DAILY NEWS Mar 10, 2010 7:40 AM - 4 comments

HD Production Leads Multi-Platform Paralympic Coverage

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Canada’s Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium will deliver a record 57 hours of high-definition television coverage of the Vancouver 2010 Paralympic Winter Games in English and French from March 12-21.  

 

This marks the most hours of coverage ever delivered to Canadian audiences and the first time the Paralympic Winter Games are being produced entirely in HD by a Canadian rights-holder.

 

The Consortium’s offering includes 27 hours of coverage in English on CTV, TSN and Rogers Sportsnet as well as 30 hours of coverage in French on RDS and RIS Info Sports.  Highlights include the Opening Ceremony, live coverage of Team Canada’s sledge hockey games, and a daily 90-minute recap show with all of the day’s highlights, results and medal standings. 

 

“Canada’s Paralympians have excelled on the world stage.  They are a huge source of national pride and we know they will continue to do us proud,” said Keith Pelley, President of Canada’s Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium.  “Along with live event coverage and highlights, we will tell the athletes’ stories of determination and accomplishments, as they go for gold in 2010.”

 

The English broadcast team for the 2010 Paralympic Winter Games features Brian Williams as host of the Opening Ceremony, Dave Randorf as play-by-play announcer for sledge hockey games with Jake Snyder and Mark Gallant as analysts, while Jamie Campbell hosts the highlights show.  In French, Claude Mailhot and Claudine Douville anchor the Opening Ceremony. Douville will also provide play-by-play for sledge hockey with analyst Jonathan Plante, while Mailhot will be seen daily on the recap show.

 

The Consortium’s coverage will also be available on TAC (The Accessible Channel), a digital television service for people who are blind, vision-impaired, deaf or hard of hearing, and on Voiceprint, an audio newsstand that broadcasts top stories from Canadian newspapers and magazines into Canadian homes.

 

In addition to television, the Consortium’s multi-platform coverage includes radio, print and two dedicated websites – CTV Paralympics.ca and RDSparalympics.ca, which will provide news, results, photos, features and the broadcast schedule. 

 

The Consortium’s radio partners, Rogers Radio and Corus Québec, will provide regular updates and highlights throughout the Paralympic Games.  The Globe and Mail, the Consortium’s national print partner, will produce a special eight-page section on the Paralympic Games, available on newsstands March 11.  This stand-alone section will highlight the accomplishments of Paralympians and include athlete profiles and features, as well as Canada’s standings and medal counts from previous Games.

 

The Vancouver 2010 Paralympic Winter Games take place March 12 to 21 in Vancouver and Whistler.  This 10-day international competition features approximately 650 athletes from more than 40 countries taking part in five sports: alpine skiing, cross-country skiing, sledge hockey, wheelchair curling, and biathlon.  Canada is the reigning Paralympic Games champion in sledge hockey, having defeated Norway in the Turin 2006 gold medal game.  Vancouver 2010 marks the first time Canada has hosted a Paralympic Winter Games; in 1976, Toronto hosted the Paralympic Summer Games.

 

Broadcast Schedule – Vancouver 2010 Paralympic Winter Games

(visit CTV.ca to confirm local broadcast times on CTV)

 

Saturday, March 13

·         Opening Ceremony

o       2 p.m. ET on CTV, RIS Info Sports

·         Sledge Hockey: Canada vs. Italy

o       1 p.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet Pacific (live)

o       4 p.m. ET on CTV and RIS Info Sports

 

Sunday, March 14

·         Sledge Hockey: Canada vs. Sweden

o       4:30 p.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet (national) (live)

o       8 p.m. ET on RIS Info Sports

o       12 midnight ET on RDS

·         Daily Highlights

o       3 p.m. ET on CTV

o       10 p.m. ET on RDS

 

Monday, March 15

·         Daily Highlights

o       3:30 p.m. ET on TSN

o       4:30 p.m. ET on RDS

 

Tuesday, March 16

·         Sledge Hockey: Canada vs. Norway 

o       11:30 p.m. ET on TSN and RDS (live)

·         Daily Highlights

o       2 a.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet East

o       2:30 a.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet Ontario

o       4:30 p.m. ET on RDS

o       5:30 p.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet West

o       6:30 p.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet Pacific

 

Wednesday, March 17

·         Daily Highlights

o       1:30 a.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet Ontario

o       2 a.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet East

o       4:30 p.m. ET on RDS

o       5:30 p.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet West

o       6:30 p.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet Pacific

 

Thursday, March 18

·         Sledge Hockey Semifinals

o       3 p.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet (national) and RIS Info Sports (live)

·         Daily Highlights

o       1:30 p.m. ET on RDS

o       3:30 p.m. ET on TSN

 

Friday, March 19

·         Daily Highlights

o       1:30 p.m. ET on RDS

o       3:30 p.m. ET on TSN

 

Saturday, March 20

·         Sledge Hockey Gold Medal Game

o       3 p.m. ET on CTV and RIS Info Sports (live)

o       12 midnight ET on RDS

·         Daily Highlights

o       1:30 p.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet Ontario/West/Pacific and RDS

o       7 p.m. ET on Rogers Sportsnet East

 

Sunday, March 21

·         Daily Highlights

o       4 p.m. ET on CTV

o       11 p.m. ET on RDS

 

About Canada’s Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium

Canada’s Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium is a unique relationship between leading media conglomerates CTV Inc. and Rogers Media Inc., which together provided unprecedented coverage and consumer choice in English, French and multi-languages on multiple platforms for the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games.  The partnership will continue for the upcoming 2010 Paralympic Winter Games and the London 2012 Games of the Olympiad.  Official brands include CTV, TSN, RDS, RIS Info Sports, Rogers Sportsnet, OMNI, OLN, V, APTN, ATN, CTVOlympics.ca, RDSolympiques.ca, The Globe and Mail, Corus Québec and select Rogers radio stations across the country.



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Reader Comments

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iVision4U

Regardless of how much more coverage their has been in reference to what there has been in the past, there simply needs to be better distribution of that content. CTV needs to recognition that their is an audience that wants that content and they want it live as well as achieved, whether that be on-line or on the TV. I have been keeping an active blog and a virtual 3D Olympics at http://blog.virtualwhistler.com and if you visit it you will notice that I have been overly positive. I love these Olympic and Paralympic games but I am rather frustrated to say the least. I WANT TO SEE MORE PARALYMPIC GAMES. I am lucky because I live in Whistler and get to see the odd event live, but these games are quite captivating and I am saddened to put it mildly that I can not see more of the games!!!!

Posted March 19, 2010 11:07 PM


phil

well, true, the tape delayed opening ceremonies set an awkward precedent, but the amount of coverage overall of the paralympics seems quite comprehensive. according to the broadcasters, it's the most ever - most by hours, most in HD, and there's online and radio as well as TV coverage. check out the listings in the story HD Production Leads Multi-Platform Paralympic Coverage

Posted March 15, 2010 08:01 AM


George

I was browsing through my TV wondering where are the para-Olympics and then I find out that yes disabled are really second class citizens. The consortium is making a big mistake not televising more of the games.

Posted March 14, 2010 02:58 PM


Marj

I want to see the curling, and the skiing in addition to the sledge hockey.

Posted March 13, 2010 06:56 PM


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