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DirecTV has stitched together a skinny bundle of sports channels, targeted at people who want to watch live sports without paying for a broad TV package. Launching Tuesday, DirecTV MySports ...
MLB Extra Innings is an out-of-market sports package distributed in North America by satellite provider DirecTV since 1996 [1] and by most cable providers since 2001. [1] The package allowed its subscribers to see up to 80 out-of-market Major League Baseball games a week using local over the air stations and regional sports networks.
The sports streaming game has a new player: DirecTV. The TV provider is launching MySports, a sports subscription streaming service with 40 channels including ESPN, Fox Sports, and the NFL Network.
ESPN College Extra was an American multinational out-of-market sports package owned by ESPN Inc. It was launched on September 5, 2015, as a merger of the existing ESPN Full Court and ESPN GamePlan, each of which offered college basketball and college football broadcasts respectively, and closed down on August 15, 2023.
Cox Sports Television (a.k.a. CST; sometimes referred to as Cox Sports TV) was an American regional sports cable and satellite television channel owned by Cox Communications. The channel, which serves the Gulf South region of the United States, features a mix of professional, collegiate and high school sporting events.
Internet sports packages are primarily marketed directly to consumers and not through cable or satellite providers. Current Internet television and radio subscription or pay-per-view services include: ESPN+ (also exclusive to DirecTV for business accounts) MLB.tv. MLB.com Gameday Audio; MiLB.tv; NFL Audio Pass (NFL, radio)
YurView California (formerly known as 4SD, Channel 4 San Diego or unofficially COX 4, and originally known as KCOX) is an American cable television channel serving San Diego, California, owned by Cox Communications, which carries the channel primarily on its San Diego area systems on channel 4.
Cox Sports rebranded as "Cox 9" on November 1, 1998, becoming a full-time channel on channel 9. [12] Retaining the Suns and high school football, Cox 9 became a general-interest channel airing previews of channels only available on Cox's digital service and community programming. The Suns moved to Fox Sports in 2003. [13]