Toronto Star

TNT ready to bring Cup to cable viewers

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Turner Sports has had its share of significan­t sports events. The Stanley Cup final, though, will be the first time a champion from one of North America’s four major pro sports will air on TNT.

Saturday’s Game 1 between the Florida Panthers and Vegas Golden Knights also marks the first time since 1994 that the final will be entirely on cable in the United States. In Canada, all games will air on Sportsnet and CBC.

TNT, which now falls under the Warner Brothers Discovery Sports umbrella, is in its second season covering the NHL. It also has the Stanley Cup final in 2025 and 2027 under a seven-year rights agreement that began last season.

“We’re excited, humbled and honoured. We’re really interested in bringing our hockey lens to the finals and creating something special for the fans,” said Craig Barry, the chief content officer for WBD Sports.

TBS has carried the NCAA men’s basketball championsh­ip three times, but when it comes to pro sports, TNT and TBS have only done conference finals for the NHL and NBA. TBS also has carried one of the league championsh­ip series in baseball.

Despite being the first Stanley Cup final on TNT, the network has a veteran crew used to doing the event. Play-by-play announcer Kenny Albert is working his 10th final (including radio), and Eddie Olczyk will be the lead analyst for the 16th time. Analyst Keith Jones is doing his 17th before leaving to take over as Philadelph­ia Flyers president, and Darren Pang is part of it for the 18th time.

Albert, Olczyk and Jones were part of NBC’s coverage, while most of Pang’s came with ESPN.

With NBC carrying the final from 2006-21, studio analyst Anson Carter admitted not being at last year’s felt different.

“I just think back to last summer sitting on my couch, and I had a serious case of FOMO,” he said. “I was watching those guys on the other network do their thing. And after being a part of it for over 10 years, I missed it. So this is a great opportunit­y for our crew to continue what we do best, while putting the game up on the pedestal that it deserves to be on.”

Barry noted the overall approach to doing the final remains the same.

“We understand our obligation to the hardcore fan and the X’s and O’s. Our colleagues at ESPN do that really well. But we also understand and take our obligation to the casual fan very seriously,” he said. “We love that intersecti­on of hockey and culture and really lean into that.”

Regarding ratings expectatio­ns, it is hard to say what this series might draw. Last year’s six-game series between the Colorado Avalanche and Tampa Bay Lightning averaged 4.6 million viewers on ABC, with the final two games drawing over five million.

TNT and TBS are averaging 1.1 million through the Eastern Conference final, a seven per cent increase over last year. Those numbers are encouragin­g, considerin­g Boston, the New York Rangers and Islanders, Tampa Bay, Minnesota and Colorado were all knocked out in the first round.

Game 7 of the 1994 final, when the Rangers beat the Vancouver Canucks to win their first Stanley Cup since 1940 on ESPN and MSG Network, has the record for most cable viewers at 5.44 million.

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