As of 2017, European Tour Productions serves as the host broadcaster for the Open Championship . The host broadcaster, as well as British and American broadcasters Sky Sports and NBC Sports respectively, utilized a total of 175 cameras during the 2016 tournament. [1] [2]
Country/Region | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | 2026 | 2027 | 2028 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | Sky Sports | ||||||||||
Republic of Ireland | |||||||||||
United States | NBC/USA Network | ||||||||||
Brazil | ESPN [3] | ||||||||||
Latin America | ESPN [3] | ||||||||||
Caribbean | ESPN [3] | ||||||||||
South Africa | SuperSport | ||||||||||
Australia | Fox Sports | ||||||||||
Japan | TV Asahi [4] | ||||||||||
Hong Kong | Fox Sports | ||||||||||
South East Asia | |||||||||||
Canada | TSN | ||||||||||
Spain | Movistar Golf |
In the United Kingdom, the Open Championship was historically broadcast by the BBC—a relationship which lasted from 1955 to 2015. The BBC's rights to the Open had been threatened by the event's removal from Category A of Ofcom's "listed" events, a status which legally mandated that the Open be broadcast in its entirety by a terrestrial broadcaster. It had since been moved to Category B, meaning that television rights to the tournament could now be acquired by a pay television outlet, such as BT Sport or Sky Sports, as long as rights to broadcast a highlights programme are given to one of the main terrestrial broadcasters. [5]
Beginning in 2016, Sky Sports will have exclusive UK rights to The Open with the BBC showing a 2-hour highlights programme every night instead of live coverage. [6] Sky's major event coverage is fronted by David Livingstone, expert analysis from Butch Harmon, on course commentary from Howard Clark, in-depth 18th hole interviews from tour coach and golfing expert, Tim Barter and main commentary from Ewen Murray and Bruce Critchley. Other golfers such as Peter Oosterhuis, Tony Johnstone, Thomas Bjørn, David Howell, Richard Boxall, Jamie Spence, Mark Roe, Robert Lee, Ross McFarlane, Sandy Lyle, Colin Montgomerie, Paul McGinley, Philip Parkin and Ken Brown contributing to their coverage over the years.
In the United States, [7] ABC had historically held rights to the Open. [8] [9] Beginning in 2010 under an eight-year agreement, the Open moved exclusively to ABC's sister pay television channel ESPN, with only tape-delayed highlights shown on ABC. [10] In June 2015, it was announced that NBC Sports would acquire rights to the Open Championship under a 12-year deal beginning in 2017; early round coverage airs on USA Network, with the main NBC network broadcasting live weekend coverage. The R&A cited NBC's successful broadcasts of Premier League football, which also primarily airs on weekend mornings in U.S. time zones, as an advantage of NBC's acquisition of The Open. [11] Similarly to the BBC, ESPN chose to opt out of its final year of Open rights, causing NBC's rights to begin in 2016 instead. [12]
1982-1996
1997-2005
2006-2015
2016–present
Announcer | Years | Network(s) |
---|---|---|
Terry Gannon | 2017–2018 | NBC |
Dan Hicks [19] | 2016-present | NBC |
Ernie Johnson Jr. | 2003–2005; 2007–2009 | TNT |
Jim McKay | 1962–1967; 1975–1983; 1985–1988; 1990–1993; 1996–2001 | ABC |
Brent Musburger | 1992–1996 | ABC |
Lou Palmer | 1982– | ESPN |
Chris Schenkel | 1968–1974 | ABC |
Jim Simpson | 1982– | ESPN |
Mike Tirico | 1997–present | ABC ESPN TNT NBC |
Roger Twibell | 1990–1991 | ABC |
Jack Whitaker | 1982–1989 | ABC |
Announcer | Years | Network(s) |
---|---|---|
Peter Alliss | 1975–2015 | ABC BBC ESPN |
Paul Azinger | 2005–2015; 2019–2023 | ABC ESPN NBC |
Ian Baker-Finch | 2004; 2008–2009 | ABC TNT |
Bobby Clampett | 2003–2007 | TNT |
Nick Faldo | 2004–2007 | ABC |
Justin Leonard | 2017–2018 | NBC |
Dave Marr | 1970–1991 | ABC |
Steve Melnyk | 1992; 1994–1997 | ABC |
Johnny Miller | 2016-2018 | NBC |
Byron Nelson | 1966–1974 | ABC |
Curtis Strange | 1998–2003, 2011-2015 | ABC |
Tom Watson | 2008 | ABC |
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