkinson's disease.[121][122][123][124][125] On December 19, 2023, Campbell-Pascall accepted a new position as a special advisor role with the
Professional Women's Hockey League (PWHL). Although she had left Sportsnet, she will remain with ESPN/ABC.[126]
Since the beginning of ESPN's current NHL contract, the network has occasionally presented alternate broadcasts of games on ESPN+, including "Star Watch" (which featured camera angles focused on specific star players),[127] "IceCast" (which featured a higher camera angle and on-screen statistics),[128] and "All-12" (an alternate camera angle of the entire ice during the
2023 NHL Stadium Series game, inspired by ESPN's "All-22" feeds for college football).[129] In a similar approach to the
FoxTrax glowing puck from the '90s, ESPN produced a "Puck Possessor" visual identifier altcast for select ABC games. This broadcast, which takes the main feed and focuses on who has the puck during games, is broadcast on ESPN+, along with the traditional ABC broadcast.
On March 14, 2023, ESPN presented an alternate youth-oriented broadcast of that night's
Washington Capitals–New York Rangers game known as the NHL Big City Greens Classic, simulcast on
Disney Channel,
Disney XD,
Disney+ and
ESPN+;[130] the broadcast leveraged the league's player and puck tracking system to render a real-time
3D animated perspective of the game based on the Disney Channel animated series Big City Greens.[131]
On October 24, 2023, ESPN+ and ESPN2 aired Frozen Frenzy, a whiparound broadcast (similar to
NFL RedZone) carrying live look-ins on all games occurring that night. All 32 NHL teams played games that night, with all games having staggered start times, and a tripleheader on ESPN.[132][133]
ESPN brought back the NHL Big City Greens Classic for the March 9, 2024 broadcast of that day's Pittsburgh Penguins-Boston Bruins game, the second half of an
ABC Hockey Saturday doubleheader. Like the Capitals-Rangers game last year, this broadcast was simulcast on
Disney Channel,
Disney XD,
Disney+ and
ESPN+, and featured the same real-time 3D animated perspective based on Big City Greens.[134][135]
Steve Levy: studio host (1993–2004), lead studio host and alternate "The Point" host (2021–present), play-by-play (1993–2004, 2021–present)[136][137][138]
John Buccigross: alternate studio host (1998–2004, 2021–present), "The Point" host and play-by-play (2021–present)
Arda Ocal: alternate studio and "The Point" host (2021–present); rinkside reporter (2024–present)
Steve Levy: studio host (1993–2004), lead studio host, alternate "The Point", and "In the Crease" host (2021–present), #4 play-by-play (1993–2004, 2021–present) [136][137][138]
John Buccigross: alternate studio host (1998–2004, 2021–present), "The Point" host, and #5 play-by-play (2021–present)
^
ab"Winners and losers of the NHL's TV deal with ESPN". Awful Announcing. March 11, 2021. Retrieved March 16, 2021. [Y]ou'll not only need a cable or satellite subscription to access your team's RSN and ESPN, but you'll also need a subscription to ESPN+ or Hulu. 75 games will be streaming exclusively in this TV deal, and while you previously got everything you needed with the cable sub, you now will need to jump into the streaming waters to see every game.