Overview of boxing broadcast on British television
This is a timeline of the history of boxing on television in the UK.
- 1955
- 22 September – ITV is launched, although initially only in London, and boxing is part of the launch night's programmes.
- 1984
- ITV obtains the rights to show boxing fights promoted by Frank Warren's Sports Network and later in the decade ITV signs a deal to with Barry Hearn. This deal marks ITV's first major step into covering British boxing as previously most of ITV's coverage had been the big fights from the US with all the major British fights being shown on the BBC. ITV launches a new programme to cover the sport - The Big Fight Live. ITV also introduces a supplementary programme Fight Night, which shows midweek recorded coverage of non-premium boxing action.
- 1990
- 11 February – Sky broadcasts its first non-free to air sports event when it shows the boxing fight between Mike Tyson and Buster Douglas. It broadcast the event on Sky Movies, doing so six days after Sky Movies becomes the UK's first pay television channel. Sky Movies shows all of Sky's premium boxing fights until they transfer to Sky Sports after it becomes a pay channel in 1992., doing so six days after Sky Movies becomes the UK's first pay television channel.
- 1992
- 1 September – Sky Sports becomes a subscription channel and consequently, Sky's coverage of boxing fully transfers to Sky Sports.
- 1995
- January – ITV loses rights to Frank Warren's Sports Network fights to Sky Sports.[2]
- October – ITV resumes its coverage of boxing, albeit for lower profile fights.
- 1997
- The BBC steps further back from showing professional boxing following the end of its midweek sports programme Sportsnight which had shown boxing, often live, throughout its time on air. The BBC had shown less boxing for the past few years as more fights had transferred to ITV and Sky Sports.
- 1998
- December – ITV launches a fortnightly boxing magazine programme Boxing First. It is shown on its new channel ITV2. The show transfers to ITV Sport Channel in 2001 and ends shortly after.
- 2001
- 22 April – The BBC makes a return to showing professional time boxing when it shows the Lennox Lewis vs. Hasim Rahman fight. The BBC continues to show fights on a ad hoc basis for the next couple of years before deciding just to show boxing in multi-sport events such as the Olympic Games and Commonwealth Games.
- 2005
- 4 March – The BBC ends its brief return to live professional boxing when it shows Clinton Woods winning the IBF light-heavyweight title.
- June – Following a successful one-off return to boxing in May, ITV decides to return to the sport on a regular basis when it re-captures the rights to Frank Warren's Sports Network promotions.
- 2007
- September – Frank Warren's Sports Network promotions moves, for the most part, to Setanta Sports although fights involving Amir Khan continue to be shown on ITV.
- 2008
- 27 May – Hayemaker Promotions signs a deal with Setanta Sports to show ten promotions. This would include the next four David Haye fights.[3] Only three were shown before Setanta went into liquidation the following year.
- 6 September – ITV loses the rights to Frank Warren’s Sports Network to Sky but it does continue to broadcast boxing when it a signs a 2-year, 26-fight deal with Hennessy Sports.
- 2014
- 8 February – BoxNation begins broadcasting in high definition.[11]
- 2019
- April – Sky Sports airs nine fights of the World Boxing Super Series (WBSS) in the 2018–19 season starting with the semi-final world title bouts,[19] ending in November with the bantamweight final between Nonito Donaire and Naoya Inoue.[20]
- 2020
- 24 January – ITV announces that it has closed its pay-per-view service ITV Box Office.[21] ITV had used this to show its recent, brief, return to broadcasting boxing.
- 2021
- June –
- After more than 25 years with Sky Sports, fights promoted by Matchroom Sport stop being shown on Sky Sports. These fights move to streaming service DAZN.[22][23]
- To ensure boxing continues on Sky Sports, Sky announces two new boxing contracts, with Top Rank for American and international boxing, and with BOXXER in the UK.[24] The first event from Sky's new deal with Top Rank takes place on 12 June.
- 2022
- 2 March – Wasserman Boxing and Channel 5 announce a deal which will see Channel 5 air five fight nights Wasserman Boxing-promoted fight nights during 2022.[25]
- 4 June – The BBC broadcasts live professional boxing for the first time since 2005 when BBC Wales and BBC iPlayer shows two Welsh title fights.[26]
- 15 December – The BoxNation TV channel closes after eleven years on air.
- 2023
- 18 July – TNT Sports launches, replacing BT Sport. It carries the same line-up of programming and sports coverage as BT Sport had done, which, for boxing, are the rights to Queensberry Boxing.** 18 July – At 6am, TNT Sports launches. It carries the same line-up of programming and sports coverage as BT Sport had done, with the exception of ESPN programming and American College Sport.
- 2025
- April – DAZN will replace TNT Sports as the rights holder to fights promoted by Queensberry Boxing, bringing up to 150 fights a year to the streaming platform.[27]