Arena Sport
Arena Sport is an ex-Yugoslav pay television sports network owned by Telekom Srbija. It consists of six television channels and is coverage area includes Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia.[1]
Arena Sport | |
---|---|
Launched | 2010 |
Owned by | Telekom Srbija (Serbia) |
Picture format | 1080i HDTV (downscaled to 16:9 576i for the SDTV feeds) |
Broadcast area | Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Kosovo North Macedonia Montenegro Serbia |
Website | tvarenasport |
Availability | |
Terrestrial | |
EVOtv (Croatia) | Channel 400 (Arena Sport 1) Channel 401 (Arena Sport 2) Channel 402 (Arena Sport 3) Channel 403 (Arena Sport 4) Channel 404 (Arena Sport 5) Channel 405 (Arena Sport 6) |
Satellite | |
Polaris (Serbia) | Serbia: Channels 304-308 Bosnia: Arena Sport 1 BiH |
MAXtv (Croatia) | Channels 400-405 |
TotalTV (Bosnia and Herzegovina) | Channel 69 (Bosnian feed) Channels 70-73 |
IPTV | |
MAXtv (Croatia) | Channels 400-405 |
ArtMotion (Kosovo) | Channel 56 (Duo Dream) - Arena Sport 1 Channels 64-68 (Duo Standard) - Arena Sport 1-5 Channels 66-70 (Duo Premium) - Arena Sport 1-5 |
Localised feeds
Serbia
Arena Sport Serbia carries several sports events. Most of them are centred towards football, mainly matches from Serie A (Italy), Ligue 1 (France), Pro League (Belgium), as well as international competitions such as the UEFA Champions League and the Europa League. Arena Sport Serbia has the broadcasting rights of the Serbian SuperLiga.
In addition to football, the Arena Sports transfers and other sporting events such as basketball ABA League, Greek League, Liga ACB and NCAA leagues, German handball league and the EHF Champions League.
Croatia
Arena Sports Croatia airs MAXtv Prva Liga's matches, UEFA Champions (until 2018) and Europa League, and since 2014, Formula One, first via their motorsport channel Max GP, then since 2015 on regular Arena Sport channels. In addition, reports and other football leagues as well as in Serbia.
Sport events
Football
Europe
UEFA Champions League (Except Croatia) UEFA Europa League UEFA Super Cup (Except Croatia) Serie A Ligue 1 Ligue 2 Coupe de la Ligue Trophée des Champions Copa del Rey DFB-Pokal Jupiler Pro League 1. HNL Fortuna Liga SPFL SuperLiga Serbian Cup Eliteserien Macedonian First Football League 1. CFL Montenegrin Cup Taça da Liga Swiss Cup Greek Cup Polish Cup BIH Cup UEFA Women's Champions League Final Primera División de Futsal
America
Asia & Oceania
Basketball
Competition | Duration | Details |
---|---|---|
All four games[2] | ||
All games (Regular season + Playoffs) + TV show | ||
since 2017 | various number of matches per round, playoffs | |
various number of matches per round, playoffs | ||
various number of matches per round, playoffs | ||
various number of matches per round, playoffs | ||
one game per week + March Madness | ||
since 2019 | Five until eight games per week + NBA All-Star Game + NBA Playoffs + NBA Finals |
Handball
Competition | Duration | Details |
---|---|---|
selected matches in each round (Regular season + Playoffs) + TV show | ||
selected matches in each round (Regular season + Playoffs) + TV show | ||
selected matches in each round (Regular season + Final four) |
Ice hockey
Competition | Duration | Details |
---|---|---|
various number of games per week + Playoffs (at least one match each day) | ||
selected games | ||
two games per day |
Rugby
Competition | Duration | Details |
---|---|---|
References
- "Telekom: Za Arena Sport 7,7 mil.€" (in Serbian). B92. 26 August 2011.
- "FIBA Intercontinental Cup to be distributed globally". FIBA. Retrieved 2020-02-07.