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UPDATED Tuesday 31 January 2012 @ 2:15 PM Eastern U.S.**
Confirming what I had surmised --correctly, as it turned out-- and already proceeded to update...Burnley at home has been moved up a day to Friday 17 February, with KO set for 8:00 PM GMT/3:00 PM U.S. EST (and please note that it's 3:00 Eastern and not an hour earlier as I mistakenly put it at the first attempt; Eastern U.S. time is 5 hours behind)
Fox Soccer Plus --a premium subscription channel available on various and sundry cable and satellite platforms (e.g., DirecTV channel 621)-- will screen the match live and will show it again same-day from 9:00 PM Eastern
Additional repeat screenings may end up on the FS+ schedule, and I'll post an update herein as the day of the match approaches
In the meanwhile, those with a serious interest in the general subject are invited to read on for the skinny on RFC and major European football competition as we screen it over this side --I've done some digging and have provided as comprehensive an overview as I could manage...
General notes regarding U.S. TV arrangements for 2011/12:
Setanta US, which had held exclusive U.S. rights to Football League match telecasts before going belly-up, had its programming and contractual broadcasting affairs absorbed by Fox under the brand
Fox Soccer Plus, which has taken on Setanta's past role of screening the Friday evening and Saturday tea time matches from the League Championship and other, more occasional fare from farther down the league
It should be borne in mind that FS+ a premium subscription channel (available on various and sundry cable and satellite platforms, and in particular on DirecTV channel 621) and costs $15 per month above and beyond other cable or satellite subscription fees; most sports bars have it as part of their menu of channels (but may not be open for business at kickoff time), and any establishment presuming to call itself a football pub does subscribe and is open for business at the appointed hour (but always --always-- phone first)
It also should be noted that the Fox Soccer properties have multiple contractual commitments (Premier League and UEFA Champions League above all, plus FA Cup, Serie A and MLS), and the Football League is near the bottom of the pecking order; for this reason, if there's any kind of schedule conflict --hypothetically speaking, not one but two Prem matches at tea-time, or a Prem match and another in Serie A-- then the Championship match would get bumped to a delayed first-time screening
Now, then --available for the Web-bound is the former FoxSoccer.tv streaming platform rebranded as
FoxSoccer2Go.com --at a subscription rate of $20 per month (or $170 for a year's subscription; see page for terms and conditions)-- which streams the Saturday tea time matches live and archives them afterwards (and I assume that this is limited to North American IPs)
As for other action, both
Fox Soccer Channel and FS+ will continue to screen live and delayed Prem and Serie A fare on matchdays and throughout the week, and FSC outbid ESPN for Champions League when the deal last came up for bidding, so that's where one will want to head on European matchdays for the next few seasons at least
With respect to Champions League, Fox screens group stage matches live across several of its U.S. channels, including of course FSC, FS+, the cable channel FX and regional Fox Sports Net affiliates (and DirecTV subscribers will have their choice of most if not all of them --check Channel 480 for the menu, and early kickoffs from Russia/Ukraine are shown live on one of the channels set aside for UEFA programming); they also fill hours upon hours of airtime with delayed and repeat screenings on the day and throughout the remainder of the week, so do check a guide for precise listings (and of course things become much less hectic with the arrival of the knockout stage)
Note also that the Champions League final has been moved to Saturday afternoon U.S. time, and it will screen live on free-to-air local Fox network affiliates for the foreseeable future --we're talking the same channel that shows
The Simpsons,
24,
American Idol, the NFL on Sundays in the fall and winter and baseball in the summer-- so to miss the Champions League final if you're an overseas visitor in the States on the day is an utter impossibility anymore; it'll be on the box in your hotel room
FSC, in addition to a regular daily hour's worth of Sky Sports News at both 2:00 AM and noon Eastern time and a nightly Fox Soccer Report out of Canada at 10:00 PM Eastern, also shows live World Cup and Euro qualifying fare, England friendlies and some full internationals, FA Cup matches and England international matches at the junior levels (and we got the Championship promotion play-off final live in 2011); for some of England's senior international matches, it's a matter of pay-per-view/pay-at-the-pub until the matches screen for free on FSC on a few days' delay
Absolutely indispensable to the U.S.-based enthusiast is ESPN with their
ESPN3 streaming platform, with Primera Division, Serie A and 1.Bundesliga galore, plus a smattering of Dutch Eredivisie and Portuguese Primeira Liga on there --the football junky's paradise, well and truly (
direct link here)
They archive whatever they stream live (with the exceptions, it seems, of matches that involve any of United, Liverpool and Chelsea --no doubt contractual issues with the respective clubs' in-house media properties; be there come the appointed hour for those), so those who can't be there as it happens may seek to remain ignorant of a given result and stream the match from archive at their leisure. I believe that registration is no longer required to access the stream, but access does seem to be restricted to North American IPs
ESPN Deportes is a cable/satellite property that shows plenty of games from Spain that also stream on ESPN3
Also,
GolTV continues to bring a steady diet of live and delayed Primera Division and 1.Bundesliga fare to screens across North America, plus featured Europa League matches thru the end of 2011/12 (after which Fox Soccer will take the wheel)
As with the Champions League, DirecTV channel 480 has a menu of up to eight live Europa League matches on matchdays from which subscribers may select, or they can watch all that are on offer simultaneously and channel-surf amongst them
Here are useful links for the football fan, whether the overseas visitor or the homeslice:
LiveSoccerTV.com listings and channel information
Fox Soccer Channel and Fox Soccer Plus quick-view schedules (use tab at upper right to select channel)
FSC and FS+ printable schedules in .pdf format
ESPN networks schedule (U.S. channels are ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNDeportes; others are ESPN's international platforms)
ESPN3 live and archived streaming platform w/guide
GolTV (mostly Primera Division, Bundesliga, Europa League)
Finally, and for the record:
RFC U.S. match exposure scorecard for 2007/8 Premier League season (first-time screenings by category; League matches only)
Fox Soccer Channel/LIVE: 10 of 38*
Fox Soccer Channel/Same-day delay: 9 of 38
Setanta Sports Channel-Setanta Xtra/LIVE: 11 of 38**
Setanta Sports Channel/Same-day delay: 3 of 38
No U.S. TV: 5 of 38
RFC U.S. match exposure scorecard for 2006/7 Premier League season (first-time screenings by category; League matches only)
Fox Soccer Channel/LIVE: 13 of 38*
Fox Soccer Channel/Same-day delay: 7 of 38
Setanta Sports Channel-Setanta Xtra/LIVE: 9 of 38**
Setanta Sports Channel/Same-day delay: 2 of 38
No U.S. TV: 7 of 38
*Among these were all 5:15 Saturday, 4:00 Sunday and stand-alone Monday matches --thanks be to Sky for moving the fixtures to odd times, which left U.S. platforms with no real choice in the matter, as they show whatever game happens to be played at those times
**Among these were all stand-alone 12:45 Saturday and 1:45 Sunday matches, for reasons as stated above