Krown Countdown U | |
---|---|
Also known as | Gridiron Nation presented by Krown Produce |
Starring | Jim Mullin Mike Hogan Gord Randall |
Country of origin | Canada |
Production | |
Production locations | Vancouver, British Columbia (2011-2017), Surrey, British Columbia, (2017-present) On location (various episodes, 2013, Thunderbird Stadium; 2013 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan; 2014, Saskatoon, 2017, Knoxville, TN; Grand Forks, ND; Hamilton, ON.; Mexico City, 2018; London, United Kingdom, 2019. |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | TSN |
Original release | 2011 – present |
Gridiron Nation presented by Krown Produce is a weekly college football recap and features show focusing on Canadians in the NCAA and USPORTS football. The show was previously known as Krown Countdown U until 2019 when the show moved to TSN across Canada. [1] The show generally airs on Wednesday at 1pm ET and Friday at 3:30pm ET on TSN1 or TSN2.
Previously, it was a recap and pre-game show broadcast by CHCH-DT across Canada, Thursday nights at 11:30 pm ET after local news and sports during football season. In the 2018 season the show's online distribution partner was CBC Sports. [2] "KCU" complimented CHCH's coverage of OUA college football which was broadcast periodically on Saturday afternoons during the college football season. It was aired prior to the start of OUA game broadcasts with a 1:00 p.m. ET kickoff. In its current form, the program is pre-recorded at HubCast Studios in Surrey, BC as a panel show, with one member of the panel participating via Skype from Central Canada. The show recapped mainly USports football games, features, news [3] and analysis of the week's upcoming games with additional content focusing on Canadian content in NCAA football, [4] Football Canada national teams, and the Canadian Junior Football League.
It first aired as CIS Countdown in September 2011 with Jim Mullin as host and Chad Klassen and Andrew Wadden as commentators, providing an overview of Canadian university football games on SHAW TV throughout Western Canada. The show was developed in conjunction with MRX and Associates as a means to promote the 2011 Vanier Cup at BC Place Stadium. In the first season, there were 10 episodes produced.
There were changes for the 2012 season, after Krown Produce became the title sponsor of the show. This included a name change to "Canadian University Countdown". Ryan Sullivan joined Wadden on the highlight desk as an anchor team, eliminating most of the duties of the host position. Mullin shifted to the panel with Hec Crighton Award winning quarterback Billy Greene joining the show as a full-time panelist and the two would remain together through the 2013–14 season. The number of stations carrying the show grew as well, with COGECO TV carrying the show in Kingston and Windsor-Essex. Cable 14 broadcast the show throughout the Hamilton region. The show was integrated into Canada West broadcast coverage on SHAW TV. Additional panelists from across the country were included via Skype, including former Sherbrooke quarterback J.P. Shoiry, Rogers Sportsnet contributor Donnovan Bennett, Justin Dunk, Charles-Antoine Sinotte and freelance writer Andrew Bucholtz rotating in the guest panelist position. There were 16 episodes produced, running from September through December.
The show changed its name again for the 2013 season, to the current Krown Countdown U. The show expanded to 20 episodes, with monthly off-season episodes running from January through May. Rogers TV stations throughout Ontario picked up the show in Ottawa, Guelph, London and Kitchener-Waterloo. Eastlink cable picked up the show for broadcast throughout the four Atlantic provinces.
The format remained mainly intact from the previous two seasons. The show went on location to start the Canada West Football season on Shaw TV, with the kickoff game in Saskatoon in 2013 [5] and 2014. The show became the pregame show for Krown Canada West Football on Shaw.
The on-screen antics of Wadden and Sullivan developed a minor cult following in the football world. In a feature on the Laval Rouge et Or football team Newsweek wrote, "There is a weekly highlight show, Krown Countdown U, that resembles what would happen if ESPN’s College GameDay mated with SCTV’s Bob and Doug McKenzie. During a recent highlights package, co-host Ryan Sullivan quipped of a player who ran back a punt for a touchdown, “He is gone, like a bullet that was shot out of a gun that shoots bullets.” [6] [7]
In 2014, former UBC Thunderbirds and Queen's Gaels offensive lineman Gord Randall replaced Greene, who left Canada to play football in Europe. Also in 2014, former UBC Thunderbirds head coach Shawn Olson [8] hosted a segment named "X's and Olson" which uses a telestrator to break down plays in 12-man football. Through 2015 and 2016 the format remained the same, with Justin Dunk assuming most of the guest panel spots from Toronto. There were 15 in-season episodes from late August through November, and monthly episodes from January through CFL/NFL draft season in May. The show's producer won the Paul Carson Award in 2016 for promotion and development of varsity sports in Canada. [9]
L. David Dube is the principal owner of Krown Produce and has underwritten the cost of production through sponsorship of the program. Dube and Mullin as project partners started planning and discussion around the Northern 8, a proposed schedule of competition which would place the best CIS/USports football teams from across the country in a nationally televised game of the week. [10] Much of the discussion surrounding the proposal was content for the panel on KCU. During the height of the first attempt to broaden competition in the winter of 2014–15, KCU produced a specific show about what the Northern 8 was, with Dube explaining the concept. [11] [12] [13]
There were many changes for the 2017 season with the shutdown of Shaw TV operations in Edmonton, Calgary and Vancouver. [14] Canada West moved to an online pay-per-view model with games and paired with SaskTel Max for games of the week. [15] Mullin, who had been the play-by-play voice of Canada West football for 10 years was not included in the new conference broadcast package. This resulted in the show finding a new home on CHCH, which significantly increased the household reach across Canada to 6.8 million [16] and aligned the product with the OUA. An online edition was posted [17] on 3DownNation after the show was distributed to CHCH. The anchoring team of Wadden and Sullivan was replaced by Mullin as the anchor, with Randall and TSN 1050 and Toronto Argonauts play-by-play voice Mike Hogan completing the roster of the full panel. Olson continued X's and Olson. With Mullin off the play-by-play beat, more focus was placed on NCAA Football and Canadian players on Division I teams. This included Mullin anchoring from Knoxville, Tennessee [18] and Grand Forks, North Dakota [19] along with on-site interviews and visits in Atlanta, Georgia, Athens, Ohio, Seattle, Washington and Buffalo, New York. There was also an episode produced out of the CHCH studios in Hamilton after the Vanier Cup.
Season eight: Partnership with CBC Sports and IFAF
In July 2018, CBC Sports, International Federation of American Football, and KCU announced a partnership to broadcast major IFAF events within Canada on CBC's online service. As part of the agreement, CBC also became the online home for KCU TV. [20]
The show rebranded in 2019 with the move to TSN as "Gridiron Nation presented by Krown Produce" a.k.a. "Krown Gridiron Nation on TSN". The majority of content focused on Canadian participation in the NCAA, [21] with some additional coverage provided to U SPORTS football. The NCAA content is in keeping with TSN's content agreement with the NCAA and ESPN.
Date | Sea. | No. ep. | Broadcaster |
---|---|---|---|
2011 | s01 | 10 | SHAW TV Vancouver, Calgary, Saskatoon, Winnipeg and COGECO TV Kingston |
2012 | s02 | 15 | SHAW TV throughout Western Canada and Northern Ontario, Shaw Direct 299 across Canada, Access 7 Saskatchewan, COGECO TV Kingston, Cable 14 Hamilton-Burlington. |
2013–2014 | s03 | 20 | SHAW TV full network, Shaw Direct, Access 7, COGECO Kingston, Cable 14, COGECO Windsor-Essex, Rogers TV Ottawa, Rogers TV London and Region, Rogers TV Kitchener-Waterloo, Rogers TV Guelph, Eastlink TV to four Atlantic provinces. |
2014–2015 | s04 | 21 | SHAW TV full network, Shaw Direct, Access 7, COGECO Kingston, Cable 14, COGECO Windsor-Essex, Rogers TV Ottawa, Rogers TV London and Region, Rogers TV Kitchener-Waterloo, Rogers TV Guelph, Eastlink TV to four Atlantic provinces. |
2015 - 2016 | s05 | 20 | SHAW TV full network, Shaw Direct, Access 7, COGECO Kingston, Cable 14, COGECO Windsor-Essex, Rogers TV Ottawa, Rogers TV London and Region, Rogers TV Kitchener-Waterloo, Rogers TV Guelph. |
2016–2017 | s06 | 20 | SHAW TV full network, Shaw Direct, Access 7, COGECO Kingston, Cable 14, COGECO Windsor-Essex, Rogers TV Ottawa, Rogers TV London and Region, Rogers TV Kitchener-Waterloo, Rogers TV Guelph. |
2017–2018 | s07 | 20 | CHCH – DT Hamilton, ON to 6.8 million Canadian households, individual SHAW TV stations in Saskatoon, Winnipeg and Thompson, MB, Access 7 Saskatchewan, 3DownNation.com |
2018–2019 | s08 | 17 | CHCH – DT Hamilton, ON to 6.8 million Canadian households, and online via CBC Sports |
2019-2020 | s09 | 15 | TSN - The Sports Network to +9 million Canadian households. |
With each episode, the staff of KCU rates the performance of the teams of USports in a power rating known as the #Power7. It is an alternative ranking system to the USports Top 10, but is not officially recognized by any conference or school in Canada. The 2017 #Power7 accurately reflected the eventual outcome of the Vanier Cup, with the Western Ontario Mustangs in first place, and the Laval Rouge et Or in second for the final weeks. The USports voting panel had Laval in the first spot of the Top 10, with Western in second over the final few weeks. [22]
2017 Final
1. Western Mustangs 2. Laval Rouge et Or 3. Calgary Dinos 4. Montreal Carabins 5. UBC Thunderbirds 6. Laurier Golden Hawks 7. McMaster Marauders
2018 Final
1. Laval Rouge et Or 2. Western Mustangs 3. Saskatchewan Huskies 4. Montreal Carabins 5. Calgary Dinos 6. Guelph Gryphons 7. UBC Thunderbirds
2019 Final
1. Montreal Carabins 2. Calgary Dinos 3. Laval Rouge et Or 4. McMaster Marauders 5. Western Mustangs 6. Saskatchewan Huskies 7. Waterloo Warriors
From January 2017 until March 2019, Krown Countdown U produced a weekly radio show during college and university sports seasons available at various times on the affiliates of the TSN Radio Network with the flagship station out of Vancouver's TSN 1040. [23] The program is also carried on the Rawlco Radio Network to affiliates in Saskatoon and Regina. The program ran from late August to December, and mid-January to mid-May and is one hour in duration. Mullin co-hosted from Vancouver with Hogan at the TSN 1050 studios in Toronto. Wadden provided the "Canadian Box Score" which recapped and previewed the college sports week in both Canada and the United States from a Canadian perspective. During the football season, Gord Randall was a regular contributor in an editorial position.
The radio program covered football, college hockey and basketball in the winter-spring months. It was almost exclusively a football show in the summer and fall.
Date | Name | Title | Affiliation |
---|---|---|---|
2011–present | Jim Mullin | Project partner-producer-host | Northern 8 |
2014–present | Gord Randall | Panelist | CW on Global TV |
2017–present | Mike Hogan | Panelist | TSN Radio |
2019 | Farhan Lalji | Reporter | TSN |
2019 | Dave Naylor | Reporter | TSN |
2019 | Jesse Palmer | Analyst | ABC/ESPN |
2015–2018 | Shawn Olson | Feature presenter | |
2011–2017 | Andrew Wadden | Anchor-analyst-line producer | TSN Radio |
2012–2016 | Ryan Sullivan | Anchor | |
2013 - 2014 | Billy Greene | Panelist | |
2015 - 2017 | Justin Dunk | Panelist | Sportsnet |
2016 | Craig Smith | Guest Panelist | |
2013 | Connor Hammond | Feature presenter | |
2012 | Richard Zussman | Feature presenter | |
2012 - 2015 | J.P. Shoiry | Panelist | SRC |
2014–2015 | Donnovan Bennett | Guest Panelist | Sportsnet |
2012 - 2015 | Andrew Bucholtz | Panelist | Yahoo.ca |
2014–2016 | Jesse Lumsden | Panelist | Shaw TV |
2011 | Chad Klassen | Host | |
2016 | C-A Sinotte | Guest Panelist | TVA Sports |
2015–2016 | Lee Barrette | Guest Panelist | Canada Football Chat |
2015 | L. David Dube | Project Partner/Spokesperson | Northern 8 |
2022 | Dashawn Stephens | Guest Panelist | PRSVRE Media Group |
Gridiron Nation presented by Krown Produce replaced the radio show with a podcast in the fall of 2019. [24]
The Vanier Cup is a post season college football championship game, used to determine the national champion in U Sports football. The game serves as the final for the winners of the Uteck Bowl and the Mitchell Bowl. In turn, the participating teams are determined by the winners of 4 bowl games: the Loney Bowl (AUS), Hardy Cup, Dunsmore Cup (RSEQ), and Yates Cup (OUA).
The UBC Thunderbirds are the athletic teams that represent the University of British Columbia in the University Endowment Lands just outside the city limits of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. In Canadian intercollegiate competition, the Thunderbirds are the most successful athletic program both regionally in the Canada West Universities Athletic Association, and nationally in U Sports, winning 112 national titles. UBC has won an additional 20 national titles competing in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics against collegiate competition from the United States and 38 national titles in sports that compete in independent competitions.
U Sports is the national sport governing body of university sport in Canada, comprising the majority of degree-granting universities in the country. Its equivalent body for organized sports at colleges in Canada is the Canadian Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA). Some institutions are members of both bodies for different sports.
The U Sports Women's Basketball Championship, branded as the Women's Basketball Final 8, is a Canadian university basketball tournament conducted by U Sports, and determines the womens's national champion. The tournament involves the champions from each of Canada's four regional sports conferences. The Bronze Baby trophy is awarded to the winners.
College football on television includes the broad- and cablecasting of college football games, as well as pre- and post-game reports, analysis, and human-interest stories. Within the United States, the college version of American football annually garners high television ratings.
Shaw Spotlight is the name of locally based community channel services operated by cable TV provider Shaw Communications. The channels are available only to Shaw Cable subscribers and are produced in communities throughout western Canada.
Canada West is a regional membership association for universities in Western Canada which assists in co-ordinating competition between their university level athletic programs and providing contact information, schedules, results, and releases about those programs and events to the public and the media. This is similar to what would be called a college athletic conference in the United States. Canada West is one of four such bodies that are members of the country's governing body for university athletics, U Sports. The other three regional associations coordinating university-level sports in Canada are Ontario University Athletics (OUA), Atlantic University Sport (AUS), and the Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec (RSEQ).
Jim Mullin is a Vancouver-based broadcaster, producer and promoter. In June 2019, he was elected as President of Football Canada, the governing body for gridiron football at the amateur level. He was re-elected to the position for a second term in June 2022. In December 2021, he was acclaimed for the position of General Secretary of IFAF. He is the producer and host of Krown Gridiron Nation on The Sports Network. He also hosted and produced Krown Countdown U Radio on the TSN Radio Network. He was the play-by-play voice for SHAW TV/Global TV for 10 years from 2007 to 2016. He was the play-by-play voice of the IFAF World Junior Football tournament in Mexico carried on CBC Sports in 2018. He is one of the two patrons of the Jon Cornish Trophy, presented annually to the top Canadian in NCAA Football.
U Sports football is the highest level of amateur play of Canadian football and operates under the auspices of U Sports. Twenty-seven teams from Canadian universities are divided into four athletic conferences, drawing from the four regional associations of U Sports: Canada West Universities Athletic Association, Ontario University Athletics, Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec, and Atlantic University Sport. At the end of every season, the champions of each conference advance to semifinal bowl games; the winners of these meet in the Vanier Cup national championship.
The U Sports Men's Soccer Championship is a Canadian university soccer tournament conducted by U Sports, and determines the men's national champion. The tournament involves the champions from each of Canada's four regional sports conferences. The Sam Davidson Memorial Trophy is awarded to the winners.
Sports broadcasting contracts in Canada include:
Mike Hogan is a Canadian sportscaster who is a sports talk radio host on TSN Radio 1050 in Toronto, Ontario. He also serves as the play-by-play voice for the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League for that station's gameday broadcasts. Hogan was formerly a long time sports talk radio host on Toronto station CJCL (AM), branded "The Fan 590", until he was relieved of those duties on June 24, 2010. Hogan was born in Kingston, Ontario.
The U Sports Women's Soccer Championship is a Canadian university soccer tournament conducted by U Sports, and determines the women's national champion. The tournament involves the champions from each of Canada's four regional sports conferences. The Gladys Bean Memorial Trophy is awarded to the winners.
The 2012 CIS football season began on August 31, 2012 with the Saskatchewan Huskies hosting the Alberta Golden Bears at Griffiths Stadium. The season concluded on November 23 in Toronto, Ontario with the 48th Vanier Cup championship, won by the Laval Rouge et Or after they defeated the McMaster Marauders 37-14. This year, 26 university teams in Canada are scheduled to play Canadian Interuniversity Sport football, the highest level of amateur Canadian football.
Krown Produce Canada West Football on Shaw was a presentation of Canada West football aired on Shaw TV, Shaw Direct and Access7. In 2012, broadcasts were streamed on CanadaWest.tv.
The Northern Football Series was a proposed sub-conference and competition for Canadian university football teams which was submitted to all Canadian university football schools on January 5, 2015. It would potentially involve the top two teams from the CWUAA, which covers Western Canada, four teams from the Ontario University Athletics (OUA), and the top two teams from the Quebec Student Sport Federation (RSEQ). A team from Atlantic University Sport (AUS) could qualify in the second year of operation.
The Jon Cornish Trophy is an award given annually to the top Canadian player in NCAA football. The award is named after Canadian Football Hall of Famer (CFHOF) Jon Cornish and has been presented since 2017, with the trophy debuting two years later on display at the CFHOF.
The 2019 U Sports football season began on August 23, 2019, with the Concordia Stingers hosting the Montreal Carabins in Montreal, Quebec. The Atlantic University Sport conference started play the following day and the Ontario University Athletics conference began play on August 25, 2019. The Canada West teams began play during the following weekend, on August 30, 2019. All 27 U Sports football teams played eight regular season games against opponents within the same conference.
The 2023 U Sports Women's Volleyball Championship was held March 17–19, 2023, in Vancouver, British Columbia, to determine a national champion for the 2022–23 U Sports women's volleyball season. In a match between the two most recent champions, the host UBC Thunderbirds defeated the top-seeded Trinity Western Spartans to win the program's 13th national championship.
The 2019 U Sports Men's Volleyball Championship was held March 15–17, 2019, in Quebec City, Quebec, to determine a national champion for the 2018–19 U Sports men's volleyball season. The tournament was played at PEPS at Université Laval. It was the 12th time that Laval had hosted the tournament, which is the most out of any program. This was also the first tournament to no longer feature an Atlantic University Sport champion as that conference had withdrawn from men's volleyball competition in 2018.