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The new agreement will come at the conclusion of the previous 12-year deal agreed to by both parties, which was signed in ...
The NHL has signed a 12-year, $11 billion CAD ($7.7 billion USD) deal with its Canadian national broadcast partner, Rogers.
The real loser in the hugely expensive deal to keep hockey on Rogers Sportsnet for the next 12 years is the Canadian fan.
Rogers Communications and the NHL announced on Wednesday a 12-year agreement for the national media rights to NHL games on ...
While the NHL's new 12-year, $7.7 billion extension with Rogers locks in national media rights across all platforms, ...
Elliotte Friedman writes about how special it is to be a part of Rogers Sportsnet NHL broadcasts, and why fewer blackouts can be expected in the next rights deal.
Richard Deitsch, a sportswriter for The Athletic, says Rogers and Sportsnet should be wary of any cost increases for their services. As passionate as Canadian hockey fans are, he says there's ...
Watch NHL commissioner Gary Bettman, NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly, Rogers Communications president and CEO Tony ...
TORONTO, ON – Rogers Communications and the National Hockey League (NHL) today announced a 12-year agreement for the national ...
According to Awful Announcing’s Andrew Bucholtz , when ...
Rogers' move to extend its hold on NHL rights signals a schematic play to control the future of hockey broadcasting in Canada ...