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{{main|List of CBS College Football personalities}}
{{main|List of CBS College Football personalities}}
===Commentator pairings===
===Commentator pairings===
#[[Verne Lundquist]]/[[Gary Danielson]]/[[Allie LaForce]]
#[[Verne Lundquist]] or [[Carter Blackburn]]/[[Gary Danielson]]/[[Allie LaForce]]
#[[Carter Blackburn]]/[[Aaron Taylor (American football, born 1972)|Aaron Taylor]]
#[[Carter Blackburn]]/[[Aaron Taylor (American football, born 1972)|Aaron Taylor]]
^[[Carter Blackburn]] filled-in for [[Verne Lundquist]] while Lundquist spended New Year's with his family.[[2014 Sun Bowl]].

The current primary commentators for the telecasts, which traditionally air either on Saturday afternoons or evenings, are Verne Lundquist (play-by-play), Gary Danielson (color) and Allie LaForce (sideline reporter). [[Adam Zucker]] (host), [[Spencer Tillman]] (analyst) and [[Brian Jones (tight end)|Brian Jones]] (analyst) make up the studio team.
The current primary commentators for the telecasts, which traditionally air either on Saturday afternoons or evenings, are Verne Lundquist (play-by-play), Gary Danielson (color) and Allie LaForce (sideline reporter). [[Adam Zucker]] (host), [[Spencer Tillman]] (analyst) and [[Brian Jones (tight end)|Brian Jones]] (analyst) make up the studio team.
2014
2014

Revision as of 07:59, 4 April 2015

College Football on CBS Sports
File:SEC on CBS.png
The SEC on CBS logo
GenreCollege football telecasts
Presented byVerne Lundquist
Gary Danielson
Allie LaForce
Adam Zucker
Spencer Tillman
Brian Jones
Theme music composerLloyd Landesman
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons9
Production
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time210 minutes or until game ends
Production companyCBS Sports
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseAugust 31, 1996 (1996-08-31) –
present
(current branding established in 2001)

The SEC on CBS (known for sponsorship purposes as The Home Depot SEC on CBS, and visually branded as SEC • CBS in logos shown within on-air graphics and network promotions) is the branding used for broadcasts of Southeastern Conference college football games that are produced by CBS Sports, the sports division of the CBS television network in the United States. CBS has been a television partner with the SEC since 1996.

History

1950s–1990

CBS has been televising college football games since it launched a sports division, and did so on a weekly basis during a period from the 1950s to 1966, when ABC gained exclusive rights to all NCAA regular season games. CBS was reduced to airing the Cotton Bowl Classic, which it had aired since 1958. It added the Sun Bowl in 1968, which remains on CBS to this day. From 1974 to 1977, it also aired the Fiesta Bowl, and from 1978 to 1986 it carried the Peach Bowl.

For the 1982 season, CBS was made an additional partner in the NCAA contract, and regular season coverage returned to the network. CBS and ABC would alternate the 12:30 and 3:30 p.m. slots from week to week during the seasons, carrying either a national game or several regional games in those frames, and also occasionally aired games in prime time, and on Black Friday. CBS broadcast games from every major conference, as well as the games of the then major independents such as Penn State (now a Big Ten member), Notre Dame (still an independent in football, though a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) for non-football sports), and Miami (now in the ACC).

As required by the NCAA, the network also televised Division I-AA, II and III games to very small audiences, giving teams such as The Citadel and Clarion State some major-network exposure (during the 1982 season, because of a player strike in the National Football League, these Division III contests aired nationwide). The pregame show was titled The NCAA Today in the vein of its pro football counterpart The NFL Today. Both shows were hosted by Brent Musburger. However for the NCAA pregame show, Pat O'Brien and Ara Parseghian were the analysts/feature reporters, although Lesley Visser made occasional appearances on the show. Gary Bender was the lead play-by-play announcer for game coverage, working with analysts such as Pat Haden and Steve Davis. Other CBS game commetators were Verne Lundquist, Lindsey Nelson, Frank Herzog, Jack Snow and Dennis Franklin. This arrangement was in place during the 1982 and 1983 seasons.

In 1984, after the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated the NCAA contract in NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, the College Football Association was formed to handle affairs between television networks and college football programs, the result was an exclusive contract with ABC that granted the network rights to all CFA partner conference games and the games of most major independents. However, the Big Ten and Pac-10 conferences were not included in this package, and signed their own agreement with CBS. Miami also reached an agreement for CBS to televise its most important home games, and in 1985, the Atlantic Coast Conference was added to CBS' list of college football properties. In 1985, Musburger took over the role of lead play-by-play voice, with Parseghian moving to the booth with him. Jim Nantz succeeded Musburger as studio host.

In 1987, CBS took over the CFA contract, which it would hold until 1990. CBS' tendency during this period was to air one marquee game each week, such as the legendary 1988 "Catholics vs Convicts" matchup between Notre Dame and Miami, though regional telecasts would occasionally be aired. For 1987 and 1988, Pat Haden joined Musberger in the booth, with John Dockery manning the sidelines. Nantz hosted what was now known as the "Prudential College Football Report," which was mostly a roundup of the day's scores (not always limited to college football) and top headlines, though sometimes key figures in the sport would be interviewed. Verne Lundquist, Tim Brant, Dick Stockton, Steve Zabriskie and Brad Nessler also called games for CBS during the CFA period. In 1989, Nantz became lead play-by-play announcer, but Haden remained the lead analyst for that year, being replaced by Brant in 1990. After 1990, ABC obtained exclusive network coverage of regular season college football, as it won back the CFA and retained the Pac-10/Big Ten rights.

1991–1994

As the 1990s began, CBS' Division I-A college football coverage was reduced to its bowl game contracts, which it had with the then-John Hancock (reverted to Sun Bowl in 1994), Cotton and the then-Blockbuster bowls. However, it lost the rights to the Cotton Bowl to NBC after the 1992 game, leaving the network with just two bowl games to round out its college football coverage. CBS televised Major League Baseball from 1990 to 1993, so as a result the network was not without major sports coverage on Saturdays during the fall after the loss of college football.

1995–1997

For 1995, CBS re-acquired the rights to the Cotton Bowl Classic, and also acquired the rights to two of the three bowl games in the newly formed Bowl Alliance, which was formed following the season to help determine an undisputed national champion (as a precursor to the Bowl Championship Series). Under the terms of the contract, which ran from 1995 through 1997, CBS aired the Fiesta Bowl and Orange Bowl, which guaranteed the network two opportunities to air a national championship game (CBS did not gain rights to the Sugar Bowl, the third bowl in the Bowl Alliance, as those were retained by ABC).

CBS was the first network to air a Bowl Alliance national championship game, as Nebraska defeated Florida in the 1996 Fiesta Bowl (on the same token, CBS also aired the last Bowl Alliance national championship game, where Nebraska defeated Tennessee in the 1998 Orange Bowl to split that year's national championship vote as Michigan, which was #1 in both the AP and Coaches Polls going into the bowls, with the latter contractually obligated to name the Nebraska–Tennessee winner as the national champion, was obligated to play in that year's Rose Bowl). CBS also continued to air the Sun Bowl, but lost the rights to the Carquest Bowl after the game was moved from New Year's Day following the Orange Bowl's move to the home of the Carquest Bowl, Joe Robbie Stadium.

CBS resumed full-time college football coverage in 1996, as the network signed television contracts with the Big East Conference and Southeastern Conference (SEC) to be the exclusive national television home of their in-conference schedules. The coverage was originally branded "College Football on CBS," sponsored initially by NASDAQ, a tag it retains for non-SEC games broadcast on the network.

CBS also televised games featuring non-Big East or SEC teams during this time. As part of the contract signed in 1996, CBS succeeded ABC Sports as the television home of the Army-Navy Game.

1998–present

CBS lost the rights to three of its bowl games following the 1997 season, as ABC gained the rights to the Orange and Fiesta Bowls as the exclusive television home of the newly formed Bowl Championship Series and Fox acquired the rights to the Cotton Bowl Classic. However beginning in 2001, CBS became the home of the SEC Championship Game, the rights to which had been retained by ABC following the SEC's move. Following the 2000 season, the Big East decided not to renew its contract with CBS and instead signed with ABC. Shortly thereafter, CBS' SEC football coverage was rebranded to show its exclusivity. CBS aired the Gator Bowl from 2007 to 2010, its biggest bowl acquisition since the Orange and Fiesta Bowls.

Today, CBS airs the top SEC weekly in-conference games as well as rivalry games with various other conferences when the SEC team is the home team. The network shares the rights to SEC conference games with the ESPN family of networks, which also airs the interconference rivalry games when the SEC team is not the home team (with the exception of Notre Dame), as well as all Pac-12/SEC regular season games.

CBS has rights to three non-SEC regular season matchups, including the Army-Navy Game. CBS and NBC Sports split coverage of the annual matchup between Notre Dame and Navy, with CBS televising the game in years where Navy serves as the host team. CBS also added the Mountain West Conference Championship Game to its coverage per a pre-existing contract that the network has with the conference (although most of the games air on CBS Sports Network). The Sun Bowl continues to air on CBS.

In 2011, in addition to Army–Navy, CBS also broadcast the other two service academy games: Navy-Air Force on October 1 and Army-Air Force on November 5, 2011 (a game which opened up as a result of CBS using its 8:00 p.m. game assignment for LSU-Alabama).

Until 2014, CBS maintained exclusivity during its 3:30 p.m. Eastern Time window. As part of an extension to CBS's contract with the SEC through the 2023-24 season, CBS gave up its window in order to allow games to be televised by the new ESPN-operated SEC Network beginning in the 2014 season. CBS, however, will still have the exclusive first pick of games for its SEC on CBS broadcast.[1]

Typical games

The games aired as part of this package are the premiere SEC matchups of the week. Top teams like the Alabama Crimson Tide, Auburn Tigers, Florida Gators, Georgia Bulldogs, Tennessee Volunteers, South Carolina Gamecocks and LSU Tigers usually appear on these telecasts. Since 1996, Florida has had the most appearances with 87 of their games broadcast by CBS, followed by Alabama with 72, LSU with 67, Georgia with 65 and Tennessee with 61. The ESPN family of networks get the subsequent picks of games among the SEC's national television partners. Since 2001, the SEC Championship Game has been televised by CBS.

The Vanderbilt Commodores have appeared on the CBS package only five times, with a 2013 game against Georgia (a 31-27 victory) marking their first appearance since 2001, and the first Vanderbilt home game televised by the network since 1982. Before their remarkable 2014 season, when they appeared four times (including the first Egg Bowl ever broadcast by CBS), Mississippi State had only seven CBS games as part of the package.

During the regular season, typical games that are shown almost every year include Florida-Tennessee (aired for the 17th time in 18 years in 2013), Georgia-Florida (all but 2002), the Auburn–Alabama (since 2000, except for 2003, 2007 and 2014), LSU–Florida (1999, 2001, 2003, 2005–2009 and 2011–2013), LSU–Ole Miss (2003, 2007–2010, 2012) and LSU–Arkansas (all but 2009), the last of which is traditionally aired the day after Thanksgiving. In addition, the interconference rivalry games, Florida–Florida State, Georgia–Georgia Tech and (since 2014) Kentucky–Louisville, often air on the network when the SEC schools host the games (otherwise, those games air on ABC or the ESPN networks, as the ACC's contracts dictate). When the interconference rivalries air on CBS, the broadcasts are generally branded as "College Football on CBS" instead of "SEC on CBS". In addition, CBS will occasionally televise games where SEC schools host marquee non-conference opponents, such as the Miami Hurricanes and Notre Dame Fighting Irish.

CBS Sports Network rebroadcasts the previous Saturday game several times throughout the following week.

Top ten SEC on CBS games[2][3]

Rank Date Time Away Team Score Home Team Score
10 September 14, 2013 3:30 P.M. #1 Alabama 49 #6 Texas A&M 42
9 December 1, 2001 3:30 P.M. #4 Tennessee 34 #2 Florida 32
8 November 5, 2011 8 P.M. #1 LSU 9 #2 Alabama 6
7 December 6, 2008* 4 P.M. #1 Alabama 20 #2 Florida 31
6 November 10, 2012 3:30 P.M. #15 Texas A&M 29 #1 Alabama 24
5 October 6, 2007 8:30 P.M. #9 Florida 24 #1 LSU 28
4 November 16, 2013 3:30 P.M. #25 Georgia 38 #7 Auburn 43
3 November 26, 2010 2:30 P.M. #2 Auburn 28 #11 Alabama 27
2 December 1, 2012* 4 P.M. #2 Alabama 32 #3 Georgia 28
1 November 30, 2013 3:30 P.M. #1 Alabama 28 #4 Auburn 34

*-SEC Championship Game

Team records

1996 through 2014 (week six) – does not include bowl games

Team Appearances Wins Losses Win Pct.
Florida 87 61 26 .701
Alabama 71 38 33 .535
LSU 67 37 30 .552
Georgia 64 35 29 .547
Tennessee 61 28 33 .459
Auburn 43 22 20 .535
Arkansas 38 12 26 .316
Navy 30 18 12 .600
Miami (FL) 21 13 8 .619
South Carolina 21 5 16 .238
Ole Miss 19 6 13 .316
Army 19 3 15 .158
Notre Dame 17 15 2 .882
West Virginia 14 4 10 .286
Kentucky 14 1 13 .071
Boston College 13 0 13 .000
Syracuse 11 8 3 .727
Florida State 11 5 6 .455
Mississippi State 11 4 7 .364
Virginia Tech 9 6 3 .667
Georgia Tech 8 4 4 .500
Pittsburgh 8 4 3 1 .571
Texas A&M 6 3 3 .500
Vanderbilt 5 1 4 .200
Penn State 4 1 2 1 .667
Air Force 4 2 2 .500
Missouri 3 0 3 .000
Louisville 2 1 1 .500
Arizona State 1 1 0 1.000
Fresno State 1 1 0 1.000
Memphis 1 1 0 1.000
Michigan 1 1 0 1.000
Ohio State 1 1 0 1.000
Southern California 1 1 0 1.000
Illinois 1 0 1 .000
Rutgers 1 0 1 .000
UCLA 1 0 1 .000
Utah State 1 0 1 .000
Virginia 1 0 1 .000

NOTE: 1 One Penn State win over Pittsburgh was vacated following the NCAA investigation into the Jerry Sandusky case.

Personalities

Commentator pairings

  1. Verne Lundquist or Carter Blackburn/Gary Danielson/Allie LaForce
  2. Carter Blackburn/Aaron Taylor

^Carter Blackburn filled-in for Verne Lundquist while Lundquist spended New Year's with his family.2014 Sun Bowl. The current primary commentators for the telecasts, which traditionally air either on Saturday afternoons or evenings, are Verne Lundquist (play-by-play), Gary Danielson (color) and Allie LaForce (sideline reporter). Adam Zucker (host), Spencer Tillman (analyst) and Brian Jones (analyst) make up the studio team. 2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

2000

1999

1998

1997

1996

1990

1989

1988

1987

1986

1985

1984

1983

1982

Features

In addition, CBS Sports Network aired the hour-long SEC Post-Game Show Presented by Geico at 7:00 p.m. Eastern Time, featuring the wrap-up of the CBS SEC game.

Nielsen ratings

Overall, the SEC on CBS had the top three-rated and most-watched college football games of the 2013 season:

Through 12 weeks of the 2013 season, SEC averaged a national household rating/share of 4.2/9. This was the highest average rating for SEC football game broadcasts on CBS at this point in the season since the network began airing primarily an SEC-only schedule in 2001.[4]

The SEC's unique contract giving them a guaranteed time slot with national coverage on a broadcast television station differs from other conferences, which are not guaranteed during the season at the 3:30 p.m. slot (the ESPN 3:30 p.m. games are regionally selected, and the Fox slot games vary between different conferences).

References

  1. ^ Jeremy Fowler (May 14, 2013). "SEC, CBS rework long-term contract". CBSsports.com. CBS Interactive. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  2. ^ Kevin Kelley (December 23, 2013). "CBS Sports Network to Air Top 10 SEC on CBS Football Games". FBSchedules.com. FB Schedules. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  3. ^ Tom Fornelli (December 23, 2013). "CBS Sports Network to broadcast top 10 SEC on CBS games". CBSsports.com. CBS Interactive. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  4. ^ "Epic Iron Bowl Delivers Most-Watched College Football Game to Date of 2013 Season". TV by the Numbers. Zap2It (Tribune Media). December 4, 2013.

Template:SEC on CBS