Another article on this subject :
CABLEVISION GETS NHL FREEZE-OUT
By ANDREW MARCHAND
AS of now, Cablevision customers will not be able to watch the
Rangers' season opener against the Flyers on Oct. 5 because of the
NHL's new agreement with the Outdoor Life Network to be the league's
national cable carrier.
While the three sides plan on further discussing the issue, the
NHL's board agreed to terms that black out OLN's exclusive game
coverage on Cablevision. No other New York cable or satellite
provider is affected.
This means, unless something changes, Cablevision subscribers — even
ones with OLN — will be unable to watch Rangers, Devils or Islanders
games when they are on the NHL's new national partner.
Cablevision's OLN subscribers also will be prevented from viewing
the 78 national regular-season games plus Stanley Cup playoff games
and the first two games of the Finals.
Why? Why else? Money.
On 90 percent of the country's cable systems, OLN is on basic cable,
according to the network.
But Cablevision's 3 million homes are offered OLN as part of the
sport tier package, which costs $4.95 per month.
In an effort to force Cablevision to move OLN to basic, the NHL
agreed to allow its games to be pawns. In choosing to allow the
blackouts, it has made it impossible for 3 million viewers to see
some of its games.
"We are committed to the NHL. We hope to resolve this issue in the
near term," an OLN spokesperson said, while confirming the
Cablevision blackout.
After canceling a season, the NHL's attitude seems to want fans to
trust it.
"We drop the puck on Oct. 5," an NHL spokesman said. "Fans shouldn't
be overly concerned at this point."
Rangers, Islanders and Devils fans will still be able to see the
majority of their team's games on MSG and FSNY. But OLN figures to
take the most attractive matchups. Each team can be on OLN eight
times during the regular season.
"Cablevision carries two regional sports networks, MSG Network and
FSN New York, that are home to our three local hockey teams and
feature hundreds of games, and we have every intention of delivering
the games that will appear on OLN to our customers as well," a
Cablevision spokesman said.
The NHL decided to go with OLN over ESPN for reportedly $65 million
this year and $70 million next year. ESPN chose not to match the
offer.
While the deal has put OLN on the map — it is now making overtures
for major-league baseball (a spokesperson declined comment) — it is
unlikely that the new agreement will increase NHL viewership, which
has lagged behind the other three major sports.
http://www.nypost.com/sports/27301.htm