Sign-up and post on Iberkshires today.It's Free!
Already a member? Log In
39°  H- 70%
The Berkshires online guide to events, news and Berkshire County community information.
Monday December 1, 2008
 Make us your homepage!
 

Daily Digest

Like to Write?
Passionate about local sports? Into the environment? Obsessive about local meetings?

Let your neighbors know what's going on in Berkshire County! iBerkshires accepts submissions about local events, news and opinion pieces. There are openings for freelance work, too, for qualified candidates. E-mail tdaniels@iberkshires.com to find out more.
Got Flu?
Track its spread through Google!
How much is heating oil this week?
How to get heating help
Win a restaurant gift certificate.
Need to contact iBerkshires? Here's how.

Obituaries

Mildred Clark Lasher, 99
Gerald J. Baclawski, 71
Gino J. Cortesi, 83
Adrien "Lefty" Lefevre, 85
Peter G. Arlos, 82
Former Pittsfield councilor
More obituaries

What's Playing


A television-hero pup (John Travolta) thinks he's a real superdog in the Disney film "Bolt."
Movie schedules and times

Sales Fliers

 
 

Columnists

That's Life

Dealing with Dirty Laundry

Independent Investor

Economy Will Dictate Agenda, Not President

Pick of the Week

Staind

Sports 'N Stuff

NFL Midseason Report Card



Other Stuff

Long Waits at State's Unemployment Offices
Federal government has 8,000 job openings
The president-elect's new Web site
www.change.gov

 Search: 
 for    

Related Stories

 
Printer Friendly Version
   Recommend this story to a friend

NFL Caves; Pats Fans Clinch Broadcast Victory

By Tammy Daniels - December 26, 2007

NORTH ADAMS - Bowing to pressure from fans and lawmakers, the National Football League has decided to broadcast Saturday's New England Patriots game to a wider audience.

The Patriots are expected to end the season with a unbeaten record. If they're the victors in Saturday's showdown with the New York Giants, they'll finish up 16-0, the first team to do so since the Miami Dolphins in 1972.

In what The Associated Press described as "a major concession," the league announced Wednesday that the NFL Network game will be simulcast on NBC and CBS.

It will be the first three-network simulcast in NFL history and the first of any NFL game since the first Super Bowl in 1967, according to The AP report.

The game was to be aired only over the fledgling NFL Network and in the Boston metro area over WCVB-TV Channel 5. That had fans without access to the channels up in arms.

A number of lawmakers, including U.S. Sens. John F. Kerry, D-Mass., and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., called on NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to be more flexible in scheduling the broadcast to allow more fans to see the game.

Kerry estimated the game would be blacked out for some 250,000 fans in Western Mass. Leahy took Goodell to task for not understanding New England, not just Boston, was the team's primary market.

Related story
  • Kerry's Complaint

    According to league rules, games can only be shown on local stations in teams' primary markets. WCVB-TV had bid for the rights to show the Pats last game of the regular season, but station officials said last week that did not include areas outside the metro area.

    Time Warner Cable of Albany, N.Y., which covers the Berkshires, did not immediately return a phone call on Wednesday on whether the game would be available on Channel 5 here.

    The NFL and the cable companies have been at loggerheads over how the new network would be carried. While it's available in some satellite TV sports packages, Time Warner does not carry it and Comcast offers it as part of a higher-tier package.

    Goodell had rejected a requests to simulcast the game on the broadcast networks; Kerry and Leahy threatened to call for Senate hearings about the proliferation of premium sports networks and anti-trust issues.

    "We have taken this extraordinary step because it is in the best interest of our fans," Goodell said in a statement. "What we have seen for the past year is a very strong consumer demand for NFL Network. We appreciate CBS and NBC delivering the NFL Network telecast on Saturday night to the broad audience that deserves to see this potentially historic game. Our commitment to the NFL Network is stronger than ever."
  • Your Comments
    Post Comment
    No Comments


    iBerkshires.com Text Ads
    www.ateffinejeweler.com
    iberkshires.com
    www.iberkshires.com
    sabor-restaurante.com
    Advertise on iBerkshires.com



    Essentials
    Berkshire Nightlife
    Berkshire Photos
    Berkshire Wallpaper
    Borrow Movies
    Class Reunion Page
    Columnists
    Dannyoart.com
    Movie Times
    Obituaries
    Randy Trabold

    Enter your email address below to receive our FREE iBerkshires.com Newsletter

    | Home | A & E | Automotive | Business | Community News | Dining | Lodging & Travel |
    | Real Estate | Schools | Sports & Outdoors | Berkshires Weather | Weddings | Berkshires Map |
    Advertise | Recommend This Page | Help
    Contact Us | Privacy Policy| User Agreement
    Execution Time: 232 ms