- Empire Sports Network
Infobox TV channel
name = Empire Sports Network
logofile = Empire.gif
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logoalt = Empire Sports logo
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launch = 1991
closed date = 2005
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owner =Adelphia Communications .
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country =United States
language =American English
broadcast area =Upstate New York
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replaced by names =MSG Network Time Warner Sports 26
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web = [http://www.empiresports.com/ Empire Sports]
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3gmobile serv 1 =Empire Sports Network was a
regional sports network oncable television which servedupstate New York from Buffalo to Albany, parts of northernPennsylvania and easternOhio . The network ended its 15 years of service on March 7, 2005, at the hands of its parent company Adelphia Communications.Programming
The network was the flagship station for
Buffalo Sabres National Hockey League games, but also aired collegiate sports (particularly ofSyracuse University ), and several sports news and talk shows. Empire also aired a significant amount of programs covering theBuffalo Bills of theNational Football League , live play by play of the Buffalo Destroyers of theArena Football League , the Pittsburgh Pirates of the National league, the Buffalo Bisons, Rochester Redwings and Syracuse Chiefs of the International League AAA, AHL hockey, andNCAA basketball.Buffalo Bandits lacrosse also received limited coverage on the station. Games of theToronto Raptors of the NBA also aired for several seasons until January 2005, when all original and live programming was canceled. In its latter years, the station also aired liveCanadian Football League Friday Night Football games and on a tape delay Saturday mornings.Some of Empire's programs included "Fan TV", a daily two and a-half hour sports news and call-in program hosted by Howard Simon and
Jim Brinson and its successor, "The SimonCast", the "Empire Sports Report", a nightly sportscast hosted by Mike DeGeorge,Josh Mora and Jason Bristol, and "Hockey Hotline", the Sabres' postgame report hosted by NHL veteranMike Robitaille and later with Brian Blessing. Other popular shows were Fan Forum withBob Koshinski , which aired from 1991 to 1998 and Pros and Cons (a predecessor to "Pardon the Interruption " that featuredWGRZ-TV 's Ed Kilgore pitted against contrarian andWGR radio host Art Wander), which ran from 1992 to 1996. Former Bills punter andESPN NFL analystPaul Maguire also hosted the "Budweiser Sportsline" on the network during the NFL season; current NHL announcers Pete Weber andDanny Gare also worked for Empire along with former Buffalo BillSteve Tasker , now of CBS. The network also televised edited matches from New Millennium Wrestling, a now-defunct independentprofessional wrestling promotion based in Rochester.Between October 2000 and March 2004, Adelphia, under VP/GM
Bob Koshinski , operated radio station WNSA 107.7 FM in Wethersfield Township, NY. WNSA overtook WGR-AM as the radio ratings leader in the spring of 2001, but then experienced the loss of talent, including Mike Schopp tp WGR when the Rigas/Adelphia scandal broke. The end of WNSA came when the station was sold toEntercom Communications in May 2004 for $10.3 million. Entercom turned it intoclassic rock "107.7 The Lake." Simon's show, however, would continue onWLVL 1340 in Lockport until November 2004, when he was recruited to host WGR's morning show.Collapse
Empire Sports thrived until March 2002 when the Adelphia bankruptcy scandal broke. With Adelphia Communications in freefall and under temporary bank-appointed management, Empire was unable to renew affiliate agreements in the fall of 2002 with
Time Warner Cable , its largest non-Adelphia customer. The network continued to operate, but was dealt another severe blow in 2003 when Adelphia'sboard of directors appointed a newchief executive officer , William Schleyer, andchief operating officer , Ron Cooper. Under their watch, Adelphia chose to shut down Empire Sports as opposed to selling it to several interested parties. No longer interested in being in the lucrative regional sports business, Adelphia laid off more than 30 full-time employees and all freelancers in the summer of 2003. The staff cuts forced Empire to eliminate the popular "Fan TV" but the network itself was still able to survive for another eighteen months.The NHL lockout that would wipe out the entire 2004-05 NHL season served both as a blessing and a death blow. Financially the lockout actually benefited the network because it was not required to pay the Sabres its annual rights fee of $9.5 million a year. However, Empire was without its core programming, and viewer interest diminished. Time Warner Cable, who controlled cable in almost all of
upstate New York , decided to drop Empire from its slate of cable pacakges in late 2004, leaving Empire only available inWestern New York and the city of Utica, although it remained on the Direct TV and Dish Network sports tier packages across the country. (The network also streamed on the Internet from the time of the selloff of WNSA-- when the station was sold, Empire merely switched the Internet stream from WNSA to Empire's feed-- to its closing.) Howard Simon's radio/TV simulcast show was among the last local programs (other than the nightly sports report) that aired on the station.Adelphia resisted offers from outside interests to purchase Empire. Despite concerns from viewers and local political leaders, Adelphia chose to eliminate Empire altogether on
January 19 , 2005. All programming was replaced by a continuous tape loop, showing highlights from the network's history, before Empire finally signed off for good onMarch 7 , 2005.Aftermath
Adelphia itself was acquired by
Time Warner Cable andComcast which completed the asset transfer onAugust 1 ,2006 . CEO William Schleyer received a bonus of $15 million and COO Ron Cooper received $9 million as part of their compensation package from the re-structured Adelphia Board of Directors.MSG Network now currently airs Buffalo Sabres games toUpstate New York customers, though the broadcasts are still produced by the Sabres organization as they were during the days of Empire.Syracuse University has an agreement withTime Warner Cable for extensive local coverage of its teams, the result of which was the creation of the sports channelTime Warner Sports 26 , which now covers most of Empire's old territory and operates out of Empire's old studios in West Seneca. Some of Empire's sports rights, such as the handful of Bisons games aired on the station, ended up onWNGS-TV .Rumors of Empire's revival had been spread in 2006 as the window for an "out clause" in the Sabres-MSG contract opened, combined with Time Warner Cable's acquisition of the Buffalo market, thereby uniting all of upstate New York under one cable provider. Those rumors, however, were squashed when a 10-year contract extension between the Sabres and MSG was announced. However, Time Warner's "Time Warner Sports" channel did eventually expand into the Buffalo market in November 2007.
Bob Koshinski has made some of Empire's highlights available on
YouTube . [http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=bkoshinski07] In addition, many hours of WNSA's audio is owned by WNSA producer Steve Cichon and is available for purchase. [http://www.staffannouncer.com/airchecks.htm]External links
* [http://www.empiresports.com/ Empire Sports Official Website] ::"Empire Sports never took down their Web site when they closed operations. Thus, their farewell message and about a year's worth of Empire news briefs remain on the site.
ee also
*
Dish Network Channel Grid
*List of DirecTV channels
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