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Braves TBS Baseball (1973–2007) College Football on TBS (1982–2006) NASCAR on TBS (1983–2000) NBA on TBS (1984–2002) U.S. Olympic Gold (1989–92) NCAA Beach Volleyball Championship (2016–17)
TBS (originally an initialism of Turner Broadcasting System) is an American basic cable television network owned by the Networks division of Warner Bros. Discovery. [1] It carries a variety of programming, with a focus on comedy, along with some sports events through TNT Sports, including Major League Baseball, Stanley Cup playoffs, and the NCAA men's basketball tournament.
The 2024–25 network television schedule for the five major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the prime time hours from September 2024 to August 2025. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series canceled after the 2023–24 television season .
On May 22, 2024, ESPN announced that it had sub-licensed a portion of the College Football Playoff broadcast rights to TNT Sports from the 2024 season—the first to feature a new 12-team tournament format—through 2028. Under the agreement, TNT Sports will broadcast two CFP first round games annually, splitting the games with ESPN and ABC.
In the 2008 season, Chip Caray, Ron Darling, and Buck Martinez formed the lead broadcast crew for Sunday games on TBS. [13] Darling and Martinez have taken turns as analysts. Marc Fein, the last TBS Braves Baseball studio host, had the same duties here, providing updates throughout the day from other MLB games. Johnson also hosts from time-to-time.
Bally Sports Kansas City will broadcast all but one of the Royals’ 162 games this season. The lone exception will be May 10, when the Royals play at the Angels. That game will be on Apple TV+.
Atlanta Braves baseball games had been a local staple on Atlanta independent station WTBS (channel 17, now WPCH-TV; which, like TBS, was owned by Ted Turner's Turner Broadcasting System) since Turner acquired the team's broadcast rights in 1973, and subsequently gained national prominence when the station was uplinked to satellite in December 1976, becoming one of America's first superstations.
Since 2010, the NCAA has had a joint contract with CBS and Warner Bros. Discovery.The coverage of the tournament is split between CBS, TNT, TBS, and truTV. [1]Broadcasters from CBS, TBS, and TNT's sports coverage are shared across all four networks, with CBS' college basketball teams supplemented with TNT's NBA teams, while studio segments take place at the CBS Broadcast Center in New York ...