{"id":26079,"date":"2003-11-20T12:54:33","date_gmt":"2003-11-20T18:54:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2003\/11\/20\/hand-in-hand\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:55:33","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:55:33","slug":"hand-in-hand","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2003\/11\/20\/hand-in-hand\/","title":{"rendered":"Hand in Hand"},"content":{"rendered":"
It began with little fanfare. If you had a satellite dish, you could have seen it, but probably didn’t notice.<\/p>\n
College Sports Television flipped the switch last April, and just like that, it was being beamed out over Channel 610 of DirecTV satellite systems. And if you were paying close attention, you may have noticed its first ever original programming event: pre- and post-game shows from the Frozen Four in Buffalo.<\/p>\n
That moment, however, was just a dry run for what was to come — a union of lost souls, two parties who wanted and needed each other, coming together for the benefit of themselves and fans everywhere.<\/p>\n
It started almost two years ago, when word of an all college sports television network was getting under way. It was hard not to dream about college hockey finally finding a home, but the sport had been burned before, with eager commissioners searching for ways to create a national television package only to find roadblocks at every turn.<\/p>\n
But who were these CSTV guys? Yes, the founders of Classic Sports Network, later sold to ESPN. But would guys like this be interested in hockey? What would their approach be?<\/p>\n
Those questions were soon answered.<\/p>\n
CSTV had it in mind early. The big sports like football and basketball were well covered, but it left so much more out there. It knew what the next sport in line was … hockey. It was just sitting there, a rabid audience just not large enough for the likes of ESPN, but perfect to be the cornerstone of a fledgling network.<\/p>\n
“They didn’t make promises right out of gate, which I give them credit for,” says CCHA commissioner Tom Anastos, whose league was the first to sign a deal with CSTV. “It’s fair to say not everybody took it that seriously [at first]. I said, ‘Prove to me you can do what you say you can do.’ It’s true of any startup business.<\/p>\n
“[They] said they received a considerable amount of feedback about hockey.”<\/p>\n
Chris Bevilacqua, CSTV co-founder and Executive Vice President, was the network’s point man. He went out, met with the commissioners of all the hockey leagues, and made deals. One by one it was done. The ECAC was the last to fall into line, late this summer.<\/p>\n
“In meeting with Chris, I sensed a sincere interest in the sport. I could see in him his passion for college athletics,” Anastos says. “I like doing business with people who are passionate in what they’re doing.”<\/p>\n
Oct. 3, 2003 — St. Lawrence at Miami. Friday Night Hockey was born. Complete with its own 30-minute lead-in studio show.<\/p>\n
“It would be easy to tell college hockey, ‘Hey, we’ll just pick off some games where we can,'” says Tim Pernetti, Director of Programming at CSTV, and a former football player at Rutgers. “Instead, we said, ‘If you want to do this right, you’ll move the games to Friday night that don’t already exist there, we’ll give it its own time period, promote it as a national deal, and we’ll do it right.’ And them realizing that we had the flexibility to make it unique is what caused it to come together.<\/p>\n
“It’s a great fit because of the flexibility. ESPN, for all its money, could easily do what we’re doing with the snap of their fingers. But they’ve become about a different thing, they’ve become a pro sports network. And let’s face it, they don’t have enough shelf space to do something like this anymore.”<\/p>\n
A match made in heaven.<\/p>\n
— Tim Pernetti, CSTV Dir. of Programming<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
Whenever the powers that be in college hockey had even approached major networks about a national TV deal, they often heard the same thing: “College hockey people know that a game between North Dakota and Maine could be huge, but will it sell to the average sports fan? They want to see rivalries they know from the other sports, like Michigan and Michigan State, Boston College and Notre Dame.”<\/p>\n
That, combined with the sheer economics of it, meant it never happened.<\/p>\n
Enter CSTV.<\/p>\n
“The way we approached it was, these are the best programs in college hockey and we had access to everything, except games that were already spoken for or were part of other TV arrangements that preceded us,” says Pernetti. “And we just took a ‘best of the best’ approach.”<\/p>\n
CSTV doesn’t deny that putting on “recognizable names” is a component of their decision making, but it is not nearly the overriding factor. After all, St. Lawrence and Miami were on the opener.<\/p>\n
“We wanted to make sure we had the highest profile matchups, the best teams, the best venues with the packed houses so it looked good, and really presented the best of what college hockey is all about,” Pernetti says.<\/p>\n