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ESPN (Brazil)

(Redirected from ESPN Brasil)

ESPN is the Brazilian division of ESPN Inc. Launched in March 1989 as Canal+, it was the first country-specific version of ESPN outside the United States, launched in June 1995. The channel has covered major sporting events, like the 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, and 2016 Summer Olympics; the 1998, 2006, 2010 and 2014 FIFA World Cup and the 1999, 2003 and 2007 Pan-American Games. High ratings and prestige in the segment have been marks of the channel; it also won the APCA award twice, in 1995 for "Best Sports Programming" and in 1998 for "Best Coverage of the 1998 FIFA World Cup".

ESPN
CountryBrazil
Broadcast areaBrazil
HeadquartersSão Paulo, São Paulo
Programming
Language(s)Portuguese
Picture format720p (16:9 HDTV)
(HD feed downgraded to letterboxed 480i for SDTV sets)
Ownership
OwnerESPN Inc.
(operated by The Walt Disney Company Latin America)
History
LaunchedESPN:
March 31, 1989
ESPN2:
2005
ESPN3:
April 29, 2009
ESPN4:
February 5, 2012
ESPN5:
January 24, 2014
ESPN6:
March 24, 2016
Former namesESPN:
Canal+ (1989–1991)
TVA Esportes (1991–1995)
ESPN Brasil (1995–2022)
ESPN2:
ESPN (2005–2022)
ESPN3:
ESPN HD (2009–2012)
ESPN+ (2012–2018)
ESPN2 (2018–2022)
ESPN4:
Fox Sports (2012–2022)
ESPN5:
Fox Sports 2 (2014–2024)
ESPN6:
ESPN Extra (2016–2024)
Links
Websitehttps://espn.com.br/
Availability
Streaming media
ESPN appWatch live
Disney+Watch live

Despite having a team that is regarded as one of the best in Brazilian sports broadcasting and important broadcasting rights for international competitions like La Liga, Premier League and the Bundesliga, major local series rights have historically not been present; the Campeonato Brasileiro, Copa do Brasil and the states' championships are held by local Grupo Globo and SporTV. ESPN, however, has purchased the rights to broadcast the 2009, 2010 and 2011 editions of the Copa do Brasil for TV and Campeonato Paulista, Copa Libertadores de América, Campeonato Brasileiro Série A and Copa Sudamericana for radio.

Brasil made a partnership with Rádio Eldorado[clarification needed] to broadcast sports on radio. The new Rádio Eldorado ESPN used Eldorado's radio assets and the team of commentators from ESPN Brasil. It was renamed Rádio Estadão ESPN in 2007 due to a partnership agreement with the O Estado de S. Paulo newspaper.[1]

In 2005 the company incorporated ESPN International coverage, starting to broadcast in two channels. Before this date, programs such as the SportsCenter International Edition, MLB and the NFL were transmitted directly from Bristol, Connecticut, with Portuguese audio from Andre Adler, Marco Alfaro, Sergio Cesario, Roby Porto, José Inácio Werneck, and Roberto Figueroa. Since 2005, shows and games are recorded and broadcast from its studios in São Paulo, though morning schedules continue to include USA and Latin American programs.

Prior to May 2011, programs produced by ESPN Brasil generally did not use in-game score graphics, though international programs had them. Beginning that month, ESPN Brasil began using the same score and other graphics used by the US channel.

In March 2012, the ESPN'S network in Brazil started with the broadcast 100% in HD with sports events and original programs. This is the same practice of ESPN in USA. The four channels of ESPN in Brazil is broadcast fully in HD.

In October 2013, ESPN launched a second screen app, ESPN Sync, to connect to broadcasts of football matches.[2][3]

On May 6, 2020, Brazil's antitrust regulator CADE announced that ESPN and Fox Sports could merge their operations in Brazil together as of January 1, 2022, and not before, due to Fox Sports' broadcast rights and structure in the country, with ESPN taking over broadcast rights and structure after the merger.[4]

In November 2021, it was announced that Disney would retire the ESPN Brasil brand after 26 years on air. ESPN Brasil became ESPN, while the current ESPN became ESPN 2, while the current ESPN 2 became ESPN 3, Fox Sports became ESPN 4. The change happened on January 17, 2022 and happened on February 15, 2024 for Fox Sports 2 and ESPN Extra as they became ESPN 5 and ESPN 6.[5][6]

ESPN channels in Brazil

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Five separate channels of ESPN exist in Brazil:[7]

  • ESPN (formerly ESPN Brasil), the main channel, more football orientated with live debate, news, interviews and major international football games.
  • ESPN2 (formerly ESPN), focused in US-based competitions (NBA, NFL and NHL).
  • ESPN3 (formerly ESPN2), focused in extreme sports, MLB, tennis, rugby, cycling, golf and poker.
  • ESPN4 (formerly Fox Sports), focused in motorsport, boxing, MMA and international football.
  • ESPN5 (formerly Fox Sports 2), focused in football, and WWE.
  • ESPN6 (formerly ESPN Extra), focused in extreme sports and wrestling.

ESPN Brazil significant programming rights

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Football

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Badminton

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Baseball

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Basketball

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Boxing

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  • ESPN Knockout

College Sports

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Cricket

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Cycling

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Futsal

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Golf

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Gridiron Football

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Handball

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Horse Racing

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Ice Hockey

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Marathon

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Mixed Martial Arts

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  • Kombat Taekwondo

Motorsport

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Multi-Sport Events

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Padel

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  • Premier Padel
  • A1 Padel

Polo

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Rugby

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Sailing

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Skiing

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Table Tennis

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Taekwondo

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Tennis

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Triathlon

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Volleyball

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Weightlifting

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Yachting

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Programs broadcast by ESPN Brazil

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  • Além da Bola
  • ATP Tour Uncovered
  • Bola da Vez
  • Cestou ESPN
  • Compacto NFL
  • Destaques da COMNEBOL Libertadores
  • Destaques da COMNEBOL Sudamericana
  • Destaques dos X Games
  • ESPN FC
  • ESPN Filmes
  • ESPN League
  • F1: The Inside Line
  • FA Cup Highlights
  • Futebol 90
  • Futebol 360
  • La Liga World
  • Linha de Passe
  • Mina de Passe
  • Momento ESPN
  • Mundo Premier League
  • MunDu Menezes
  • NBA Action
  • Pelas Quadras
  • Premier League Stories
  • Prévia da FA Cup
  • Resenha
  • Resenha da Rodada
  • Show da Rodada: La Liga
  • Show da Rodada: Premier League
  • Show da Rodada: Serie A
  • SportsCenter Abre o Jogo
  • SportsCenter Brazil
  • SportsCenter U.S.
  • UEFA Nations League: Match Day Highlights
  • UEFA Nations League: Match Night Highlights

ESPN Brazil staff

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  • Abel Neto – "Futebol 360" host
  • Airton Cunha – Tennis commentator
  • Alana Ambrósio – "Cestou ESPN" host
  • Alex Tseng – host
  • André Donke – soccer commentator
  • André Kfouri – Reporter; "ESPN League" and "SportsCenter" host
  • Amoroso – soccer commentator
  • André Linares – Reporter
  • André Plihal – "Resenha" and "Bola da Vez" host
  • Antonio Martoni – Rugby commentator
  • Antony Curti – NFL, College Football and MLB commentator; "ESPN League" co-host
  • Ari Aguiar – Play-by-play announcer and "ESPN League" host
  • Bruno Vicari – "SportsCenter" host
  • Caco da Motta - soccer commentator
  • Carlos Eugênio Simon – referee commentator
  • Celso Unzelte – soccer commentator
  • Christian Fittipaldi – IndyCar Series commentator
  • Cícero Mello – Reporter
  • Cledi Oliveira – Play-by-play announcer
  • Conrado Giulietti - Play-by-play announcer
  • Daniela Boaventura – "ESPN FC" host
  • Diego Lugano – soccer commentator and "Resenha" and "ESPN FC" co-host
  • Djalminha – soccer commentator and "Resenha" co-host
  • Edgard Mello Filho – Motorsport commentator
  • Eduarda Gonçalves - Reporter
  • Eduardo Affonso – Reporter
  • Eduardo Agra – NBA and College Basketball commentator
  • Eduardo de Menezes – Reporter and "Além da Bola" host
  • Eduardo Elias – "SportsCenter" host
  • Elton Serra - soccer commentator
  • Eugênio Leal – soccer commentator
  • Fábio Luciano – soccer commentator
  • Fausto Macieira – MotoGP commentator
  • Felipe Motta – "SportsCenter" host
  • Fernando Campos – soccer commentator
  • Fernando Meligeni - Tennis commentator
  • Fernando Nardini – Play-by-play announcer and "SportsCenter" co-host
  • Fernando Saraiva – soccer commentator
  • Gian Oddi – Soccer commentator
  • Gláucia Santiago – "SportsCenter" host
  • Gustavo Berton – Reporter
  • Gustavo Hofman – Soccer commentator and Reporter
  • Gustavo Zupak – Soccer commentator
  • Hamilton Rodrigues – Play-by-play announcer
  • Hugo Botelho – Play-by-play announcer
  • João Castelo Branco – Reporter
  • José Roberto Lux "Zé Boquinha" – NBA and College Basketball commentator
  • Juliana Tesser – MotoGP commentator
  • Léo Bertozzi – Soccer commentator
  • Leonardo Gaciba – referee commentator
  • Lilliany Nascimento - Reporter
  • Luciana Marianno – Play-by-play announcer
  • Luciano Amaral – "ESPN FC" host
  • Luiz Carlos Largo – Play-by-play announcer
  • Marcela Rafael – "SportsCenter" host
  • Mariana Spinelli – "SportsCenter" host
  • Mario Marra – soccer commentator
  • Matheus Pinheiro – Play-by-play announcer
  • Matheus Suman – Play-by-play announcer
  • Maurício Bonato – Play-by-play announcer
  • Mauro Naves – soccer commentator
  • Mendel Bydlowski – Reporter
  • Osvaldo Pascoal – soccer commentator
  • Paulo Antunes – NFL and MLB commentator; "ESPN League" co-host
  • Paulo Calçade – Soccer commentatorator
  • Paulo Soares – Play-by-play announcer and "SportsCenter" host
  • Pedro Henrique Torre – Reporter
  • Rafael Marques – soccer commentator
  • Rafael Reis – Reporter
  • Raphael Prates – soccer commentator
  • Renan do Couto – Play-by-play announcer
  • Renan Rocha – Play-by-play announcer
  • Renata Ruel – referee commentator
  • Renato Rodrigues – soccer commentator
  • Ricardo Bulgarelli – NBA commentator
  • Ricardo Melo – golf commentator
  • Roberta Barroso – Reporter
  • Rodrigo Bueno – soccer commentator
  • Rogério Vaughan – Play-by-play announcer
  • Rubens Pozzi – Reporter and Sportscenter co-host
  • Silas Pereira – soccer commentator
  • Teliana Pereira - tennis commentator
  • Thiago Alves – Play-by-play announcer and Motorsport commentator
  • Thiago Simões – Soccer and NHL commentator
  • Ubiratan Leal – Soccer and MLB commentator
  • Vinicius Moura – Play-by-play announcer
  • Vinicius Nicoletti – Reporter
  • Victoria Leite - Reporter
  • Victor Martins – Motorsport commentator
  • Weinny Eirado – NFL, MLB and College Football commentator
  • William Tavares – "Futebol 90" host; play-by-play announcer and "Linha de Passe" co-host
  • Wlamir Marques – FIBA Basketball commentator
  • Zé Elias – soccer commentator
  • Zinho – soccer commentator

See also

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References

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  1. ^ (in Portuguese)Estadão, Quem Somos,
  2. ^ "In advance of the 2014 World Cup, ESPN partners with Mobovivo to launch ESPN Sync – Lost Remote". Archived from the original on January 19, 2014. Retrieved January 21, 2014.
  3. ^ "Mobovivo and ESPN Sync Soccer to the Second Screen". November 14, 2013.
  4. ^ "Cade aprova fusão entre Disney e Fox, e ESPN poderá transmitir Libertadores".
  5. ^ "Disney 'mata' ESPN Brasil após 26 anos no ar e muda o nome do Fox Sports". Notícias da TV (in Portuguese). November 12, 2021. Retrieved November 24, 2021.
  6. ^ "Disney devolve marca Fox Sports, e canal esportivo deixa de vez o Brasil após 12 anos - 20/10/2023 - Televisão - F5". f5.folha.uol.com.br. Retrieved November 5, 2023.
  7. ^ (in Portuguese) "Sobre a ESPN". ESPN Press Room Brasil. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
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