This is a timeline of
Premier Sports, which includes the period when the channel broadcast as Viaplay Sports, and of its former free-to-air channel FreeSports.
Premier Sports
2009
25 September –
MSK launches, initially to broadcast events which had not been available in
Great Britain since the collapse of Setanta Sports as they had not been picked up by rival sports broadcasters but are available through Setanta in
Ireland.
2010
29 July – MSK and MSK Extra are renamed
Premier Sports and Premier Sports Extra.
19 August – Premier Sports announces that it has bought the live and exclusive television rights to thirty matches per season from the
Conference National for the next three seasons.[1] The thirty matches selected for broadcast included all five Conference National play-offs.[2]
12 October – Premier Sports announces that they will broadcast up to 10 live
National Hockey League games per week from the
2011–12 season.[8] The rights had previously been held by
ESPN America although the channel does broadcast some matches for the remainder of that season.
21 November – Premier Sports begins broadcasting
greyhound racing on five nights a week, providing free-to-air coverage of the Greyhound Premier League. It does so until grand finals night in February 2012.
2012
January – It is announced that
Celtic TV and
Rangers TV would each air on Premier Sports as a three-hour block on Monday evenings.[9][10]
5 July – Premier Sports announces that NHL will continue for a further 4 years on the channel with appropriately 400 games per season being broadcast and complemented by a daily broadcast of Hockey Tonight.[12] Premier later further extends its coverage of NHL which now runs until 2021.
17 August – Premier Sports buys the rights to the French
Top 14 league, usually broadcasting two live games per round.[13] It shows the league for just a single season as the rights pass to BT Sport for the 2013/14 season.
2013
Premier Sports broadcasts 260 hours of Indoor
Bowls.[14] The deal includes coverage of the World Bowls Tour International Open, PBA Masters, National Under-25s, EIBA Singles Finals, England Internationals, World Pairs and Premier Threes events.
25 October – Four years after launching,
Premier Sports finally becomes available on Virgin Media. It launches one day prior to the start of the
2013 Rugby League World Cup and is available to all customers until early 2014.[16]
26 October-30 November – Premier Sports broadcasts its first major international sporting event when it is joint broadcaster with the BBC of the
2013 Rugby League World Cup.[17] The channel also covered live coverage of the
2017 event.
11 June – Premier Sports begins covering
Copa América.[20] It also shows the next two editions, ending in 2019 when the right pass to the BBC.
July – Premier Sports shows
UEFA Champions League and
UEFA Europa League qualifiers that include British teams.[21] Premier Sports continues to show these early qualification matches to this day, with its coverage ending at the penultimate stage of qualifying.
2 August – Premier Sports becomes one of the rights holders to the newly expanded
Scottish Challenge Cup. It broadcasts games alongside other rights holders
BBC Alba and
S4C. Previously, BBC Alba had been the sole broadcaster of the competition.[22]
Premier Sports and Freesports broadcast live and also highlights of the
speedway leagues Sweden's
Elitserien and the Polish PGE
Ekstraliga.
12 February – FreeSports televised pool for the first time.
28 April – FreeSports begins showing live coverage of matches from
rugby league’s
National Conference League with more than 30 matches to be shown over the course of the season.[24]
30 May-3 June – Premier Sports broadcasts full coverage of the
2018 BDO World Trophy.
25 July – Premier Sports 2 is launched.[26][27][28]
31 August – Premier Sports takes over as broadcaster of the
PRO14 Rugby.[29] The agreement sees all 152 games per season broadcast live, with no less than 21 games (one per round) shown live free-to-air on
FreeSports.[30] Sky Sports and the BBC had been the previous broadcasters - the BBC had shown the tournament since its inception in 2001.
November – Premier Sports announces a six-year deal with the
SFA starting in 2019 to show the
Scottish Cup. Its live rights include the first 2 picks from rounds 4, last 16 and quarter-finals and first pick of a semi-final. There are also options to show matches in rounds 1-3 and the final and other semi-final non-exclusively with the BBC.[31]
30 June – FreeSports is removed from Freesat due to fee disagreements.[35]
13 September –
FreeSports begins showing snooker when it begins its coverage of the first-ever ranking edition of the
2020 Championship League. FreeSports also covers the
2021 tournament. The event had previously been shown on ITV4.
Premier Sports begins showing
Impact Wrestling. The partnership also sees Impact's weekly programme Impact! broadcast every Wednesday on
FreeSports.[37]
2 March –
FreeSports shows test cricket for the first time when it starts showing all tests, ODI’s and T20 fixtures involving Afghanistan and Zimbabwe.[39] This builds on the channel's cricket coverage which had mainly consisted of T10 and T20 events.
27 April – It is announced that Premier Sports will become the title sponsor of the
Scottish League Cup. Consequently, for the next two seasons the competition will be known as the Premier Sports Cup. It was also announced that Premier Sports will now show the competition until the 2026/27 season.[40] Last year, Premier Sports had replaced BT Sport as broadcaster of the competition.
May – Premier Sports shows
Serie A football for the final time as the rights pass to BT Sport for the 2021-22 season.[41]
28 May – Premier Sports begins showing coverage of French rugby union's top flight competition -
Top 14. It had previously broadcast the competition in 2012/13.
2022
Premier Sports beings broadcasting the
RFL Championship. Coverage includes the regular season, the Play-Offs in the autumn culminating in the Million Pound Game and every match of the Summer Bash featuring all 14 clubs in a single venue on the same weekend. The deal also includes the 2023 season.
28 February – Premier Sports replaces Sky Sports as the secondary rights holder of rugby league's
Challenge Cup. It shows five games from the competition - one match from rounds 4, 5 and 6 and two quarter-finals.
1 June – Premier Sports begins broadcasting Scotland, Wales Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland
UEFA Nations League matches until 2024. The deal also includes live rights to all other matches involving non-UK teams inc Spain, Germany, Italy and Portugal.[42]
June – The
National Hockey League is shown on Premier Sports for the final time as the UK TV rights move to Scandinavian streaming service
Viaplay as part of its UK launch.[43]
30 June – FreeSports is removed from the
Freeview platform.[44]
21 July –
Viaplay Group announces that it has acquired Premier Sports and stated its intention to rebrand the channels as Viaplay Sports network.[46][47]
1 November – Premier Sports is renamed Viaplay Sports and Freesports is renamed as Viaplay Xtra.[48]
9 December – Viaplay Sports starts showing
European Professional Club Rugby's second-tier competition, the
EPCR Challenge Cup.[49] This is Viaplay's first major rights acquisition following its acquisition of Premier Sports.
2023
February – Viaplay Sports becomes the rights holder of the
PDC European Tour of 13 live darts events for the next five seasons.[50]
November – it is announced that Premier Sports has bought Viaplay out in the UK and would rebrand the channels back to Premier Sports, just a little over a year since they became Viaplay channels.[51]
9 April – Premier Sports returns as a two-channel service following Viaplay’s completion of the sale of its UK sports channel business back to Premier Sports.[53]
This is a timeline of
Premier Sports, which includes the period when the channel broadcast as Viaplay Sports, and of its former free-to-air channel FreeSports.
Premier Sports
2009
25 September –
MSK launches, initially to broadcast events which had not been available in
Great Britain since the collapse of Setanta Sports as they had not been picked up by rival sports broadcasters but are available through Setanta in
Ireland.
2010
29 July – MSK and MSK Extra are renamed
Premier Sports and Premier Sports Extra.
19 August – Premier Sports announces that it has bought the live and exclusive television rights to thirty matches per season from the
Conference National for the next three seasons.[1] The thirty matches selected for broadcast included all five Conference National play-offs.[2]
12 October – Premier Sports announces that they will broadcast up to 10 live
National Hockey League games per week from the
2011–12 season.[8] The rights had previously been held by
ESPN America although the channel does broadcast some matches for the remainder of that season.
21 November – Premier Sports begins broadcasting
greyhound racing on five nights a week, providing free-to-air coverage of the Greyhound Premier League. It does so until grand finals night in February 2012.
2012
January – It is announced that
Celtic TV and
Rangers TV would each air on Premier Sports as a three-hour block on Monday evenings.[9][10]
5 July – Premier Sports announces that NHL will continue for a further 4 years on the channel with appropriately 400 games per season being broadcast and complemented by a daily broadcast of Hockey Tonight.[12] Premier later further extends its coverage of NHL which now runs until 2021.
17 August – Premier Sports buys the rights to the French
Top 14 league, usually broadcasting two live games per round.[13] It shows the league for just a single season as the rights pass to BT Sport for the 2013/14 season.
2013
Premier Sports broadcasts 260 hours of Indoor
Bowls.[14] The deal includes coverage of the World Bowls Tour International Open, PBA Masters, National Under-25s, EIBA Singles Finals, England Internationals, World Pairs and Premier Threes events.
25 October – Four years after launching,
Premier Sports finally becomes available on Virgin Media. It launches one day prior to the start of the
2013 Rugby League World Cup and is available to all customers until early 2014.[16]
26 October-30 November – Premier Sports broadcasts its first major international sporting event when it is joint broadcaster with the BBC of the
2013 Rugby League World Cup.[17] The channel also covered live coverage of the
2017 event.
11 June – Premier Sports begins covering
Copa América.[20] It also shows the next two editions, ending in 2019 when the right pass to the BBC.
July – Premier Sports shows
UEFA Champions League and
UEFA Europa League qualifiers that include British teams.[21] Premier Sports continues to show these early qualification matches to this day, with its coverage ending at the penultimate stage of qualifying.
2 August – Premier Sports becomes one of the rights holders to the newly expanded
Scottish Challenge Cup. It broadcasts games alongside other rights holders
BBC Alba and
S4C. Previously, BBC Alba had been the sole broadcaster of the competition.[22]
Premier Sports and Freesports broadcast live and also highlights of the
speedway leagues Sweden's
Elitserien and the Polish PGE
Ekstraliga.
12 February – FreeSports televised pool for the first time.
28 April – FreeSports begins showing live coverage of matches from
rugby league’s
National Conference League with more than 30 matches to be shown over the course of the season.[24]
30 May-3 June – Premier Sports broadcasts full coverage of the
2018 BDO World Trophy.
25 July – Premier Sports 2 is launched.[26][27][28]
31 August – Premier Sports takes over as broadcaster of the
PRO14 Rugby.[29] The agreement sees all 152 games per season broadcast live, with no less than 21 games (one per round) shown live free-to-air on
FreeSports.[30] Sky Sports and the BBC had been the previous broadcasters - the BBC had shown the tournament since its inception in 2001.
November – Premier Sports announces a six-year deal with the
SFA starting in 2019 to show the
Scottish Cup. Its live rights include the first 2 picks from rounds 4, last 16 and quarter-finals and first pick of a semi-final. There are also options to show matches in rounds 1-3 and the final and other semi-final non-exclusively with the BBC.[31]
30 June – FreeSports is removed from Freesat due to fee disagreements.[35]
13 September –
FreeSports begins showing snooker when it begins its coverage of the first-ever ranking edition of the
2020 Championship League. FreeSports also covers the
2021 tournament. The event had previously been shown on ITV4.
Premier Sports begins showing
Impact Wrestling. The partnership also sees Impact's weekly programme Impact! broadcast every Wednesday on
FreeSports.[37]
2 March –
FreeSports shows test cricket for the first time when it starts showing all tests, ODI’s and T20 fixtures involving Afghanistan and Zimbabwe.[39] This builds on the channel's cricket coverage which had mainly consisted of T10 and T20 events.
27 April – It is announced that Premier Sports will become the title sponsor of the
Scottish League Cup. Consequently, for the next two seasons the competition will be known as the Premier Sports Cup. It was also announced that Premier Sports will now show the competition until the 2026/27 season.[40] Last year, Premier Sports had replaced BT Sport as broadcaster of the competition.
May – Premier Sports shows
Serie A football for the final time as the rights pass to BT Sport for the 2021-22 season.[41]
28 May – Premier Sports begins showing coverage of French rugby union's top flight competition -
Top 14. It had previously broadcast the competition in 2012/13.
2022
Premier Sports beings broadcasting the
RFL Championship. Coverage includes the regular season, the Play-Offs in the autumn culminating in the Million Pound Game and every match of the Summer Bash featuring all 14 clubs in a single venue on the same weekend. The deal also includes the 2023 season.
28 February – Premier Sports replaces Sky Sports as the secondary rights holder of rugby league's
Challenge Cup. It shows five games from the competition - one match from rounds 4, 5 and 6 and two quarter-finals.
1 June – Premier Sports begins broadcasting Scotland, Wales Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland
UEFA Nations League matches until 2024. The deal also includes live rights to all other matches involving non-UK teams inc Spain, Germany, Italy and Portugal.[42]
June – The
National Hockey League is shown on Premier Sports for the final time as the UK TV rights move to Scandinavian streaming service
Viaplay as part of its UK launch.[43]
30 June – FreeSports is removed from the
Freeview platform.[44]
21 July –
Viaplay Group announces that it has acquired Premier Sports and stated its intention to rebrand the channels as Viaplay Sports network.[46][47]
1 November – Premier Sports is renamed Viaplay Sports and Freesports is renamed as Viaplay Xtra.[48]
9 December – Viaplay Sports starts showing
European Professional Club Rugby's second-tier competition, the
EPCR Challenge Cup.[49] This is Viaplay's first major rights acquisition following its acquisition of Premier Sports.
2023
February – Viaplay Sports becomes the rights holder of the
PDC European Tour of 13 live darts events for the next five seasons.[50]
November – it is announced that Premier Sports has bought Viaplay out in the UK and would rebrand the channels back to Premier Sports, just a little over a year since they became Viaplay channels.[51]
9 April – Premier Sports returns as a two-channel service following Viaplay’s completion of the sale of its UK sports channel business back to Premier Sports.[53]