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Star Sports (China)
East Asian sports television channel From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Star Sports is an East Asian pay television sports channel broadcast to Mainland China and formerly South Korea, operated by Fox Networks Group Asia Pacific, a subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company (Southeast Asia). It was previously part of the Fox Sports operations in East and Southeast Asia, but this version retained Star Sports name; ESPN Mainland China was instead renamed Star Sports 2.
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History
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Hong Kong-based Star TV launched Prime Sports (later renamed Star Sports) in partnership with American company TCI, which owned Prime-branded regional sports channels. The channel was broadcast across Asia, as with the footprint of AsiaSat 1. Star TV has since regionalized the channel with several versions, including a dedicated version for Taiwan. Later, ESPN has joined in the region as a competitor to Star Sports.
In October 1996, ESPN and Star Sports agreed to combine their operations across Asia.[1] As a result, a joint venture named, ESPN Star Sports was formed, to be headquartered in Singapore.[2]
In April 1999, the channel had a first major logo change from vertical to horizontal, along with other STAR TV channels.
In June 2012, it was announced that News Corporation would buy ESPN International's share in ESPN Star Sports.[3][4] Following the News Corporation take over, ESPN all over Asia would be relaunched as Fox Sports but the relaunch of ESPN Star Sports as Fox Sports did not affect much of East Asia, as Star Sports continued to broadcast in Mainland China and South Korea kept the brand, and instead, the version of ESPN for Mainland China was renamed as Star Sports 2 on 10 January 2014.[5][6]
Unlike 16 other channels owned by Disney which were shut down in 2021 and 2023, Star Sports China continues to operate until this day.[7]
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Channels
- Star Sports 1
- Star Sports 2: This channel was not available in South Korea only in Mainland China.
Programming
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Sporting events covered by Star Sports include:
Australian Rules Football
Baseball
- Major League Baseball:
- Select spring training and regular season games (home games only and select road games)
- ESPN Major League Baseball (Sunday Night Baseball and select special games, tie-breaker and Home Run Derby)
- MLB All-Star Game (MLB International feed)
- Postseason (wild card, Division Series and Championship Series)
- World Series (MLB International feed)
- World Baseball Classic
- Korea Baseball Organization (ESPN feed)[8]
Basketball
Boxing
- Versus
- World Boxing Matches
Bull Riding
- Professional Bull Riders events
Cricket
- ICC
- Cricket World Cup[9]
- Under-19 Cricket World Cup (all matches available on Fox+, highlights and live coverage of final on television)
- Women's Cricket World Cup
Football
- AFC Champions League (from play-offs, for West Zone play-offs until quarter finals)
- AFC U-19 Championship
- AFC U-16 Championship
- AFC Futsal Championship
- AFC Futsal Club Championship
- Danish Super League (one match per week, 2019–2021 (originally from June 2020 with the remaining matches in 2019–20))
- DBU Pokalen (three matches (both semi finals and a final) in 2019–20)
Golf
Kickboxing
Mixed Martial Arts
Motorsports
- Formula One
- FIA Formula 2 Championship
- FIA Formula 3 Championship
- FIM Motocross World Championship
- Superbike World Championship
- World Touring Car Cup (only for highlights)
- MotoGP
- WeatherTech SportsCar Championship
- FIA World Endurance Championship (only for highlights)
- IndyCar Series
- Formula E
- Supercars Championship
Rugby
Union
Tennis
- Australian Open
- French Open
- Wimbledon
- US Open
- Fed Cup (final only)
- ATP Cup
- Laver Cup
- Hawaii Open
News
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See also
- Fox Sports (Asian TV network)
- Star Sports Network India
- Fox Sports' (and previously ESPN Star Sports') partnership in South Korea:
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
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