New York Post

Give us the actual start times, Fox

- Andrew Marchand amarchand@nypost.com

MEMO to Fox Sports: Tell us the right start times for the World Cup games.

Fox is disrespect­ing its audience by promoting its World Cup games an hour earlier than when they actually kick off. It’s a bad-faith TV practice that most, if not all, of the networks perpetrate, but it is particular­ly egregious for the World Cup from Russia.

Most fans who want to watch the games on a work day, like Friday, have to make s peci a l arrangemen­ts to see it. But Fox promoted, on screen, its marquee Friday matchup of Spain-Portugal by listing its coverage starting at 1 p.m., when the game was scheduled for 2.

On Saturday, it has the nerve to say France-Australia is at 5 a.m. when it actually begins at 6 a.m.

Fox Sports declined an on-the-record comment when asked to defend the practice, but officials said that they try to build up to kickoff. Among the examples they used, the officials compared it to a movie in which you go to see previews. We countered that previews run approximat­ely 15 minutes.

The other point the officials made is that it is the industry standard to not say the exact start time.

The everyone-does-it defense doesn’t fly, especially because the World Cup is being aired from Russia. The time difference makes it difficult for people to know when games actually begin. Fox doesn’t make it easier, while just annoying viewers who plan an hour before kickoff.

What is so frustratin­g about the practice by all networks, not just Fox, is they could just say: Pregame coverage begins at 1 p.m., while the kickoff is at 2.

It is easy and builds trust with your audience. The idea that networks will somehow get more viewers by telling people wrong informatio­n is inane. TV people, you are just annoying your most loyal audience members!

Quick Clicks: When ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel and Sen. Ted Cruz settle their feud at Texas Southern University by playing basketball against each other Saturday, they will have a special playby-play announcer: Gus Johnson.

Johnson, known for his excitable calls, will call the matchup, according to Fox Sports spokesman Eddie Motl.

Kimmel and Cruz have sparred on Twitter after, among other things, Kimmel compared Cruz’s looks to a blobfish. The segment is expected to be on Kimmel’s ABC show next week.

Incidental­ly, this was the World Cup on which Johnson was supposed to be Fox’s lead play-by-player, but, smartly, everyone involved realized it wasn’t a good idea considerin­g his inexperien­ce with the sport and the passion of the game’s fans.

Fox’s “Brownie Points” on its U.S. Open coverage is a winner. Course reporter Ken Brown hits the right notes, giving viewers a good feel of how a hole will play with creative demonstrat­ion methods, such as using a basketball to more easily show how a golf ball will roll. Brown’s passion for the segments comes through.

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