5 February –
Sky Television launches at 6.00pm. The channel line-up consists of a sports channel but is a pan-European service called
Eurosport rather than a Sky-branded UK channel.
1990
January–March – Sky shows live coverage of England's cricketing tour to the
West Indies. This is the first time that full live coverage of an overseas tour has been shown in the UK. The coverage is broadcast on
Sky One.
11 February –
Sky Movies broadcasts its first special event – the boxing fight between
Mike Tyson and Buster Douglas, doing so six days after Sky Movies becomes the UK's first pay television channel. Sky Movies shows all of Sky's premium
boxing fights until they transfer to Sky Sports after it becomes a pay channel in 1992.
27 March –
BSB launches and among the channel line-up is a sports service called
The Sports Channel.
2 November – Sky TV and
BSB merge. The new company is called
BSkyB.[1] Two of BSB's five channels are closed immediately but The Sports Channel stays on air.
1991
January – The Sports Channel covers its first major tennis tournament when it broadcasts live coverage of the
Australian Open. It goes on to show the event until 1994.
20 April –
Sky Sports launches, replacing the
BSB Sports Channel.
Spring – Sky Sports shows live coverage of the newly created
World League of American Football. Channel 4 also covers the competition with a weekly Saturday morning highlights programme.
6–22 May –
Eurosport briefly closes after the competing
Screensport channel had filed a complaint to the
European Commission over its corporate structure.[2]TF1 Group subsequently steps in and replaces
BSkyB as Eurosport's joint owners.
14–25 July – Sky Sports broadcasts full live coverage of the
1991 World Student Games, which are held in the UK. This is the only time that Sky has broadcast a multi-sport event.
26 August – Sky begins its coverage of the
US Open (tennis) tournament, beginning a relationship with the event which lasts until 2015.
1992
22 February-25 March – Sky shows its first major
cricket tournament when it broadcasts exclusive live coverage of the
1992 Cricket World Cup. This is the beginning of Sky's coverage of the event which continues to this day and is therefore the longest set of rights that Sky Sports holds.
18 May – Sky purchases the live rights to the newly formed football
Premier League for £304 million.[3]
15 August – Sky Sports launches Sports Saturday. The programme follows the same format as the BBC's Grandstand programme featuring a mix of sporting action, concluding with the day's football results.
16 August – To mark the start of Sky Sports's coverage of the
Premier League, the channel launches an afternoon-long football programme called Super Sunday. The first programme sees the first use of a
score bug, a
digital on-screen graphic displaying the current score. Initially only used for football coverage, it is soon extended to other sports coverage and is soon taken up by other broadcasters.
17 August – Monday Night Football makes its debut on Sky Sports as part of Sky's deal to show Premier League matches on Monday evenings. This is the first time that domestic football has been shown in the UK on Monday evenings.
31 August – Sky Sports broadcasts
World Wrestling Federation's SummerSlam '92 in full. This is the first time that full coverage of a WWF event is shown in the UK.
1 September – Sky Sports becomes a subscription channel.
Sky signs a deal with the newly formed World Darts Council, since renamed the
Professional Darts Corporation (PDC), to broadcast three of its tournaments.
22–24 September – Sky Sports becomes the exclusive broadcaster of
golf's
Ryder Cup and has shown the event exclusive live ever since.
1 November –
Sky Sports Gold launches. Ut broadcasts for three hours a night, three nights a week.
1996
Following an approach by
Rupert Murdoch to British
rugby league clubs to form a new Super League, the sport agrees to the proposals, which amongst other things sees the sport move from a winter to a summer season.
June – Sky Sports increases its coverage of women's sport by broadcasting women's cricket[8] and women's golf [9] for the first time.
16 August –
Sky Sports 3 launches. The new channel showcases the Football League, which Sky now holds the rights to. Sky Sports 3 also becomes the home to Sky's coverage of the
Scottish Premier League. This is the first time that the SPL has been shown across the UK. The channel broadcasts part-time, from midday until midnight.
Sky Sports is renamed Sky Sports 1
Sky Sports Gold closes although some of its programmes continue to be shown for a while on the other Sky Sports channels.
26 October – Sky's coverage of
Major League Baseball ends after showing MLB for the past four years.
November – Sky Sports begins showing live coverage of the
England national rugby union team, replacing the BBC which had held the right for many decades.
February – Sky Sports broadcasts matches from the
Six Nations championships for the first time as part of its contract to show England's rugby union games. It does so until 2001.
15 August – On the first day of the
1998–99 football season, the first edition of Soccer Saturday is broadcast. The afternoon-long football scores and results service replaces Sports Saturday.
1 October –
Sky Digital launches and this is marked by the launch of the UK's first rolling sports news channel
Sky Sports News.
15 November – Rival digital television service
OnDigital launches. Sky had originally been a partner in the venture but was forced to pull out by the
Independent Television Commission. However, some Sky channels, including two
Sky Sports channels (Sky Sports 1 and Sky Sports 3 – Sky Sports 2 is added later – do appear on the service.
1999
April – Sky Sports launches its interactive service
Sky Sports Active.
Sky Sports broadcasts a home
cricket Test Match live for the first time as part of a joint deal with
Channel 4. This arrangement continues until 2005.
22 August –
Sky Sports Xtra launches, initially primarily as an interactive service.[10]
Sunday Supplement launches, providing a Sunday morning discussion of the previous day's football.
October – Sky Sports covers the
Rugby League World Cup for the first time, sharing the rights with the BBC.
2001
Sky's exclusive live coverage of the England football team ends following the rights transferring to the BBC. Sky had held the rights since the days of BSB's Sports Channel.
4–7 July – Sky Sports shows the first edition of a new overseas darts tournament, the
Las Vegas Desert Classic. Sky continues to show the event until it ends in 2009.
August – Coverage of the Football League reverts to Sky Sports after one season with ITV, which the broadcaster had intended would kick-start the
ITV Sport Channel which failed due to the massive price that ITV had paid for the rights.
Following the collapse on
ITV Digital, Sky Sports takes over as broadcaster of tennis’
ATP tour.
22 October – Sky becomes the new broadcaster of
rugby union's European clubs tournament
Heineken Cup.
2004
11 June –
At the Races relaunches as a stand-alone venture. Between 2000 and 2003 the channel had been on air in conjunction with
Channel 4.
August – Football First launches. The programme allows viewers to choose the game they want to watch.
2005
8 January –
Premier League Snooker is relaunched with Sky Sports being the broadcaster of the event, which takes place over a four-month period.
20 January – Sky Sports shows the first night of a new tournament
Premier League Darts. The League is a new format and is played over a number of one-off nights, generally every Thursday. Sky continues to show the event to this day.
2006
Sky Sports becomes the exclusive broadcaster of all live cricket matches in the UK following the
ECB awarding Sky exclusive coverage of all of England's home tests, one-day internationals and Twenty20 Internationals.[13]
May – The first edition of Cricket AM is broadcast on Sky Sports and Sky One. Based on its successful
football-related counterpart Soccer AM, it broadcasts during the footballing off-season.
22 May – Sky launches its high definition service when
Sky One HD and
Sky Sports 1 HD being broadcasting.
August – The
European Union objects to what it saw as a
monopoly on television football rights and demands the 2007 contract be split into separate packages of 23 games. Consequently, Sky wins four of the six available packages, with the other two are taken by
Setanta Sports.
December – Sky's 13 years of covering golf's
PGA Tour ends due to
Setanta Sports winning the rights to coverage of the tour from the start of 2007.[14]
January – Sky Sports regains the rights to golf's
PGA Tour.[15]
3 April –
Sky 3D launches, initially as a commercial channel. The first event to be shown is a football match. Residential customers get access to the channel on 1 October.[16][17]
7–10 April – Sky Sports shows coverage of golf's
Masters Tournament for the first time. It shows the first two rounds exclusively live and shares coverage of rounds 3 and 4 with the BBC.[24]
2012
9 March –
Sky Sports F1 launches following the purchase of coverage of every race of the
Formula One.[25] Around half of the races are to be shown exclusively by Sky Sports. This is Sky's first full-time channel dedicated to a single sport.
7 August – Sky Sports broadcasts the
FA Community Shield for the final time, having screened the event since 1990.
Due to poor viewing figures, Sky Sports decides to stop showing
FIM World Speedway.[27] Eurosport replaces Sky Sports, who had been the rights holder for over a decade.
2013
6–9 June – Sky Sports broadcasts darts'
UK Open for the final time.
30 June – Sky Sports launches its first temporary channel Sky Sports Ashes to provide full coverage of the
2013 Ashes Series. Temporary channel renames of this nature is now common practice within Sky, both for sports and movies.[28]
August – Cricket AM is broadcast for the final time.
September –
Sky Sports shows coverage of the
US Open (tennis) for the final time, having shown the event every years since 1991. It had decided not to bid for the rights to the 2016 tournament.[36]
November – After 20 seasons on air, the final edition of rugby league magazine Boots 'N' All is broadcast.
24 August –
Sky Sports Mix launches. It is available to all Sky customers, and is designed to offer a sampling of content from the full range of Sky Sports networks to non-Sky Sports customers.[38][39]
27 November – Sky Sports announces a deal to bring extensive coverage of
netball to TV screens. It shows the coverage on its non-premium channel
Sky Sports Mix.[40]
After more than 20 years, Sky's coverage of British Speedway ends. The rights move to
BT Sport.[41]
2017
18 July –
Sky Sports is revamped with the numbered channels being replaced by sports-specific channels. These include two channels dedicated to football, a cricket channel and a golf channel. Other sports are moved to two new channels – Action and Arena – and a showcase channel called Sky Sports Main Event is launched which features simulcasts of the top events being shown on Sky Sports that day.[42] Also,
Sky Sports News drops the HQ label.
3–6 August – Sky Sports replaces the BBC as live broadcaster of golf's
Women's British Open.[43]
10 August-1 September –
Sky Sports broadcasts eight matches live from the
2017 Women's Cricket Super League. This marks Sky’s first major foray into women’s cricket.[44] Sky expands its coverage the following year, showing 12 matches from the
2018 event.[45]
14 February –
BT and
Sky have agreed a £4.4bn three-year deal to show live Premiership football matches from 2019 to 2022, but the amount falls short of the £5.1bn deal struck in 2015.[46]
12 May – Sky's coverage of the
European Rugby Champions Cup ends after 15 years of coverage of the event when the rights to the tournament transfer to BT Sport. It also loses its coverage of the
Pro14 competition to
Premier Sports.
May – Sky's 20+ years of coverage of
La Liga ends when the rights transfer to
Eleven Sports. It also loses its rights to the
Eredivise and the Chinese Super League to the new channel.[47]
8 August – Sky Sports takes over from BT Sport as broadcaster of cricket's
Caribbean Premier League.
6 September – Apart from England's home matches, Sky Sports is the exclusive broadcaster of football's new
UEFA Nations League tournament.
September – Sky Sports resumes covering the
NBA after a decade on other networks.[48]
December – Sky Sports ends its coverage of
tennis after more than 25 years when its rights to the ATP Tour transfer
Amazon Prime.[49]
20 June – U.S.
professional wrestling promotion
WWE announces that its programming would move to BT Sport beginning in 2020, ending a relationship that dated back to Sky's launch in 1989.[54]
2020s
2020
June – With the resumption of play in the
2019–20 Premier League due to the
Coronavirus pandemic in the United Kingdom, the Premier League announces that it will show all remaining matches on British television, split primarily across Sky, BT, and Amazon. A large number of these matches are scheduled for free-to-air broadcasts, with Sky airing 25 on
Pick.[55]
1 August – Sky Sports becomes the exclusive broadcaster of live coverage of the
Scottish Professional Football League.[56] In recent seasons Sky had shared the rights with BT Sport.
6 August – Sky announces that Sunday Supplement will not be returning for the 2020/21 season.[57]
3 September – Sky Sports NFL launches. It is an in-season rebrand of Sky Sports Action and provides round-the clock coverage of the NFL. As well as live and recorded coverage of games, output includes simulcasts of magazine shows from
NFL Network such as Good Morning Football and NFL Total Access.[58] The channel broadcasts until early February 2021.
8 September – It is announced that all of September's Premier League fixtures will be shown on TV due to fans not being into stadiums due to the Coronavirus pandemic. Sky shows six of the eleven extra TV games.[59]
13 November – The Premier League confirms that the broadcasting of matches via pay-per-view will end and that all games in December and January will be shown by either Sky Sports and BT Sport with one game also being shown on both Amazon Prime and the BBC.[61]
April – Sky begins showing
Extreme E motor racing.[63]
7 May – Sky Sports ends a decade of coverage of the Challenge Cup when it shows two quarter-finals from the
2021 Challenge Cup.[64]
13 May – The
Premier League announces that, for the first time, the next three-year broadcasting contact has been awarded without a bidding process. Consequently, Sky Sports is paying the same amount for the same packages it was awarded for the 2019-2022 contact.[65]
June –
After more than 25 years with Sky Sports, fights promoted by
Matchroom Sport stop being shown on Sky Sports. These fights move to streaming service
DAZN.[66][67]
To ensure boxing continues on Sky Sports, Sky announces two new boxing contracts, with
Top Rank for American and international boxing, and with BOXXER in the UK.[68] The first event from Sky's new deal with Top Rank takes place on 12 June.
13 August –
Sky Sports replaces BT Sport as broadcaster of Germany's
Bundesliga and Supercup.[69]
3 September – Sky Sports replaces BT Sport as the pay-TV broadcast partner of the
FA Women's Super League. Sky will show two fixtures per round - a total of 44 games/season - with some matches simulcast on
Sky One, and the BBC will show one fixture of which 18 of their 22 games will be on BBC One or BBC Two.[70]
2022
9 January – 6 February – Sky Sports and the BBC share coverage of the
African Cup of Nations with Sky Sports showing most of the games live.[71]
March – Sky Sports' coverage of the
UEFA Nations League ends when the rights transfer to Premier Sports.[72]
27 July – Sky Sports launches a UHD channel for Sky Sports Main Event.[73]
September – Sky Sports begins showing coverage of
Notre Dame home matches. This is the first time that Sky Sports has shown live coverage of the
NCAA.
24 October – Sky Sports and the GAA announce a mutual agreement to end their broadcast partnership after nine years.[74][75] The rights transfer to the BBC.
2023
10 January – Sky Sports begins showing South Africa’s new T20 cricket league.[76]
12 June – Sky Sports's coverage of the
NBA ends ahead of a later announcement that
TNT Sports will take over the rights to show NBA in the UK from the
2023–24 NBA season onwards.[79]
28 August – Sky Sports returns to the broadcasting of tennis when it begins a new five-year deal to broadcast the
US Open.[80]
18 November – Following an agreement with
ESPN, Sky Sports starts showing three
College Football games a week plus the Bowl season and ESPN's pre-game show College Gameday. The deal also includes the 2024 College football season.[81]
November - As part of the aforementioned deal with ESPN, Sky Sports will show three
College Basketball matches each week.
2024
January – Coverage of the
ATP Tour returns to
Sky Sports, having been with Amazon Prime for the previous five years.[82]
11 February – Sky Sports launches a full time
tennis channel, Sky Sports Tennis.[83]
19 March-8 April – Sky Sports shows coverage of College Basketball's
March Madness tournament for the first time.[84]
29 May – Sky will close its standard definition feeds of Sky Sports.[85]
August – Sky Sports+ will launch. This will allow Sky to show up to 100 events concurrently. Sky says that this will result in a 50% increase in the amount of sport that Sky will broadcast.[86] A Sky Sports + linear channel will also be available.[87]
August – Sky Sports will live stream every match of the opening weekend of the 2024/25 EFL season live, including the games scheduled for 3pm.
5 February –
Sky Television launches at 6.00pm. The channel line-up consists of a sports channel but is a pan-European service called
Eurosport rather than a Sky-branded UK channel.
1990
January–March – Sky shows live coverage of England's cricketing tour to the
West Indies. This is the first time that full live coverage of an overseas tour has been shown in the UK. The coverage is broadcast on
Sky One.
11 February –
Sky Movies broadcasts its first special event – the boxing fight between
Mike Tyson and Buster Douglas, doing so six days after Sky Movies becomes the UK's first pay television channel. Sky Movies shows all of Sky's premium
boxing fights until they transfer to Sky Sports after it becomes a pay channel in 1992.
27 March –
BSB launches and among the channel line-up is a sports service called
The Sports Channel.
2 November – Sky TV and
BSB merge. The new company is called
BSkyB.[1] Two of BSB's five channels are closed immediately but The Sports Channel stays on air.
1991
January – The Sports Channel covers its first major tennis tournament when it broadcasts live coverage of the
Australian Open. It goes on to show the event until 1994.
20 April –
Sky Sports launches, replacing the
BSB Sports Channel.
Spring – Sky Sports shows live coverage of the newly created
World League of American Football. Channel 4 also covers the competition with a weekly Saturday morning highlights programme.
6–22 May –
Eurosport briefly closes after the competing
Screensport channel had filed a complaint to the
European Commission over its corporate structure.[2]TF1 Group subsequently steps in and replaces
BSkyB as Eurosport's joint owners.
14–25 July – Sky Sports broadcasts full live coverage of the
1991 World Student Games, which are held in the UK. This is the only time that Sky has broadcast a multi-sport event.
26 August – Sky begins its coverage of the
US Open (tennis) tournament, beginning a relationship with the event which lasts until 2015.
1992
22 February-25 March – Sky shows its first major
cricket tournament when it broadcasts exclusive live coverage of the
1992 Cricket World Cup. This is the beginning of Sky's coverage of the event which continues to this day and is therefore the longest set of rights that Sky Sports holds.
18 May – Sky purchases the live rights to the newly formed football
Premier League for £304 million.[3]
15 August – Sky Sports launches Sports Saturday. The programme follows the same format as the BBC's Grandstand programme featuring a mix of sporting action, concluding with the day's football results.
16 August – To mark the start of Sky Sports's coverage of the
Premier League, the channel launches an afternoon-long football programme called Super Sunday. The first programme sees the first use of a
score bug, a
digital on-screen graphic displaying the current score. Initially only used for football coverage, it is soon extended to other sports coverage and is soon taken up by other broadcasters.
17 August – Monday Night Football makes its debut on Sky Sports as part of Sky's deal to show Premier League matches on Monday evenings. This is the first time that domestic football has been shown in the UK on Monday evenings.
31 August – Sky Sports broadcasts
World Wrestling Federation's SummerSlam '92 in full. This is the first time that full coverage of a WWF event is shown in the UK.
1 September – Sky Sports becomes a subscription channel.
Sky signs a deal with the newly formed World Darts Council, since renamed the
Professional Darts Corporation (PDC), to broadcast three of its tournaments.
22–24 September – Sky Sports becomes the exclusive broadcaster of
golf's
Ryder Cup and has shown the event exclusive live ever since.
1 November –
Sky Sports Gold launches. Ut broadcasts for three hours a night, three nights a week.
1996
Following an approach by
Rupert Murdoch to British
rugby league clubs to form a new Super League, the sport agrees to the proposals, which amongst other things sees the sport move from a winter to a summer season.
June – Sky Sports increases its coverage of women's sport by broadcasting women's cricket[8] and women's golf [9] for the first time.
16 August –
Sky Sports 3 launches. The new channel showcases the Football League, which Sky now holds the rights to. Sky Sports 3 also becomes the home to Sky's coverage of the
Scottish Premier League. This is the first time that the SPL has been shown across the UK. The channel broadcasts part-time, from midday until midnight.
Sky Sports is renamed Sky Sports 1
Sky Sports Gold closes although some of its programmes continue to be shown for a while on the other Sky Sports channels.
26 October – Sky's coverage of
Major League Baseball ends after showing MLB for the past four years.
November – Sky Sports begins showing live coverage of the
England national rugby union team, replacing the BBC which had held the right for many decades.
February – Sky Sports broadcasts matches from the
Six Nations championships for the first time as part of its contract to show England's rugby union games. It does so until 2001.
15 August – On the first day of the
1998–99 football season, the first edition of Soccer Saturday is broadcast. The afternoon-long football scores and results service replaces Sports Saturday.
1 October –
Sky Digital launches and this is marked by the launch of the UK's first rolling sports news channel
Sky Sports News.
15 November – Rival digital television service
OnDigital launches. Sky had originally been a partner in the venture but was forced to pull out by the
Independent Television Commission. However, some Sky channels, including two
Sky Sports channels (Sky Sports 1 and Sky Sports 3 – Sky Sports 2 is added later – do appear on the service.
1999
April – Sky Sports launches its interactive service
Sky Sports Active.
Sky Sports broadcasts a home
cricket Test Match live for the first time as part of a joint deal with
Channel 4. This arrangement continues until 2005.
22 August –
Sky Sports Xtra launches, initially primarily as an interactive service.[10]
Sunday Supplement launches, providing a Sunday morning discussion of the previous day's football.
October – Sky Sports covers the
Rugby League World Cup for the first time, sharing the rights with the BBC.
2001
Sky's exclusive live coverage of the England football team ends following the rights transferring to the BBC. Sky had held the rights since the days of BSB's Sports Channel.
4–7 July – Sky Sports shows the first edition of a new overseas darts tournament, the
Las Vegas Desert Classic. Sky continues to show the event until it ends in 2009.
August – Coverage of the Football League reverts to Sky Sports after one season with ITV, which the broadcaster had intended would kick-start the
ITV Sport Channel which failed due to the massive price that ITV had paid for the rights.
Following the collapse on
ITV Digital, Sky Sports takes over as broadcaster of tennis’
ATP tour.
22 October – Sky becomes the new broadcaster of
rugby union's European clubs tournament
Heineken Cup.
2004
11 June –
At the Races relaunches as a stand-alone venture. Between 2000 and 2003 the channel had been on air in conjunction with
Channel 4.
August – Football First launches. The programme allows viewers to choose the game they want to watch.
2005
8 January –
Premier League Snooker is relaunched with Sky Sports being the broadcaster of the event, which takes place over a four-month period.
20 January – Sky Sports shows the first night of a new tournament
Premier League Darts. The League is a new format and is played over a number of one-off nights, generally every Thursday. Sky continues to show the event to this day.
2006
Sky Sports becomes the exclusive broadcaster of all live cricket matches in the UK following the
ECB awarding Sky exclusive coverage of all of England's home tests, one-day internationals and Twenty20 Internationals.[13]
May – The first edition of Cricket AM is broadcast on Sky Sports and Sky One. Based on its successful
football-related counterpart Soccer AM, it broadcasts during the footballing off-season.
22 May – Sky launches its high definition service when
Sky One HD and
Sky Sports 1 HD being broadcasting.
August – The
European Union objects to what it saw as a
monopoly on television football rights and demands the 2007 contract be split into separate packages of 23 games. Consequently, Sky wins four of the six available packages, with the other two are taken by
Setanta Sports.
December – Sky's 13 years of covering golf's
PGA Tour ends due to
Setanta Sports winning the rights to coverage of the tour from the start of 2007.[14]
January – Sky Sports regains the rights to golf's
PGA Tour.[15]
3 April –
Sky 3D launches, initially as a commercial channel. The first event to be shown is a football match. Residential customers get access to the channel on 1 October.[16][17]
7–10 April – Sky Sports shows coverage of golf's
Masters Tournament for the first time. It shows the first two rounds exclusively live and shares coverage of rounds 3 and 4 with the BBC.[24]
2012
9 March –
Sky Sports F1 launches following the purchase of coverage of every race of the
Formula One.[25] Around half of the races are to be shown exclusively by Sky Sports. This is Sky's first full-time channel dedicated to a single sport.
7 August – Sky Sports broadcasts the
FA Community Shield for the final time, having screened the event since 1990.
Due to poor viewing figures, Sky Sports decides to stop showing
FIM World Speedway.[27] Eurosport replaces Sky Sports, who had been the rights holder for over a decade.
2013
6–9 June – Sky Sports broadcasts darts'
UK Open for the final time.
30 June – Sky Sports launches its first temporary channel Sky Sports Ashes to provide full coverage of the
2013 Ashes Series. Temporary channel renames of this nature is now common practice within Sky, both for sports and movies.[28]
August – Cricket AM is broadcast for the final time.
September –
Sky Sports shows coverage of the
US Open (tennis) for the final time, having shown the event every years since 1991. It had decided not to bid for the rights to the 2016 tournament.[36]
November – After 20 seasons on air, the final edition of rugby league magazine Boots 'N' All is broadcast.
24 August –
Sky Sports Mix launches. It is available to all Sky customers, and is designed to offer a sampling of content from the full range of Sky Sports networks to non-Sky Sports customers.[38][39]
27 November – Sky Sports announces a deal to bring extensive coverage of
netball to TV screens. It shows the coverage on its non-premium channel
Sky Sports Mix.[40]
After more than 20 years, Sky's coverage of British Speedway ends. The rights move to
BT Sport.[41]
2017
18 July –
Sky Sports is revamped with the numbered channels being replaced by sports-specific channels. These include two channels dedicated to football, a cricket channel and a golf channel. Other sports are moved to two new channels – Action and Arena – and a showcase channel called Sky Sports Main Event is launched which features simulcasts of the top events being shown on Sky Sports that day.[42] Also,
Sky Sports News drops the HQ label.
3–6 August – Sky Sports replaces the BBC as live broadcaster of golf's
Women's British Open.[43]
10 August-1 September –
Sky Sports broadcasts eight matches live from the
2017 Women's Cricket Super League. This marks Sky’s first major foray into women’s cricket.[44] Sky expands its coverage the following year, showing 12 matches from the
2018 event.[45]
14 February –
BT and
Sky have agreed a £4.4bn three-year deal to show live Premiership football matches from 2019 to 2022, but the amount falls short of the £5.1bn deal struck in 2015.[46]
12 May – Sky's coverage of the
European Rugby Champions Cup ends after 15 years of coverage of the event when the rights to the tournament transfer to BT Sport. It also loses its coverage of the
Pro14 competition to
Premier Sports.
May – Sky's 20+ years of coverage of
La Liga ends when the rights transfer to
Eleven Sports. It also loses its rights to the
Eredivise and the Chinese Super League to the new channel.[47]
8 August – Sky Sports takes over from BT Sport as broadcaster of cricket's
Caribbean Premier League.
6 September – Apart from England's home matches, Sky Sports is the exclusive broadcaster of football's new
UEFA Nations League tournament.
September – Sky Sports resumes covering the
NBA after a decade on other networks.[48]
December – Sky Sports ends its coverage of
tennis after more than 25 years when its rights to the ATP Tour transfer
Amazon Prime.[49]
20 June – U.S.
professional wrestling promotion
WWE announces that its programming would move to BT Sport beginning in 2020, ending a relationship that dated back to Sky's launch in 1989.[54]
2020s
2020
June – With the resumption of play in the
2019–20 Premier League due to the
Coronavirus pandemic in the United Kingdom, the Premier League announces that it will show all remaining matches on British television, split primarily across Sky, BT, and Amazon. A large number of these matches are scheduled for free-to-air broadcasts, with Sky airing 25 on
Pick.[55]
1 August – Sky Sports becomes the exclusive broadcaster of live coverage of the
Scottish Professional Football League.[56] In recent seasons Sky had shared the rights with BT Sport.
6 August – Sky announces that Sunday Supplement will not be returning for the 2020/21 season.[57]
3 September – Sky Sports NFL launches. It is an in-season rebrand of Sky Sports Action and provides round-the clock coverage of the NFL. As well as live and recorded coverage of games, output includes simulcasts of magazine shows from
NFL Network such as Good Morning Football and NFL Total Access.[58] The channel broadcasts until early February 2021.
8 September – It is announced that all of September's Premier League fixtures will be shown on TV due to fans not being into stadiums due to the Coronavirus pandemic. Sky shows six of the eleven extra TV games.[59]
13 November – The Premier League confirms that the broadcasting of matches via pay-per-view will end and that all games in December and January will be shown by either Sky Sports and BT Sport with one game also being shown on both Amazon Prime and the BBC.[61]
April – Sky begins showing
Extreme E motor racing.[63]
7 May – Sky Sports ends a decade of coverage of the Challenge Cup when it shows two quarter-finals from the
2021 Challenge Cup.[64]
13 May – The
Premier League announces that, for the first time, the next three-year broadcasting contact has been awarded without a bidding process. Consequently, Sky Sports is paying the same amount for the same packages it was awarded for the 2019-2022 contact.[65]
June –
After more than 25 years with Sky Sports, fights promoted by
Matchroom Sport stop being shown on Sky Sports. These fights move to streaming service
DAZN.[66][67]
To ensure boxing continues on Sky Sports, Sky announces two new boxing contracts, with
Top Rank for American and international boxing, and with BOXXER in the UK.[68] The first event from Sky's new deal with Top Rank takes place on 12 June.
13 August –
Sky Sports replaces BT Sport as broadcaster of Germany's
Bundesliga and Supercup.[69]
3 September – Sky Sports replaces BT Sport as the pay-TV broadcast partner of the
FA Women's Super League. Sky will show two fixtures per round - a total of 44 games/season - with some matches simulcast on
Sky One, and the BBC will show one fixture of which 18 of their 22 games will be on BBC One or BBC Two.[70]
2022
9 January – 6 February – Sky Sports and the BBC share coverage of the
African Cup of Nations with Sky Sports showing most of the games live.[71]
March – Sky Sports' coverage of the
UEFA Nations League ends when the rights transfer to Premier Sports.[72]
27 July – Sky Sports launches a UHD channel for Sky Sports Main Event.[73]
September – Sky Sports begins showing coverage of
Notre Dame home matches. This is the first time that Sky Sports has shown live coverage of the
NCAA.
24 October – Sky Sports and the GAA announce a mutual agreement to end their broadcast partnership after nine years.[74][75] The rights transfer to the BBC.
2023
10 January – Sky Sports begins showing South Africa’s new T20 cricket league.[76]
12 June – Sky Sports's coverage of the
NBA ends ahead of a later announcement that
TNT Sports will take over the rights to show NBA in the UK from the
2023–24 NBA season onwards.[79]
28 August – Sky Sports returns to the broadcasting of tennis when it begins a new five-year deal to broadcast the
US Open.[80]
18 November – Following an agreement with
ESPN, Sky Sports starts showing three
College Football games a week plus the Bowl season and ESPN's pre-game show College Gameday. The deal also includes the 2024 College football season.[81]
November - As part of the aforementioned deal with ESPN, Sky Sports will show three
College Basketball matches each week.
2024
January – Coverage of the
ATP Tour returns to
Sky Sports, having been with Amazon Prime for the previous five years.[82]
11 February – Sky Sports launches a full time
tennis channel, Sky Sports Tennis.[83]
19 March-8 April – Sky Sports shows coverage of College Basketball's
March Madness tournament for the first time.[84]
29 May – Sky will close its standard definition feeds of Sky Sports.[85]
August – Sky Sports+ will launch. This will allow Sky to show up to 100 events concurrently. Sky says that this will result in a 50% increase in the amount of sport that Sky will broadcast.[86] A Sky Sports + linear channel will also be available.[87]
August – Sky Sports will live stream every match of the opening weekend of the 2024/25 EFL season live, including the games scheduled for 3pm.