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F1 Moving From NBC To ESPN Beginning In '18 As Part Of Multiyear Deal

F1 will move from NBC Sports to ESPN next year as part of a multiyear rights deal that is expected to be announced later today. Neither side would comment on financials, but ESPN is not believed to be paying a rights fee for the programming and will rely on a world feed to carry the races. The circuit's OTT rights are not part of this deal, as F1 will retain control over those rights -- a position that proved to be a sticking point with NBC, which had carried races on NBCSN since '13. F1 also pushed for a shorter deal length. The circuit, which is trying to build itself up under new ownership, did not want its U.S. rights to be tied down in any kind of long-term deal, sources said. “Formula 1 is a world class sports property that has tremendous upside long term,” said ESPN Exec VP/Programming & Scheduling Burke Magnus. He said F1 CEO & Exec Chair Chase Carey, Managing Dir of Commercial Operations Sean Bratches and their team are “incredibly talented and well positioned to take F1 to another whole level, particularly in the United States.” Magnus: “We’re happy to be their partner in that effort.” ESPN committed to televise all 21 races live next year -- 16 on ESPN2, three on ESPN and two on ABC. ABC will re-air the May 27 Monaco Grand Prix in the timeslot following the Indianapolis 500. ESPN has committed to carry all practice sessions, qualifying and races live and in replay on one of its platforms next year. “We had the ability on Sunday mornings on ESPN2 to slide the races right into the schedule,” Magnus said. “The design here is to lean heavily into the sport once again. It’s been a few years. We want to make it a big deal again.”

GROWING PROFILE IN U.S.: Carey and Bratches have made it clear that they are interested in adding a second U.S. race and doing more marketing around the sport in America -- two areas where ESPN can help. Magnus said F1 drivers and races will pop up on Disney networks occasionally -- even the non-sports ones -- to help the racing circuit grow in the U.S. NBC, which has touted itself as the U.S. television home of motorsports, still retains the rights to NASCAR through ’24 and IndyCar through next year. It also carries several smaller motorsports properties, like Red Bull GRC. An NBC Sports spokesperson said, "Although we take great pride in having grown Formula One’s visibility and viewership since we became its exclusive U.S. media rights holder in 2013, this will be our last season with the series. In this case, we chose not to enter into a new agreement in which the rights holder itself competes with us and our distribution partners. We wish the new owners of F1 well.” This season, NBC/NBCSN/CNBC are averaging 548,000 viewers for 14 F1 races, up 13% from the same point last season. For ESPN, the addition of F1 could rekindle a connection with motorsports fans, following decisions in recent years that has seen it drop rights for NASCAR and NHRA. ABC was the first U.S. broadcaster to carry a F1 race in ‘62, when “Wide World of Sports” aired highlights of the Monaco Grand Prix a week after the race. ESPN televised F1 races from '84-97.

DATE
TIME (ET)
EVENT
NET
March 25
12:55am
Australian GP
ESPN2
April 8
1:55am
Chinese GP
ESPN2
April 15
10:55am
Bahrain GP
ESPN2
April 29
8:55am
Azerbaijan GP
ESPN2
May 13
7:55am
Spanish GP
ESPN2
May 27
7:55am
Monaco GP
ESPN
May 27
3:30pm
Monaco GP (re-air)
ABC
June 10
1:55pm
Canadian GP
ESPN
June 24
7:55am
French GP
ESPN2
July 1
7:55am
Austrian GP
ESPN2
July 8
7:55am
British GP
ESPN
July 22
7:55am
German GP
ESPN2
July 29
7:55am
Hungarian GP
ESPN2
Aug. 26
7:55am
Belgian GP
ESPN2
Sept. 2
7:55am
Italian GP
ESPN2
Sept. 16
7:55am
Singapore GP
ESPN2
Sept. 30
7:55am
Russian GP
ESPN2
Oct. 7
12:55am
Japanese GP
ESPN2
Oct. 21
2:55pm
U.S. GP
ABC
Oct. 28
2:55pm
Mexican GP
ABC
Nov. 11
10:55am
Brazilian GP
ESPN2
Nov. 25
7:55am
Abu Dhabi GP
ESPN2

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