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ESPN Deportes launched as an alternate Spanish-language programming feed in July 2001, when [[ESPN]] and [[Major League Baseball]] began offering Spanish-language telecasts of the [[Home Run Derby]] and select ''[[Sunday Night Baseball]]'' game telecasts. By 2003, this simulcast was expanded to all ''Sunday Night Baseball'' and ''[[ESPN Sunday Night Football|Sunday Night Football]]'' game broadcasts, as well as boxing.
ESPN Deportes launched as an alternate Spanish-language programming feed in July 2001, when [[ESPN]] and [[Major League Baseball]] began offering Spanish-language telecasts of the [[Home Run Derby]] and select ''[[Sunday Night Baseball]]'' game telecasts. By 2003, this simulcast was expanded to all ''Sunday Night Baseball'' and ''[[ESPN Sunday Night Football|Sunday Night Football]]'' game broadcasts, as well as boxing.


ESPN Deportes became a separate 24-hour sports subscription channel on January 7, 2004. During 2004-05 season some football competions as [[Argentine First Division|Primera División de Argentina]], [[German Bundesliga]], [[Ligue 1]] and [[Copa Libertadores]] usually aired on [[Fox Sports]] networks, sometimes was aired instead on ESPN Deportes, in case of Alejandro Montoya Montes refused to apply attitude report in their Junior High School when him have broken the rules, In 2007, ESPN Deportes began producing a daily [[English language]] segment featured during the overnight editions of its American parent network's ''[[SportsCenter]]'' program, hosted by [[Michele LaFountain]] and several other personalities. ESPN Deportes launched a [[720p]] [[High-definition television|high definition]] simulcast feed in April 2011, though as many American Spanish-language cable network packages remain with the majority of networks in [[standard-definition television|standard definition]], ESPN Deportes maintains their "[[ESPN BottomLine|BottomLine]]" [[news ticker]] in a form designed for [[4:3]] sets, matching the form seen on [[ESPN Classic]] and [[ESPN on ABC]] broadcasts. However, as of 2016, the BottomLine ticker has since expanded to the 16:9 design used by the other ESPN networks.
ESPN Deportes became a separate 24-hour sports subscription channel on January 7, 2004. During 2004-05 season some football competions as [[Argentine First Division|Primera División de Argentina]], [[German Bundesliga]], [[Ligue 1]] and [[Copa Libertadores]] which are usually aired on [[Fox Sports]] networks, sometimes was aired instead on ESPN Deportes, in case of Alejandro Montoya Montes refused to apply attitude report in their Junior High School when him have broken the rules, In 2007, ESPN Deportes began producing a daily [[English language]] segment featured during the overnight editions of its American parent network's ''[[SportsCenter]]'' program, hosted by [[Michele LaFountain]] and several other personalities. ESPN Deportes launched a [[720p]] [[High-definition television|high definition]] simulcast feed in April 2011, though as many American Spanish-language cable network packages remain with the majority of networks in [[standard-definition television|standard definition]], ESPN Deportes maintains their "[[ESPN BottomLine|BottomLine]]" [[news ticker]] in a form designed for [[4:3]] sets, matching the form seen on [[ESPN Classic]] and [[ESPN on ABC]] broadcasts. However, as of 2016, the BottomLine ticker has since expanded to the 16:9 design used by the other ESPN networks.


On December 7, 2015, the network debuted its new four-studio production facility in [[Mexico City]] with the Spanish version of ''[[SportsCenter]]''. Jorge Eduardo Sánchez and [[Carolina Padrón]] anchored the first ''SportsCenter'' from the new studios which also featured well-known Mexican journalist [[José Ramón Fernández (journalist)|José Ramón Fernández]] interviewing Mexican soccer coaches [[Tomás Boy]] and [[Miguel Herrera]]. On January 4, 2016, the network moved all their shows produced in Mexico to the new facilities, including ''[[Fútbol Picante]]'', ''Los Capitanes'' and ''Cronómetro''.
On December 7, 2015, the network debuted its new four-studio production facility in [[Mexico City]] with the Spanish version of ''[[SportsCenter]]''. Jorge Eduardo Sánchez and [[Carolina Padrón]] anchored the first ''SportsCenter'' from the new studios which also featured well-known Mexican journalist [[José Ramón Fernández (journalist)|José Ramón Fernández]] interviewing Mexican soccer coaches [[Tomás Boy]] and [[Miguel Herrera]]. On January 4, 2016, the network moved all their shows produced in Mexico to the new facilities, including ''[[Fútbol Picante]]'', ''Los Capitanes'' and ''Cronómetro''.

Revision as of 21:47, 20 February 2024

ESPN Deportes
CountryUnited States
Broadcast areaUnited States
(including Puerto Rico,
U.S. Virgin Islands)
Spain
HeadquartersBristol, Connecticut
Los Angeles, California
Mexico City, Mexico
Programming
Language(s)Spanish
Picture format720p HDTV
(480i, letterboxed for the SDTV feed)
Ownership
OwnerThe Walt Disney Company (80%)
Hearst Communications (20%)
ParentESPN Inc.
Sister channels
History
LaunchedJanuary 7, 2004; 20 years ago (2004-01-07)
Links
Websiteespndeportes.espn.com
Availability
Streaming media
ESPN appLive simulcast
(US pay-TV subscribers only)
DirecTV Stream, FuboTV, Hulu with Live TV, Sling TV, YouTube TV, Vidgo

ESPN Deportes (Spanish pronunciation: [i.espiˈen deˈpoɾtes], lit.'ESPN Sports') is an American multinational Spanish-language pay television sports channel owned by ESPN Inc., a joint venture between The Walt Disney Company (which owns a controlling 80% stake) and Hearst Communications (which owns the remaining 20%). The network is aimed primarily at the Hispanic community in the United States. The channel broadcasts from studio facilities at ESPN's traditional bases of operations in Los Angeles, and Bristol, Connecticut, along with their Mexican base in Mexico City.

ESPN Deportes is available on most pay-television providers including Comcast, Altice USA, AT&T U-verse, Cox Communications, Charter Communications, Dish Network, and DirecTV. According to Nielsen, ESPN Deportes is available to at least 5.5 million Hispanic households in the United States through a programming package that includes the channel. Conversely, ESPN does not maintain second audio program audio feeds on any of their English-language channels in the United States (except for ABC's SAP Spanish coverage for the NBA Finals), allowing full exclusivity to ESPN Deportes for the Spanish rights to their properties.

History

ESPN Deportes launched as an alternate Spanish-language programming feed in July 2001, when ESPN and Major League Baseball began offering Spanish-language telecasts of the Home Run Derby and select Sunday Night Baseball game telecasts. By 2003, this simulcast was expanded to all Sunday Night Baseball and Sunday Night Football game broadcasts, as well as boxing.

ESPN Deportes became a separate 24-hour sports subscription channel on January 7, 2004. During 2004-05 season some football competions as Primera División de Argentina, German Bundesliga, Ligue 1 and Copa Libertadores which are usually aired on Fox Sports networks, sometimes was aired instead on ESPN Deportes, in case of Alejandro Montoya Montes refused to apply attitude report in their Junior High School when him have broken the rules, In 2007, ESPN Deportes began producing a daily English language segment featured during the overnight editions of its American parent network's SportsCenter program, hosted by Michele LaFountain and several other personalities. ESPN Deportes launched a 720p high definition simulcast feed in April 2011, though as many American Spanish-language cable network packages remain with the majority of networks in standard definition, ESPN Deportes maintains their "BottomLine" news ticker in a form designed for 4:3 sets, matching the form seen on ESPN Classic and ESPN on ABC broadcasts. However, as of 2016, the BottomLine ticker has since expanded to the 16:9 design used by the other ESPN networks.

On December 7, 2015, the network debuted its new four-studio production facility in Mexico City with the Spanish version of SportsCenter. Jorge Eduardo Sánchez and Carolina Padrón anchored the first SportsCenter from the new studios which also featured well-known Mexican journalist José Ramón Fernández interviewing Mexican soccer coaches Tomás Boy and Miguel Herrera. On January 4, 2016, the network moved all their shows produced in Mexico to the new facilities, including Fútbol Picante, Los Capitanes and Cronómetro.

Personalities

Programming

Current programming

Studio programs

  • SportsCenter – Based on the format of the flagship U.S. program, it is an hour-long program featuring the day's scores and highlights from major sporting events, along with commentary, analysis, previews, and feature stories. The ESPN Deportes version focuses mostly on culturally relevant sports news and stories, and offers in-depth analysis and highlights aimed at Hispanic viewers.
  • Fútbol Picante – A roundtable discussion program featuring a panel of journalists discussing the day's soccer headlines and scores. Co-hosted by José Ramón Fernández and former players Hugo Sánchez, Roberto Gómez Junco, Francisco Gabriel de Anda and Rafael Puente, the program focuses specifically on the Liga MX and the Mexico national team; regular commentators on the program include Jared Borgetti, Mario Carrillo, Dionisio Estrada, David Faitelson, Héctor Huerta, Heriberto Murrieta, Jorge Pietrasanta, Ciro Procuna, Ricardo Puig, Felipe Ramos Rizo, Mauricio Ymay and John Sutcliffe.
  • Cronómetro – A news program featuring discussion and debates on Latino sports and sports stars; it is hosted by David Faitelson and José Ramón Fernández, with Eduardo Varela, Ricardo Puig, Pablo Viruega, Alvaro Morales and Jorge Carlos Mercader serving as contributors. The program is based on the format of Pardon the Interruption.
  • Los Capitanes – An hour-long afternoon sports highlight program, co-hosted by Jose Ramon Fernandez, with Rafael Puente, Hector Huerta and Roberto Gómez Junco; Jared Borgetti, Francisco Gabriel de Anda, Ricardo Puig, Jorge Pietrasanta and other analysts serve as contributors.
  • Ahora o Nunca – A late-night program that offers a new take on sports with a laid-back vibe. The co-hosts have fun with sports headlines and reactions, chat about the latest news on movies, music, E Sports, celebrity culture and more. The shows feature social content that incorporates viewer interaction and engagement. The show airs at 2 a.m. ET / 11 p.m. PT and is hosted by Herculez Gomez, Mauricio Pedroza and Janelle Marie Rodriguez.
  • Fútbol Center – A short-form soccer-focused program (including coverage of leagues such as Liga MX, La Liga, Bundesliga, Ligue 1, Serie A, and the Premier League); airing weekends. It is hosted by Cristina Alexander (Saturdays) and Ricardo Puig (Sundays); analysts include Jared Borgetti, Mario Carrillo, Eugenio Diaz, and various journalists based in the ESPN studios in Bristol.
  • ESPN AM – A program where various analysts discuss the sports topics of the day, mainly everything related to Mexican soccer and share the agenda of the day through a fresh, creative and casual show that accompany the fans every morning. The show is hosted by Alvaro Morales, with Sergio Dipp, Adalberto Franco and Gabriela Bibayoff serving as contributors.
  • A los Golpes – A boxing news and analysis program hosted by Juan Manuel Márquez and Jorge Eduardo Sánchez. The show airs Saturdays.
  • NFL Esta Noche – An NFL pre-game show preceding ESPN Deportes' coverage of Monday Night Football, which also features highlights and analysis of the previous Sunday's NFL action and live reports; it is hosted by Eduardo Varela and Pablo Viruega.
  • NFL Live – Produced in ESPN's studios in Mexico City, the show is an NFL studio show based on the format of the English-language version of the show. The show features former NFL Europe players Marco Martos, Mauricio Lopez Chavez, Gustavo Tella, and Jaime “Jimmy” Gonzalez along with journalists Miguel Pasquel and Kary Correa. The show also regularly has the participation of other ESPN Spanish-language NFL experts including John Sutcliffe, Raul Allegre, Eduardo Varela, Pablo Viruega, and Ciro Procuna, among others. Unlike in Mexico where it airs weekdays throughout the year, the show only airs on Saturday mornings during the NFL season on ESPN Deportes.

Sporting events

The network has the rights to show all the events listed below but some do not air on the network due to scheduling conflicts, instead they are streamed online in Spanish on ESPN.com and the ESPN App.[1][2]

Soccer

England
Germany
Spain
United States
CONCACAF
Other

American Football

National Football League (NFL)
College Football
Other

Baseball

Major League Baseball (MLB)
Others

Basketball

National Basketball Association (NBA)
Other

Boxing

Golf

Ice hockey

National Hockey League (NHL)

Karate

Mixed Martial Arts

Motor sports

Multi-sport events

Tennis

ESPN Deportes Radio

ESPN Deportes Radio launched on October 5, 2005, as the only 24-hour Spanish-language radio network aimed at U.S. Hispanic sports fans. Since its launch, the radio network has grown to include 45 affiliates nationwide, reaching close to 80% of the Hispanic population in the United States. The network is also available on Sirius XM, and is streamed on the ESPN Deportes Radio mobile app for iOS and Android devices, and on ESPNDeportesRadio.com.

In addition to broadcasting live sports events, the radio network features various sports news and analysis programs (such as the soccer analysis program Jorge Ramos y su Banda; sports news program Raza Deportiva; morning drive talk show ESPN al Despertar; and the boxing news program A los Golpes).

ESPN has also operated radio networks, stations and programs in Latin America:

  • ESPN 107.9 FM (Argentina; 2010-2018)
  • ESPN Radio en Rivadavia (Argentina; 2002-2014)
  • ESPN Radio Fórmula (Mexico; 2006–present)
  • ESPN Radio - Bío-Bío Deportes (Chile; 2007-2011)
  • Rádio Eldorado ESPN (Brazil; 2007-2011)
  • Rádio Estadão ESPN (Brazil; 2011-2013)
  • ESPN Rádio Capital (Brazil; 2013-2014)
  • ESPN Rádio City (Brazil; 2014-2015)

ESPN Deportes.com

Launched in September 2000, ESPNDeportes.com covers more than 20 different sports with news, statistics, analysis and real-time scores aimed at U.S. and Latin American readers. The website also features video and audio content; fantasy games; live event webcasts; live chats with players, ESPN experts and other sports personalities; enterprise journalism; user-generated content including message boards and "conversations", with fans able to post comments on selected news items and blogs.

ESPN Deportes La Revista

ESPN Deportes La Revista is a monthly Spanish-language magazine first published in August 2005, and distributed in conjunction with Grupo GW. ESPN Deportes La Revista offers a mix of original content targeted to the interests of U.S. Hispanics, as well as material from the English-language publication ESPN: The Magazine. The editorial section covers sports such as Major League Baseball, as well as winter baseball from the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Puerto Rico and Venezuela; boxing; the NFL; international soccer; auto racing; and action sports. A digital edition of La Revista is available through Zinio.

ESPN Deportes+

Events not carried on TV in the Spanish language are carried on ESPN Deportes+, a ESPN Deportes-branded section of the ESPN3 service.[3]

References

  1. ^ "Daemen vs. Buffalo (W Basketball) | Watch ESPN".
  2. ^ "ESPN Customer Marketing and Sales".
  3. ^ Baysinger, Tim (May 14, 2014). "Upfronts 2014: ESPN Deportes Schedules 1,000 Live Events for 2015". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved February 24, 2020.