1 May – The BBC broadcasts the Rugby League Challenge Cup final for the first time, although this can only be seen in the London area.
1949
No events.
1950s
1950
No events.
1951
The first ever televised international rugby league match takes place between Great Britain and New Zealand at Station Road, Swinton. This was the first outdoor sporting event to be televised in the north of England.[1]
1952
The Challenge Cup final is broadcast for a second time, and was the first time it could be seen in the north of England.
1953
The Rugby Football League refuse permission to broadcast the Challenge Cup final due to concerns that live coverage had affected the attendance of the previous year's final.[2]
1954
No events.
1955
October–November – The newly launched ITV creates a rugby league tournament called the Independent Television Floodlit Trophy. Played under floodlights at various London football grounds, the tournament is shown live in the London area only because ITV had not launched in the sport's north of England heartlands. The second halves of the matches are shown live. The competition was a one-off and did not return the following year.
1956
No events.
1957
No events.
1958
10 May – The BBC broadcasts the Challenge Cup final for the third time and this marks the start of annual coverage of the final.
1959
No events.
1960s
1960 to 1964
At some unknown point during this period, Grandstand shows coverage of earlier rounds from the Challenge Cup for the first time.
1965
6 October – The first edition of the BBC2 Floodlit Trophy is broadcast, bringing rugby league to television screens on a regular basis for the first time. The competition is designed specifically for television.
11 June – A new TV deal is agreed with the BBC, but they no longer hold exclusive rights to rugby league coverage, and any games not shown by the BBC can be offered to Independent Television instead.[3] The BBC2 Floodlit Trophy is also scrapped due to financial cutbacks by the broadcaster.[4]
19 May – For the only time since 1958, the BBC does not show live coverage of the final of the Challenge Cup. It had shown the original game live 18 days earlier but opted to show the replay in highlights form only, as part of that week's edition of Sportsnight.[6]
1983
No events.
1984
No events.
1985
ITV scraps its British rugby league coverage, and no games from the league championship are shown at all on UK television for the next two seasons.[5] A new program, Australian RL Action, is briefly shown, featuring highlights of Australian clubs from the New South Wales Rugby League (NSWRL) competition.[7][8]
1986
No events.
1987
For a brief period, Yorkshire Television broadcasts a late night rugby league highlights programme called Scrumdown.[5]
August – The RFL agrees a deal with British Aerospace for their new TV service, Sportscast, a TV channel shown exclusively in pubs and clubs.[11] The service was short-lived, collapsing 18 months later.[12]
1991
No events.
1992
BSkyB acquires exclusive rights to show league matches.[13] Sky also launches its own rugby league magazine programme, Boots 'N' All, which first aired in February 1992.[14]
7–28 October – L!VE TV broadcasts many of the matches from the 1995 Rugby League World Cup. It shows many of them exclusively because, apart from the opening game, the BBC does not show any of the games live until the semi-final stage.
1996
Following an approach by Rupert Murdoch to British rugby league clubs to form a new Super League, the sport agrees to the proposals, which amongst other things sees the sport move from a winter to a summer season. Consequently, all live league coverage is shown exclusively on Sky Sports.
Manchester local television station Channel M launches a rugby league magazine called Code XIII. Whilst its main focus is on teams playing in the Greater Manchester area, it also touched upon the progress of other teams in the region including Warrington and Widnes. A spin-off series, Code XIII: Grassroots, focused on local amateur rugby league highlights. The programme ran for three seasons, ending in 2008 after management at Channel M decided that they were not willing to go forward with another series that did not contain game action, and that the asking price for buying in the footage was more than Guardian Media Group could afford.
2007
Rugby League Raw is broadcast for the final time due to Sky Sports beginning to show National League rugby.
9 June – S4C shows the first of four Celtic Crusadersrugby league matches live.[17] The following season, S4C shows five more Celtic Crusaders games.
2008
February – Having previously only been broadcast as a regional programme, The Super League Show is broadcast nationally for the first time when it is given a Tuesday lunchtime slot on BBC Two.[18]
22 November – Sky Sports' coverage of the Rugby League World Cup ends as the rights for future tournaments move to Premier Sports.
2009
25 September – ESPN brings National Rugby League to the UK when it broadcasts the first Preliminary Final live on 25 September, the second Preliminary Final and on 4 October it shows the Grand Final.[19]
Sky Sports broadcasts games from the Challenge Cup for the first time.[21] Sky is the secondary broadcaster of the competition, showing live coverage of one match from rounds 5 and 6 and two quarter-finals.
2013
26 October-30 November – Premier Sports broadcasts its first major international sporting event when it is joint broadcaster with the BBC of the 2013 Rugby League World Cup.[22] The channel also provides live coverage of the 2017 event.
3 November – The BBC announces that it has signed deals with a number of different sports to bring 1,000 extra hours of live sports coverage each year. The increase in free-to-air sport includes coverage of the entire Rugby League Challenge Cup.[24]
26 October-16 November – BBC Sport broadcasts live coverage of rugby league's British Lions tour to New Zealand.[26]
2020s
2020
No events.
2021
7 May – Sky Sports ends a decade of coverage of the Challenge Cup when it shows two quarter-finals from the 2021 Challenge Cup.[27]
2022
12 February – Live Super League matches are broadcast on free-to-air television for the first time when Channel 4 shows the first of ten matches each season for the next two years. This is the first time in its 40-year history that channel 4has broadcast rugby league.[28]
Premier Sports broadcasts the RFL Championship. Coverage includes the regular season, the Play-Offs in the autumn culminating in the Million Pound Game and every match of the Summer Bash featuring all 14 clubs in a single venue on the same weekend. The deal also includes the 2023 season.
28 February – Premier Sports replaces Sky Sports as the secondary rights holder of the Challenge Cup. It shows five games from the competition - one match from rounds 4, 5 and 6 and two quarter-finals.
15 October-19 November – The BBC broadcasts live coverage of all 61 games from the men's, women's and wheelchair tournaments of the 2021 Rugby League World Cup.[29]
2023
No events.
2024
17 February - The BBC shows a live Super Leaguerugby league match for the first time when it broadcasts the first of the 15 Super League games that the BBC will show for the next three seasons.[30]
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