1982 American TV series or program
College Football on TBS Also known as TBS Sports NCAA Football TBS Sports SEC Football Big PlayStation Saturday TBS Saturday Night College Football Genre College football telecastsStarring See list of commentators Theme music composer Edd Kalehoff Country of origin United States Original language English Camera setup Multi-camera Running time 180 minutes or until game ended Production company Turner Sports Network TBS Release September 2, 1982 (1982-09-02 ) – November 4, 2006 (2006-11-04 )
College Football on TBS was the presentation of the Turner Broadcasting System (TBS) cable channel 's regular season college football television package.
History
Initial coverage
TBS became the first cable station to nationally broadcast college football live when it began airing games during the 1982 season .[ 1] [ 2] The games were aired under a special "supplemental" television contract with the NCAA.[ 3] [ 4] ESPN followed later the same year, starting with a simulcast of the Independence Bowl match-up between Kansas State and the University of Wisconsin on December 11, 1982, which was the first college football game shown live on ESPN.
When TBS (or WTBS as it was officially known at the time) first broadcast college football in 1982, they aired a package of live Division I-AA games on Thursday night and Division I-A games on Saturday.[ 5] games. WTBS was only able to show teams that had not been on national television in 1981 . There were a maximum of four teams that had been on regional television on two occasions. Meanwhile, ABC and CBS had the right to take away a game from WTBS as long as it did so no later than the Monday before the game. Bob Neal and Tim Foley were the booth commentators for WTBS during this period. Meanwhile, Craig Sager , Paul Hornung [ 6] and Pepper Rodgers [ 7] anchored the pregame show for WTBS.
By 1984 , WTBS started (primarily) carrying SEC [ 8] games. On June 8 of that year, the Supreme Court handed down a decision that allowed individual schools to control their own TV rights. That began the conference syndication packages in earnest and to the glut of games that continues to this day. TBS' coverage from this era was essentially the forerunner to the ESPN's Thursday /Saturday night packages.
2002–2006 coverage
TBS dropped college football after the 1992 season and left the field for several years. However, it again broadcast college football games from 2002 –2006 ,[ 9] showing Big 12 and Pac-10 [ 10] matchups. These were broadcast on the network as part of a sublicensing agreement with Fox Sports Net , who is the national cable partner for both conferences. TBS' coverage was originally known as Big PlayStation Saturday ,[ 11] [ 12] [ 13] [ 14] but this was dropped before the final season. The network aired two games a week for the first four seasons of the contract but dropped to one for some weeks during the final season.
Theme music
Nickelback 's (featuring Kid Rock and Dimebag Darrell ) 2003 cover of Elton John 's "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting " was used as the theme song for TBS ' Saturday Night College Football [ 15] telecasts. In the show's open , the song is accompanied by a drumline and cymbalists, while clips of the two teams playing the night's featured game are interspersed throughout.[ 16]
TBS would also use the NFL on TNT theme c. 1997 [ 17] (dubbed "Warrior Dance"[ 18] and composed by Edd Kalehoff ) for their Carquest/MicronPC.com Bowl and Senior Bowl coverage and their Saturday Night College Football coverage from 2002 –2003 .
Games on TBS (Division I-A games only)
Excludes the schedules from the 2002 and 2003 seasons because they could not be found.
1980s
1982
1983
Date
Home Team
Away Team
Host Conference
Oct. 8
Tennessee
20
LSU
6
SEC
Oct. 29[ 19]
South Carolina
31
NC State
17
Independent
Nov. 5
Vanderbilt
8
Kentucky
17
SEC
Nov. 12[ 20]
Tennessee
10
Ole Miss
13
SEC
Nov. 24[ 21]
Tulane
7
LSU
20
Independent
There was no football telecast on September 24 as Notre Dame was playing against Miami in prime time on CBS . There also was no football telecast on November 26 as TBS instead, aired a Louisville -Kentucky basketball game with Skip Caray and Joe Dean on the call.
1984 (SEC Full Package begins)
Date
Home Team
Away Team
Host Conference
Notes
Sept. 8
Florida
21
LSU
21
SEC
Sept. 15
Georgia Tech
16
Alabama
6
ACC
Sept. 22
Tulane
26
Kentucky
30
Independent
Sept. 29
Auburn
29
Tennessee
10
SEC
Oct. 13
Georgia
18
Ole Miss
12
SEC
Oct. 20
Georgia
62
Vanderbilt
35
SEC
Oct. 27
Kentucky
7
Georgia
37
SEC
Nov. 10
Florida
27
Georgia
0
SEC
Game played in Jacksonville, Florida
Nov. 17
Kentucky
17
Florida
25
SEC
Nov. 24
Mississippi State
3
Ole Miss
24
SEC
Dec. 1
Vanderbilt
13
Tennessee
29
SEC
1985
Date
Home Team
Away Team
Host Conference
Sept. 14
Georgia
17
Baylor
14
SEC
Sept. 21
Florida State
19
Memphis State
10
Independent
Sept. 28
Vanderbilt
20
Alabama
40
SEC
Oct. 12
Auburn
59
Florida State
26
SEC
Oct. 19
Alabama
14
Tennessee
16
SEC
Oct. 26
Georgia
26
Kentucky
6
SEC
Nov. 2
Ole Miss
0
LSU
14
SEC
Nov. 9
Vanderbilt
31
Kentucky
24
SEC
Nov. 16
Tennessee
34
Ole Miss
14
SEC
Nov. 23
Kentucky
0
Tennessee
42
SEC
Nov. 30
Tennessee
30
Vanderbilt
0
SEC
Georgia Tech
20
Georgia
16
ACC
1986
Date
Home Team
Away Team
Host Conference
Sept. 6
Alabama
42
Vanderbilt
10
SEC
Sept. 13
Tennessee
23
Mississippi State
27
SEC
Sept. 20
Florida State
10
North Carolina
10
Independent
Sept. 27
Michigan
20
Florida State
16
Big Ten
Oct. 4
Georgia
14
Ole Miss
10
SEC
Oct. 18
Georgia
38
Vanderbilt
16
SEC
Oct. 25
Georgia Tech
14
Tennessee
13
ACC
Nov. 1
Mississippi State
3
Alabama
38
SEC
Nov. 8
Kentucky
34
Vanderbilt
22
SEC
Nov. 15
Ole Miss
10
Tennessee
22
SEC
Nov. 22
Ole Miss
24
Mississippi State
3
SEC
Nov. 29
Georgia
31
Georgia Tech
24
SEC
1987
Date
Home Team
Away Team
Host Conference
Notes
Sept 5
Miami
31
Florida
4
Independent
Sept 12
Mississippi State
10
Tennessee
38
SEC
Sept 19
Alabama
14
Florida
23
SEC
at Birmingham
Sept 26
Tennessee
20
Auburn
20
SEC
Oct 3
Tennessee
38
California
12
SEC
Oct 17
LSU
34
Kentucky
9
SEC
first telecast from LSU's Tiger Stadium
Oct 24[ 22]
Georgia
17
Kentucky
14
SEC
Oct 31
Vanderbilt
27
Rutgers
13
SEC
Nov 7
Georgia
23
Florida
10
SEC
at Jacksonville, Florida
Nov 14
Florida
27
Kentucky
14
SEC
1988
Date
Home Team
Away Team
Host Conference
Notes
Sept 10
Auburn
20
Kentucky
10
SEC
Sept 17
Tennessee
9
LSU
34
SEC
Sept 24
South Carolina
23
Georgia
10
Independent
Oct 1
Kentucky
27
Alabama
31
SEC
Oct 8[ 23]
Alabama
12
Ole Miss
22
SEC
Oct 15
Vanderbilt
24
Florida
9
SEC
Oct 22
Kentucky
16
Georgia
10
SEC
Oct 29
LSU
31
Ole Miss
20
SEC
Nov 5
Georgia
26
Florida
3
SEC
Game played in Jacksonville, Florida
Nov 12
Mississippi State
3
LSU
20
SEC
Nov 26
Georgia
24
Georgia Tech
3
SEC
1989
Date
Home Team
Away Team
Host Conference
Notes
Sept 2
Florida State
26
Southern Miss
30
Independent
Game played in Jacksonville, Florida
Florida
19
Ole Miss
24
SEC
Sept 16
Georgia
15
Baylor
3
SEC
Sept 23
Alabama
15
Kentucky
3
SEC
Sept 30[ 24]
Vanderbilt
14
Alabama
20
SEC
Oct 14
Vanderbilt
16
Georgia
35
SEC
Oct 28[ 25]
LSU
39
Tennessee
45
SEC
Nov 4
Alabama
23
Mississippi State
10
SEC
Nov 11
Florida
10
Georgia
17
SEC
Game played in Jacksonville, Florida
Nov 18
Georgia
3
Auburn
20
SEC
Dec 2[ 26]
Tennessee
17
Vanderbilt
10
SEC
1990s
1990
Date
Home Team
Away Team
Host Conference
Notes
Sept 8
Mississippi State
7
Tennessee
40
SEC
Sept 15
Alabama
13
Florida
17
SEC
Sept 22
Vanderbilt
24
LSU
21
SEC
Sept 29
Florida
34
Mississippi State
21
SEC
Oct 13[ 27]
Georgia
12
Ole Miss
28
SEC
Oct 27
Florida State
27
LSU
3
Independent
Nov 3
Mississippi State
0
Alabama
22
SEC
Nov 10
Florida
38
Georgia
7
SEC
Game played in Jacksonville, Florida
Nov 17
Kentucky
15
Florida
47
SEC
Nov 24
Tennessee
42
Kentucky
28
SEC
Dec 1
Georgia
23
Georgia Tech
40
SEC
1991
Date
Home Team
Away Team
Host Conference
Notes
Sept 7
Mississippi State
13
Texas
6
SEC
Sept 14
Tennessee
30
UCLA
16
SEC
Sept 21
Tennessee
26
Mississippi State
24
SEC
Sept 28
Florida
29
Mississippi State
7
SEC
Played at Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida
Oct 5
Auburn
9
Southern Miss
10
SEC
Oct 19
Kentucky
26
LSU
29
SEC
Oct 26
Georgia
49
Kentucky
25
SEC
Nov 2
Alabama
13
Mississippi State
7
SEC
Nov 16
Georgia
37
Auburn
27
SEC
Nov 23
Tennessee
16
Kentucky
7
SEC
2000s
2004
Date
Game
Kickoff Time (Eastern Time)
Host Conference
Saturday, Sept 11
Houston at Oklahoma
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Sept 18
Clemson at Texas A&M
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Sept 25
USC at Stanford
6:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Oct 2
Kansas State at Texas A&M
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Arizona State at Oregon
9:15 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Oct 9
Nebraska at Texas Tech
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Oct 16
UCLA at California
6:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Oct 23
Texas at Texas Tech
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Oct 30
Arizona State at California
9:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Nov 6[ 28]
Oklahoma State at Texas
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Nov 13
Washington State at Arizona State
6:00 p.m.
Pac-10
2005
Date
Game
Kickoff Time (Eastern Time)
Host Conference
Saturday, Sept 3
Colorado State at Colorado
2:30 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Sept 10
Wake Forest at Nebraska
6:00 pm.
Big 12
Saturday, Sept 17
Fresno State at Oregon
6:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Sept 24
Arizona State at Oregon State
9:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Oct 1
Arizona at California
6:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Oct 8
Texas Tech at Nebraska
3:00 p.m.
Big 12
California at UCLA
6:30 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Oct 15
Oklahoma at Kansas
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Oct 22
Oregon State at UCLA
6:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Oct 28[ 29]
Texas at Oklahoma State
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Nov 6
Stanford at USC
9:00 p.m.
Pac-10
2006
Date
Game
Kickoff Time (Eastern Time)
Host Conference
Saturday, Sept 2
UAB at Oklahoma
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
BYU at Arizona
9:15 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Sept 9
Minnesota at California
6:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Sept 16
Arizona State at Colorado
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Sept 23
UCLA at Washington
6:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Sept 30
USC at Washington State
6:00 p.m.
Pac-10
Saturday, Oct 7
Missouri at Texas Tech
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Oct 14
Baylor at Texas
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, Oct 28
Texas at Texas Tech
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Saturday, November 4
Washington at Oregon
2:30 p.m.
Pac-10
Oklahoma State at Texas
6:00 p.m.
Big 12
Play-by-play
Sideline reporters
Studio hosts
Studio analysts
See also
References
^ WTBS, Ted Turner's superstation, also has carried college football this year for the first time. But WTBS isn't as polished as ABC or CBS and never had a chance to make our TV Bowl.
^ The NCAA said O.K., but the other college football broadcasters—WTBS, Ted Turner's SuperStation, and ABC—wouldn't allow CBS to broadcast extra games without extracting several pounds of teleflesh. Turner wasn't even disposed to let CBS move a Division I-A game from Saturday to Sunday without the network making what it considered unreasonable concessions. For example, he wanted CBS to promise not to schedule college telecasts opposite the proposed NFL Players Association All-Star games, the rights to which he owns.
^ "Turner Cable TV Gets N.C.A.A. Football Pact" . New York Times . January 28, 1982. Retrieved 2006-09-06 .
^ College Football has aired frequently on TBS throughout the years. Here's a nice Quantel-made promo for a matchup between West Virginia and Maryland.
^ Next month the College Football Association (CFA) will award its Saturday night cable TV rights for '85. "We're going to take a serious swing at it," says Turner. Last year ESPN paid $9.3 million for the CFA. This year, only Turner may know where the bidding will stop. ESPN has to be uneasy. Says its president, Bill Grimes, "Turner was our competitor last time, on the USFL. Since we edged him out for it, I'm sure he'll be more motivated than last time."
^ And oh, yes, there's a third winner of sorts, Paul Hornung, co-host of the Saturday studio show on WTBS, the Turner superstation (see box). When the NCAA controlled TV, it kept Hornung off college games because of his NFL suspension for gambling and his closer identification with the pro game.
^ OUR FIRST ANNUAL SHAME-ON-YOU AWARD—To WTBS-TV, Ted Turner's superstation, for allowing the NCAA to have veto power over its football announcers. TBS had to get rid of Pepper Rodgers and Paul Hornung when the censors from Shawnee Mission, Kans., found them unsavory.
^ You have your choice of either another CFA game on ESPN or an SEC matchup on WTBS, the Ted Turner superstation.
^ TBS dropping Big XII football games
^ TBS College Football TV Spot on YouTube
^ September 2003 - TBS College Football Promo on YouTube
^ 2003 Oklahoma vs Colorado on YouTube
^ 2003 Oklahoma vs Iowa State on YouTube
^ Texas v Tulane 2003 on YouTube
^ 2005 Oklahoma vs Kansas on YouTube
^ "OSU v Texas Tease" . YouTube. 2006-12-15. Retrieved 2012-08-31 .
^ NFL on TNT Theme Music (1995-1997) on YouTube
^ NFL on TNT '95 ("Warrior Dance") on YouTube
^ 1983 East Carolina - NC State on YouTube
^ 1983 Tennessee vs Mississippi on YouTube
^ LSU vs TULANE 1983 Football in the Superdome on YouTube
^ 1987 Georgia vs. Kentucky on YouTube
^ 1988 OM 22 v ALA 12, The Brick Bowl on YouTube
^ TBS 1989 Alabama vs Vanderbilt Football Commercial on YouTube
^ 1989 # 11 Tennessee vs LSU on YouTube
^ 1989 # 8 Tennessee vs Vanderbilt on YouTube
^ TBS Sports: SEC Football, Georgia v Ole Miss (circa 1989) on YouTube
^ Texas v Oklahoma State 2004 on YouTube
^ Texas @ Oklahoma State 2005 2nd Half on YouTube
^ "Thulin will begin his third-consecutive year as the play-by-play announcer for TBS' 2004-05 college football coverage" . Archived from the original on 2011-09-28. Retrieved 2009-12-15 .
^ Davis will serve as the analyst for TBS' college football coverage of the Pac-10 and Big 12 for the third consecutive year. Archived 2012-02-23 at the Wayback Machine
^ Erin Andrews returns to provide atmosphere pieces from the site that showcase the tradition and pageantry of these two great conferences.
^ For the third consecutive year, he will also report from the sideline for TBS' Pac-10/Big 12 college football coverage. Archived 2008-12-04 at the Wayback Machine
^ "Turner Newsroom: Home" . News.turner.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2012-08-31 .
^ Following a successful seven-year career in New York as a stage actor, television commercial and voice-over artist, Kevin Christopher switched career gears and signed on as the Sports Anchor for Turner Broadcasting's TBS Evening News in the spring of 1980. For the next seven years he was the main studio anchor for Atlanta Braves baseball, Atlanta Hawks basketball, NBA basketball, SEC College football and the Sunday night Coors Sports Page highlight show, as well as a contributor to CNN and Headline News. Archived 2010-03-11 at the Wayback Machine
^ Marc Fein will serve as studio host for TBS’s coverage of Big 12 and PAC-10 college football in 2006. He previously handled sideline reporting duties for the networks’ college football coverage in 2004. Archived 2011-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
^ He also hosted college football games on TBS Superstation for the 2002-03 season, dubbed Big Play Saturday. Archived 2012-02-23 at the Wayback Machine
^ He was a sports anchor for CNN while also serving TBS Sports as the anchor of College Football Scoreboard for four years (1982-85). Archived 2008-12-04 at the Wayback Machine
^ Turner Sports announced today that legendary Oklahoma Sooners linebacker Brian Bosworth will join TBS Superstation's Big PlayStation Saturday this season as a studio analyst for its pre-game, post-game and halftime shows.
External links
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