How long before regular season games are aired Live online?
NFL NETWORK & NFL.COM: HOME TO THE
2010 NFL PRESEASON!
NFL.com's New ‘NFL Preseason Live' Offers Preseason Games Online
All 65 Preseason Games Air in High-Definition on NFL Network
NFL Network's 10 Live Broadcasts Include McNabb's Debut in Washington, Tebow's First NFL Game & Pete Carroll's Return to the NFL Sidelines
With preseason kicking off in August, NFL Network and NFL.com features the most NFL preseason game coverage ever. NFL.com unveils NFL Preseason Live to watch games online and NFL Network once again carries all 65 preseason games in HD.
For the first time, NFL.com offers NFL Preseason Live, a subscription product that delivers fans preseason games live. Users can watch available games online and choose from home or away broadcasts to complement a new viewing experience that includes movable picture-in-picture and mosaic layouts to watch multiple games at once. NFL Preseason Live is available for $39.99.
NFL Network is home to the entire NFL preseason game slate with all 65 matchups, including multiple replays, airing on the only network dedicated to football. The 2010 preseason schedule on NFL Network includes 10 live nationally-televised games, with all matchups available in high definition.
Week 1 of the 2010 NFL preseason on NFL Network features five live games highlighted by veteran quarterback DONOVAN MCNABB's debut in Washington, the NFL debut of Broncos rookie quarterback TIM TEBOW and Seahawks head coach PETE CARROLL's return to the NFL sidelines.
The Redskins kick off NFL Network's live game schedule vs. the Buffalo Bills Friday, August 13 at 7:30 PM ET. Saturday, August 14 features a doubleheader with Tampa Bay at Miami at 7:00 PM ET, followed by Tennessee at Seattle at 10:00 PM ET. The weekend wraps up with San Francisco at Indianapolis Sunday, August 15 at 1:00 PM ET, followed by Denver at Cincinnati at 7:00 PM ET.
There's no better place for Fantasy Football fans to prepare their picks and depth charts for the 2010 regular season than with NFL Network and NFL.com's all-encompassing coverage of the 2010 preseason. All 10 live preseason games will include halftime reports featuring NFL Network's team of analysts from its Los Angeles studios and five-minute NFL Network Now updates between game broadcasts reporting the most up-to-date news and information. NFL Network's schedule includes a total of 162 telecasts as it includes every game, live games and game replays of all the preseason action.
Here is a preview of the 10 live games on NFL Network:
Buffalo Bills vs. Washington Redskins • Friday, August 13 at 7:30 PM ET
QB Donovan McNabb and head coach Mike Shanahan open a new chapter with the Washington Redskins, while new Bills head coach Chan Gailey makes his return to the NFL with a young offense that includes rookie RB C.J. Spiller.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers vs. Miami Dolphins • Saturday, August 14 at 7:00 PM ET
No. 3 overall draft pick Gerald McCoy gets his first taste of NFL action as part of the Buccaneers defense against a Miami Dolphins offense led by QB Chad Henne and free agent addition WR Brandon Marshall.
Tennessee Titans vs. Seattle Seahawks • Saturday, August 14 at 10:00 PM ET
The second game of Saturday's doubleheader features Pete Carroll's return to the NFL sidelines as Seahawks head coach, hosting QB Vince Young and the Tennessee Titans.
San Francisco 49ers vs. Indianapolis Colts • Sunday, August 15 at 1:00 PM ET
Mike Singletary and Jim Caldwell begin their sophomore seasons with their respective teams. Singletary's 49ers feature a talented defense including Pro Bowl LBPatrick Willis and rookie FS Taylor Mays, while Peyton Manning begins his 13th NFL season as quarterback of the AFC champion Colts.
Denver Broncos vs. Cincinnati Bengals • Sunday, August 15 at 7:00 PM ET
Broncos head coach Josh McDaniels shows off his trio of young quarterbacks as Kyle Orton, Brady Quinn and rookie Tim Tebow battle for the Denver's starting QB spot against a Bengals defense that ranked fourth in the league in 2009.
Pittsburgh Steelers vs. New York Giants • Saturday, August 21 at 7:00 PM ET
Super Bowl XLIII and XLII champions meet Week 2 of the preseason when the Giants host the Steelers in their first game in the New Meadowlands Stadium.
Green Bay Packers vs. Seattle Seahawks • Saturday, August 21 at 10:00 PM ET
QB Aaron Rodgers leads a Packers offense that finished sixth in the league last year against a young Seahawks team featuring first-round draft picks Russell Okung and Earl Thomas.
Cleveland Browns vs. Detroit Lions • Saturday, August 28 at 5:00 PM ET
Lions DT and No. 2 overall pick Ndamukong Suh gets his third preseason look against a Cleveland Browns squad that boasts rookie CB Joe Haden and QB Colt McCoy.
New England Patriots vs. New York Giants • Thursday, September 2 at 7:00 PM ET
The Patriots complete their preseason game slate in the New Meadowlands Stadium against the New York Giants.
Washington Redskins vs. Arizona Cardinals • Thursday, September 2 at 10:00 PM ET
Two teams debuting different looks on offense in 2010 face off in the final preseason game of the season.
NFL NETWORK SCHEDULE FOR 2010 PRESEASON GAMES
(BOLD INDICATES LIVE GAMES / FIRST AIRINGS ONLY / ALL TIMES EASTERN)
Monday, August 9
1:00 PM - Cincinnati Bengals at Dallas Cowboys
Thursday, August 12
11:00 PM - New Orleans Saints at New England Patriots
Friday, August 13
9:30 AM - Carolina Panthers at Baltimore Ravens
3:30 PM - Oakland Raiders at Dallas Cowboys
7:30 PM - Buffalo Bills at Washington Redskins -- LIVE
10:30 PM - Jacksonville Jaguars at Philadelphia Eagles
Saturday, August 14
1:30 AM - Kansas City Chiefs at Atlanta Falcons
7:00 PM - Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Miami Dolphins -- LIVE
10:00 PM - Tennessee Titans at Seattle Seahawks -- LIVE
Sunday, August 15
1:00 AM - Chicago Bears at San Diego Chargers
10:00 AM - Detroit Lions at Pittsburgh Steelers
1:00 PM - San Francisco 49ers at Indianapolis Colts -- LIVE
7:00 PM - Denver Broncos at Cincinnati Bengals -- LIVE
10:00 PM - Minnesota Vikings at St. Louis Rams
Monday, August 16
1:00 AM - Houston Texans at Arizona Cardinals
4:00 PM - Cleveland Browns at Green Bay Packers
Thursday, August 19
1:00 PM - New York Giants at New York Jets
11:00 PM - Indianapolis Colts at Buffalo Bills
Friday, August 20
1:00 PM - New England Patriots at Atlanta Falcons
Saturday, August 21
4:00 PM - Philadelphia Eagles at Cincinnati Bengals
7:00 PM - Pittsburgh Steelers at New York Giants -- LIVE
10:00 PM - Green Bay Packers at Seattle Seahawks -- LIVE
Sunday, August 22
1:00 AM - Houston Texans at New Orleans Saints
4:00 AM - Kansas City Chiefs at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
7:00 AM - New York Jets at Carolina Panthers
10:00 AM - Baltimore Ravens at Washington Redskins
1:00 PM - Detroit Lions at Denver Broncos
4:00 PM - Dallas Cowboys at San Diego Chargers
11:00 PM - Oakland Raiders at Chicago Bears
Monday, August 23
4:00 PM - St. Louis Rams at Cleveland Browns
11:00 PM - Miami Dolphins at Jacksonville Jaguars
Tuesday, August 24
1:00 PM - Minnesota Vikings at San Francisco 49ers
Thursday, August 26
1:00 PM - Arizona Cardinals at Tennessee Titans
11:00 PM - St. Louis Rams at New England Patriots
Friday, August 27
2:00 AM - Indianapolis Colts at Green Bay Packers
11:00 PM - Philadelphia Eagles at Kansas City Chiefs
Saturday, August 28
2:00 AM - Atlanta Falcons at Miami Dolphins
2:00 PM - Washington Redskins at New York Jets
5:00 PM - Cleveland Browns at Detroit Lions -- LIVE
11:00 PM - Seattle Seahawks at Minnesota Vikings
Sunday, August 29
2:00 AM - Cincinnati Bengals at Buffalo Bills
7:00 AM - San Diego Chargers at New Orleans Saints
10:00 AM - Tennessee Titans at Carolina Panthers
1:00 PM - New York Giants at Baltimore Ravens
4:00 PM - Arizona Cardinals at Chicago Bears
11:00 PM - San Francisco 49ers at Oakland Raiders
Monday, August 30
2:00 AM - Jacksonville Jaguars at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
4:00 PM - Dallas Cowboys at Houston Texans
Wednesday, September 1
1:00 PM - Pittsburgh Steelers at Denver Broncos
Thursday, September 2
7:00 PM - New England Patriots at New York Giants -- LIVE
10:00 PM - Washington Redskins at Arizona Cardinals -- LIVE
Friday, September 3
1:00 AM - San Diego Chargers at San Francisco 49ers
6:00 AM - Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Houston Texans
9:00 AM - Baltimore Ravens at St. Louis Rams
12:00 PM - Buffalo Bills at Detroit Lions
3:00 PM - Denver Broncos at Minnesota Vikings
7:00 PM - Miami Dolphins at Dallas Cowboys
Saturday, September 4
12:00 AM - Green Bay Packers at Kansas City Chiefs
7:00 AM - Atlanta Falcons at Jacksonville Jaguars
1:00 PM - Chicago Bears at Cleveland Browns
4:00 PM - New York Jets at Philadelphia Eagles
8:00 PM - Carolina Panthers at Pittsburgh Steelers
11:00 PM - Seattle Seahawks at Oakland Raiders
Sunday, September 5
10:00 AM - New Orleans Saints at Tennessee Titans
1:00 PM - Cincinnati Bengals at Indianapolis Colts
* Live games on NFL Network and NFL Preseason Live will be blacked out when televised on local stations. NFL Preseason Live features all the preseason games except the 11 that are televised nationally by NFL network partners.
NFL Network airs seven days a week, 24 hours a day on a year-round basis and is the only network dedicated entirely to the NFL and the sport of football. For more information, log onto www.nfl.com/nflnetwork. NFL.com is the most popular sports league website and the exclusive internet home of NFL Network.
I think this is a very interesting development that feels a great deal like a trial balloon for a regular season release. If they can do it for the pre-season, why can't they do it for the regular season too? I think there's a huge market of people that would be willing to pay $39.99/month for access to NFL streaming games. I think this is a significant step forward towards opening up that revenue stream for non-DirecTV customers.
What do you guys think?
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NFL trying to make a buck
I know it’s only $39.95 but it’s also preseason. The only reason I watch any preseason games other than 49ers is because I’ve been through the offseason and needing my NFL fix. You can only watch so many replays of old games on NFL Network. I doubt the NFL would offer the same thing for the regular season anytime soon. It would affect things like NFL Ticket and they probably would make more money with NFL Ticket over streaming. I would I would be interested if it were ever offered though. Half of the 49ers games I watch are streaming and low quality as it is. I just don’t see it happening anytime soon.
"If you don't love it, leave it! USA, number one!" - Ricky Stanzi
I doubt it would cut into Sunday Ticket sales at all
People who can’t get DirecTV due to where they live would eat up this service
People who can’t get DirecTV due to a deposit would eat this up
People who are stuck with a cable provider and can’t get satellite service would eat it up.
It’d actually open up new sources of revenue for the NFL.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
I'd be one of those that would eat it up.
A lot of what DirecTV would lose is the people that have it just for NFL Ticket. I know it may not be that many but I personally know people that have DirectTV for NFL Ticket and I’m sure they would drop at least the package with them if the streaming was cheaper. I think a lot of it would depend on price.
"If you don't love it, leave it! USA, number one!" - Ricky Stanzi
by Haggardninja on Jul 26, 2010 1:57 PM PDT up reply actions
Direct TV
When I moved to Kansas from Germany and was looking for cable/satellite tv I chose Direct TV only becuase they have NFL Sunday Ticket. Now that I am deployed to Iraq again it would be nice to have an option to stream the games online since my Direct TV doesnt work here. Now when I return next season to the states again I would rather keep my Direct Tv and watch the games on my large TV then my monitor but the option would be nice. Another option would be for Direct Tv to stream the games online as an add on to the NFL Sunday Ticket I pay for at home.
by LongDistance9ersFan on Jul 28, 2010 5:51 AM PDT up reply actions
I totally agree smiley
But the unfortunate truth is that the NFL doesn’t understand simple economics and would rather give DirecTV exclusive Ticket rights than follow the brilliant lead of MLBAM (advanced media) with MLB.TV and other premium products. They think “ooh $4 billion” but I doubt they’ve ever run the numbers to see if they could make more money democratizing access to games. In fact, I KNOW they haven’t run the numbers, because there’s no way in hell a monopoly DirecTV deal can compete with all carriers competing to broadcast the Ticket. If anyone from Goodell’s office is reading check this out:
(Profit / out of market viewer * DTV viewers) + $4 bln < (profit / oom viewer)*(DTV viewers + All satellite viewers + All cable TV viewers + online viewers + mobile viewers)
its science
Well part of the issue is that the NFL has exploded in popularity since they first did the
deal with DirecTV. An infusion of guaranteed cash was desperately important to the league at the time. Now that the league is the most popular (and profitable) sport in the US they have much more power to things the way they want to.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
Ah, here's another viewpoint ...
I have been a DirecTV customer for the past 15 years, for two particular reasons: (1) I wanted and did subscribe to the NFL Sunday Ticket package, primarily to watch every 49ers game, and (2) because we were living aboard our boat full time and used DirecTV as or primary television source — since we were offshore a good part of the time, this was our only sane option. We have continued to subscribe to DirecTV and Sunday Ticket since moving back ashore in 2008. Throughout this time we have had access to the full slate of NFL games and wouldn’t consider any other TV source, particularly cable.
However, because I am also a baseball fan (A’s and Giants primarily) I have tried subscribing to MLB.TV — via land-based internet. Initially the video quality was so poor that I cancelled my subscription. Two years later I decided to try again, thinking that MLB had probably worked out the kinks. Not so. Although supposedly improved, I found the video quality to be just as bad as my first try. Again I cancelled and am not liked to try again until SUBSTANTIALLY better technology is employed.
Can’t speak for the likely quality of NFL games on streaming internet. But, if my MLB experience is any indicator, NO THANKS!! I’ll stick to the Sunday Ticket package because I know the HD quality is state-of-the-art and the cost isn’t that exorbitant.
by 49erFanSince1950 on Jul 26, 2010 6:46 PM PDT up reply actions
Part of it is your internet connection
part of it is MLB. I can’t speak for the live games but the games through the NFL Game Rewind are great.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
Sorry I wasn't more specific ...
I was talking about live telecasts. I live in Tucson, AZ and am an A’s and Giants fan. So, my desire was to watch live Bay Area games.
by 49erFanSince1950 on Jul 26, 2010 7:39 PM PDT up reply actions
You must have had horrible internet connection...
I have had MLB.TV for the past 5 years and never had any problems with it. And ever since they came out with the HD version it is just as good as watching on your HD tv. You can even link it to your game console system, I have PS3 and watch it through my tv. The quality is fantastic.
You can add
people who don’t have a TV but still want to watch football would eat this up.
by ZeroOneInfinity on Jul 26, 2010 5:14 PM PDT up reply actions
NFL Gamepass
Here in Olde England – indeed anywhere outside the US I think – you can pay for regular season games online. It’s a fantastic deal – you can pay for a week, a month or a season, which gives you all the games for all teams, or you can pay for one team for the whole season. Last season I hedged my bets and paid for a week every now and then, because other times I could watch on TV (we get two games every Sunday) or sometimes the games were on at times I couldn’t watch, or I was otherwise engaged on family stuff or whatever. This year I am going for the Niners season ticket.
It has always amazed me that the service is not available inside the US. I am sure it’s only a matter of time.
LondonNiner - member of the legendary David Carr thread, 6 March 2010.
by LondonNiner on Jul 26, 2010 1:21 PM PDT via mobile reply actions
I wonder what the language of the DirecTV contract and the Sunday Ticket deal is
and if that’s why they don’t offer this streaming service in the U.S. I like the idea of doing it on a weekly, monthly or seasonal basis and being able to watch any game, or just your team.
Do you remember what the costs are for the various packages?
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
This page ...
… only has the off-season prices. I think the regular season prices were comparable though. I believe a Niners season ticket will cost me 150 US dollars, or something like that. Might be nothing like that – I am rubbish at money and I have to have someone at work (a business manager) and someone at home (my wife) to handle all transactions as sums mean nothing to me. I think I have some sort of numerical dyslexia.
LondonNiner - member of the legendary David Carr thread, 6 March 2010.
I can't access that page
Because my IP address identifies me as being from the US
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
Wow
They even geo-block the explanation page! That’s pretty hardcore!
LondonNiner - member of the legendary David Carr thread, 6 March 2010.
website
Where do I sign up?
I am deployed at the moment and would love to get the 49ers game online
by LongDistance9ersFan on Jul 28, 2010 5:54 AM PDT up reply actions
Call me Debbie Downer but
I just don’t see this coming tto the regular season any time soon, particularly given the amounts paid by the TV networks and the 1 billion dollars paid by Direct TV. IMO this is just a further attempt to generate revenue on a part of the product that currently generates none on a national basis.
That being said I really hope it does become available domestically and that the single team option is retained. As a 49er fan outside of their broadcast area it’s annoying to be willing to give the NFL a reasonable amount of money to watch he team I’m a fan of while not paying for the whole switching to DirectTV (which will cost me notably more monthly before Sunday Ticket) not to mention I’m perfectly happy with my “free” non-49er game selection.
by Deelron on Jul 26, 2010 1:42 PM PDT via mobile reply actions
But isn't the case ...
… and correct me if I’m wrong, but I thought that in certain areas of the States you only got the local teams on TV? Therefore, a subscription model per team could be made to work if it geo-blocked you from selecting your local team. The technology exists to make this happen, and it would mean a Niners fan in SF could watch Niners games on TV (if my understanding is correct – you get all SF games in the Bay Area right?) and a Niners fan in, say, Texas, could choose a subscription to San Francisco.
LondonNiner - member of the legendary David Carr thread, 6 March 2010.
That would be nice
There’s also large portions of the country that aren’t realy geographically close to any team. I’m just as close to San Francisco as I am to Seattle, Phoenix or Denver, yet it’s the Denver Broncos that play every Sunday.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
Hey ...
… at least you will get the Wembley game on TV then!
LondonNiner - member of the legendary David Carr thread, 6 March 2010.
Midwest here
I get excited when the Niners play someone from the NFC North but a majority of the time they won’t even televise those games because a “better” game is on. I couldn’t believe that they didn’t televise the Vikings vs Niners game last year in our area. For some reason, they thought that Green Bay vs St Louis would be the better game. Here we get mostly Bears or Green Bay games on FOX and a lot of Kansas City or Indianapolis on CBS. I was blindsided when I turned on the TV to find that they were airing Colts vs 49ers on FOX though.
"If you don't love it, leave it! USA, number one!" - Ricky Stanzi
by Haggardninja on Jul 26, 2010 3:04 PM PDT up reply actions
Yep
And I would be perfectly happy from being locked out of live games in my local market, and I’d be happy to pay ~10 a game for the ~15 weeks the 49ers arn’t on locally here. I badly want to give the NFL another $150 dollars and there service isn’t available in the US.
by Deelron on Jul 26, 2010 8:29 PM PDT via mobile up reply actions
It wont happen anytime soon at all....
Why would the NFL throw away the guaranteed money that the Networks bring in as well as their investment in their own Network and Redzone to stream every game online? And who is going to pay the announcers and the production crew that shoots it if the networks dont? And why would I pay to watch it online when you know there will be a way to watch it for free…. And how will they figure out how to balck out the Raiders games to locals online when Al Davis succeeds in putting together another crap team? And I suppose the Superbowl will be on Pay per View now?
There is no way the Networks will allow the games to strea if they have broadcast rights…. maybe the NFL network could do it for their own games but I believe those games are also broadcast locally so again how do they black those people out…. if you think this is coming to Regular Season in the next 15 years, you are way off…
by thatguywiththebeardandthebanjo on Jul 26, 2010 4:35 PM PDT up reply actions
1. We don’t know who owns the rights to the Internet broadcasts
2. Blocking local access is as easy as blocking your IP address
3. There’s a huge portion of the country which doesn’t have DirecTV. Not every DirecTV subscriber wants to pay extra for the Sunday Ticket. This is a way to tap into an extra revenue stream without impacting the current revenue stream at all
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
The worst part is
I already pay for most of those services, and want to pay more to actually watch the one team I actually root for, but can’t for a reasonable fee.
by Deelron on Jul 26, 2010 8:31 PM PDT via mobile up reply actions
It would work the same way DirecTV does.
DirecTV doesn’t give their own broadcast. They use the broadcast from the other networks and owe a share to those networks of their revenue. It’s the same way the online broadcast would work. MLB and NHL already have this going on. To black you out locally they can tell where you are located by your IP address.
Need more voting choices...
I’m convinced this will happen eventually but I’m thinking more in a 5 year span. TVs are becoming internet aware and we will soon have the ability to get a lot more tv straight from high speed internet.
These TV companies ( DirecTV, FOX, etc ) only pay the NFL that much because they can make more in advertising & subscriptions when they air the games. They are simply over-priced middlemen and as soon as the NFL can get rid of them, they will.
I bet there is some kind of exclusivity agreement between the NFL & DirecTV. As soon as that contract expires, I bet we will be able to get all the games through nfl.com and/or the NFL cable channel…. and I can’t wait.
Tinman
There is an exclusivitiy agreement, which is why no other cable company has DirecTV
however I have to wonder if that agreement covers things like internet viewing, since it’s an entirely different thing. My guess, based on current models in the publishing world (e.g. ebook sales vs paper sales) is that unless the contract specifies internet viewing those rights are still held by the NFL.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
Yeah
I think it is specific to the internet. Why else would they offer the internet streaming service over seas but not here?
Tinman
Technology concerns maybe?
I seem to recall that they were offering it in parts of New York City last season.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
I don't have Sunday Ticket myself but doesn't it also include the pre-season games?
so wouldn’t this be a violation of that contract?
Anybody with Sunday Ticket want to clarify?
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
The details would interesting...
Here is what is says on nfl.com regarding Sunday ticket. Seems like they made a point to say that it covers the whole regular season with no mention of the pre-season.
With NFL SUNDAY TICKET™ you can choose from the biggest selection of games available anywhere throughout the 17-week regular season.
Tinman
Nice find
Here’s the relevant quote
The agreement also significantly broadens the reach of NFL SUNDAY TICKET™ by enabling NFL fans who cannot receive DIRECTV satellite service to get NFL SUNDAY TICKET™ via broadband. This service will begin no later than 2012.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
This part sucks..
NFL SUNDAY TICKET™ on Broadband: Fans who live in areas where DIRECTV’s service is not available, such as apartment buildings or in residences with poor sightlines to a satellite signal, will be able to purchase a new NFL SUNDAY TICKET™ broadband package.
It sounds like this means you can only get the broadband package if the DirecTV signal is no good where you live.
Tinman
I doubt that
because you can get directv just about everywhere except in downtown metropolis areas—though maybe this is what the NFL was rolling out last year for the New York area.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
I would imagine so.
I dont know how long DirecTV holds the contract for going into the future because I’m to lazy to do research, but you can be sure they will do everything possible to protect their investment. NFL is probably safe from breaching contract by offering to those who can’t get DirecTV with a legit reason. New York would definitely make sense.
Question for you all plz ...
… we have what we call (air cable ) .. we have Hd tv’s so we only get what come’s threw the air wave’s ( fox cbs nbc abc and some other’s about 30 channel’s ), but i have satelite internet (keyon) , would i be able to stream preseason game’s even though my P.C. is kinda slow …!!
Gotta love a woman that wear's knee pad's to work ...!!
Depends on the stream
if it’s a HD stream like veetle probably not. If I remember right Keyon is a 1.5 mb down 256k up right? You should be able to stream lower res feeds just fine, assuming that Keyon doesn’t have some sort of cap on how much you can use.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority
Thank's , prolly have to ask the kid's about the 1.5 mb thing though ...!!
Gotta love a woman that wear's knee pad's to work ...!!
Great idea for a post!
2011 for sure – no doubt the contracts anticipated this (from the NFL side).
I don’t think that at all… and of course this is all speculation on your behalf
by Drew K on Apr 14, 2010 2:05 PM PDT
who the heck..
would vote never??
Wow… although they are just peoples opinions, never seems a little far-fetched.
I could see it happening within the next 3 years depending on if their is football during the next 3 years..
I picked 2011 because
It better not take them any longer than that. I’ve been waiting for them to get on board with this since the MLB released theirs years ago. It’s so convenient for us out of state fans, I do not want to pay all that money to Directv ever again, with or without the online service. I will be paying for the preseason package though. And thanks to the 4 prime time games I wont have to go to the bar to watch.
The cost is still a robbery though. 40 bucks for 3 games per team??!! That is insane, and it’s only preseason. Maybe I wont be buying it and I’ll send hate mail instead. I only pay 24 bucks a month for the mlb online package and get at least 25 games a month. I’m only counting the Giants of course because that’s all I care to watch during regular season baseball.
$40 bucks per month
or $10 per week for your team. I’d be willing to pay $10/week to watch the 49ers and not have to deal with a crappy feed that cuts out constantly.
Logic merely enables one to be wrong with authority

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