Post by Skaggs on Apr 17, 2004 19:33:46 GMT -5
NFL ON FOX KICKS-OFF SUPER BOWL SEASON SEPT. 12th IN HIGH DEFINITION
Dallas at Green Bay, St. Louis at Carolina, Green Bay at Philadelphia and
SUPER BOWL XXXIX Among Regular and Postseason Highlights
FOX Sports Becomes First Network to Present Up To 6 Games Each Week in HD
2004 Preseason Schedule Features Thursday and Friday
Prime Time Games on August 19 and 27
The 2004 NFL on FOX season, one that will culminate with the live presentation of SUPER BOWL XXXIX, premieres Sunday, Sept. 12 with doubleheader coverage of seven games, highlighted by Joe Gibbs’ return to the Redskins’ sidelines when Washington hosts Tampa Bay, and Bill Parcells’ Dallas Cowboys against the Minnesota Vikings. In total, FOX Sports broadcasts a 111-game regular season slate, including nine doubleheader Sundays, the traditional Thanksgiving Day game and two special late-season non-Sunday national broadcasts. Each week, coverage begins with FOX NFL SUNDAY (12:00-1:00 PM ET/9:00-10:00 AM PT), America’s most watched pregame show for ten straight years, starring co-hosts James Brown and Terry Bradshaw, and analysts Howie Long and Jimmy Johnson.
FOX Sports’ 2004 NFL regular and postseason broadcast schedule boasts an unprecedented presentation of high definition programming. Beginning Sept. 12, the network will present up to six games in 720p high definition every week during the regular season. In addition, all nationally televised regular and postseason games, including the NFC Championship Game and SUPER BOWL XXXIX, will be offered in the 720p (progressive) high definition format, which takes 60 razor sharp, complete pictures per second, producing spectacular moving images. No other network has ever produced as many as six NFL games in HD on the same day.
The NFL on FOX’ eleventh season boasts 64 games featuring last season’s playoff teams, including: the Seattle Seahawks (13); the NFC Champion Carolina Panthers (12); the NFC North champion Green Bay Packers (11); the NFC East champion Philadelphia Eagles (10); the NFC West champion St. Louis Rams (10); and the Dallas Cowboys (10). FOX’ 2004 schedule also includes 12 games featuring the Washington Redskins’ crusade for the Lombardi Trophy, back under the direction of the last man to lead the storied franchise to glory, head coach Joe Gibbs.
Once the playoff teams are determined, the NFL on FOX presents exclusive live postseason coverage, including: an NFC Wild Card Game on Sunday, Jan. 9; the NFC Divisional Playoffs, Saturday, Jan. 15 and Sunday, Jan. 16; the NFC Championship Game on Sunday, Jan. 23 and culminates with SUPER BOWL XXXIX on Sunday, Feb. 7 from ALLTEL Stadium in Jacksonville, FL.
This season’s NFL on FOX coverage again kicks off with three regular-season NFL Europe League contests in June leading up to World Bowl 2004, the league’s championship game, Saturday, June 12 (12:00 PM ET), live from Gelsenkirchen, Germany.
The NFL on FOX’s 2004 preseason schedule features Jeremy Shockey and the re-tuned New York Giants against the NFC Champion Carolina Panthers, led by former Giant defensive coordinator John Fox, on Thursday, August 19 (8:00 PM ET), live from Ericsson Stadium in Charlotte. Eight days later on Friday, August 27 (8:00 PM ET), Joe Gibbs and the Washington Redskins visit Marshall Faulk and the defending AFC West Champion St. Louis Rams at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis.
David Hill and Ed Goren are the Executive Producers of the NFL on FOX. Bill Brown is Senior Producer. Scott Ackerson is the Coordinating Producer of FOX NFL SUNDAY.
Following is a complete list of games on the 2004 NFL on FOX regular and postseason broadcast schedules:
FOX SPORTS 2004 NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE SCHEDULE
(ALL TIMES ET)
Sunday, September 12
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Seattle Seahawks at New Orleans Saints
Detroit Lions at Chicago Bears
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Washington Redskins
Arizona Cardinals at St. Louis Rams
4:00 PM Dallas Cowboys at Minnesota Vikings
New York Giants at Philadelphia Eagles
Atlanta Falcons at San Francisco 49ers
Sunday, September 19
1:00 PM Washington Redskins at New York Giants
Chicago Bears at Green Bay Packers
St. Louis Rams at Atlanta Falcons
San Francisco 49ers at New Orleans Saints
Carolina Panthers at Kansas City Chiefs
4:00 PM Seattle Seahawks at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Sunday, September 26
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Chicago Bears at Minnesota Vikings
Philadelphia Eagles at Detroit Lions
Arizona Cardinals at Atlanta Falcons
New Orleans Saints at St. Louis Rams
4:00 PM Green Bay Packers at Indianapolis Colts
San Francisco 49ers at Seattle Seahawks
Sunday, October 3
1:00 PM New York Giants at Green Bay Packers
Philadelphia Eagles at Chicago Bears
Washington Redskins at Cleveland Browns
4:00 PM New Orleans Saints at Arizona Cardinals
Atlanta Falcons at Carolina Panthers
Sunday, October 10
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys
Minnesota Vikings at Houston Texans
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at New Orleans Saints
Detroit Lions at Atlanta Falcons
4:00 PM Carolina Panthers at Denver Broncos
Arizona Cardinals at San Francisco 49ers
St. Louis Rams at Seattle Seahawks
Sunday, October 17
1:00 PM Carolina Panthers at Philadelphia Eagles
Washington Redskins at Chicago Bears
Green Bay Packers at Detroit Lions
San Francisco 49ers at New York Jets
Seattle Seahawks at New England Patriots
Sunday, October 24
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Chicago Bears at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Philadelphia Eagles at Cleveland Browns
Detroit Lions at New York Giants
St. Louis Rams at Miami Dolphins
Atlanta Falcons at Kansas City Chiefs
4:00 PM Dallas Cowboys at Green Bay Packers
Seattle Seahawks at Arizona Cardinals
New Orleans Saints at Oakland Raiders
Sunday, October 31
1:00 PM Detroit Lions at Dallas Cowboys
Green Bay Packers at Washington Redskins
New York Giants at Minnesota Vikings
Arizona Cardinals at Buffalo Bills
4:00 PM Carolina Panthers at Seattle Seahawks
Atlanta Falcons at Denver Broncos
Sunday, November 7
1:00 PM Dallas Cowboys at Cincinnati Bengals
Philadelphia Eagles at Pittsburgh Steelers
Washington Redskins at Detroit Lions
Arizona Cardinals at Miami Dolphins
4:00 PM Chicago Bears at New York Giants
New Orleans Saints at San Diego Chargers
Seattle Seahawks at San Francisco 49ers
Sunday, November 14
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Atlanta Falcons
Chicago Bears at Tennessee Titans
Detroit Lions at Jacksonville Jaguars
Seattle Seahawks at St. Louis Rams
4:00 PM Minnesota Vikings at Green Bay Packers
Carolina Panthers at San Francisco 49ers
New York Giants at Arizona Cardinals
Sunday, November 21
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM San Francisco 49ers at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Arizona Cardinals at Carolina Panthers
Detroit Lions at Minnesota Vikings
Dallas Cowboys at Baltimore Ravens
St. Louis Rams at Buffalo Bills
4:00 PM Washington Redskins at Philadelphia Eagles
Atlanta Falcons at New York Giants
Thursday, November 25 (Thanksgiving Day)
4:00 PM Chicago Bears at Dallas Cowboys
Sunday, November 28
1:00 PM Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants
Washington Redskins at Pittsburgh Steelers
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Carolina Panthers
4:00 PM New Orleans Saints at Atlanta Falcons
Sunday, December 5
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Carolina Panthers at New Orleans Saints
San Francisco 49ers at St. Louis Rams
Arizona Cardinals at Detroit Lions
Minnesota Vikings at Chicago Bears
Atlanta Falcons at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
4:00 PM Green Bay Packers at Philadelphia Eagles
New York Giants at Washington Redskins
Sunday, December 12
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM New York Giants at Baltimore Ravens
Chicago Bears at Jacksonville Jaguars
New Orleans Saints at Dallas Cowboys
Seattle Seahawks at Minnesota Vikings
Detroit Lions at Green Bay Packers
4:00 PM St. Louis Rams at Carolina Panthers
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at San Diego Chargers
San Francisco 49ers at Arizona Cardinals
Saturday, December 18
5:00 PM Washington Redskins at San Francisco 49ers
Sunday, December 19
1:00 PM Dallas Cowboys at Philadelphia Eagles
Seattle Seahawks at New York Jets
Minnesota Vikings at Detroit Lions
4:00 PM New Orleans Saints at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
St. Louis Rams at Arizona Cardinals
Friday, December 24
3:00 PM Green Bay Packers at Minnesota Vikings
Sunday, December 26
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM New York Giants at Cincinnati Bengals
Chicago Bears at Detroit Lions
Carolina Panthers at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Atlanta Falcons at New Orleans Saints
4:00 PM Washington Redskins at Dallas Cowboys
Arizona Cardinals at Seattle Seahawks
Sunday, January 2, 2005
1:00 PM Minnesota Vikings at Washington Redskins
Detroit Lions at Tennessee Titans
Green Bay Packers at Chicago Bears
New Orleans Saints at Carolina Panthers
San Francisco 49ers at New England Patriots
4:00 PM Atlanta Falcons at Seattle Seahawks
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Arizona Cardinals
Sunday, January 9, 2005
NFC Wild Card Game (teams, site & time to be determined)
Saturday, January 15, 2005
NFC Divisional Playoff Game (teams, site & time to be determined)
Sunday, January 16, 2005
NFC Divisional Playoff Game (teams, site & time to be determined)
Sunday, January 23, 2005
NFC Championship Game (teams, site & time to be determined)
Sunday, February 7, 2005
SUPER BOWL XXXIX
ALLTEL STADIUM, Jacksonville, FL
-- FOX SPORTS --
Dallas at Green Bay, St. Louis at Carolina, Green Bay at Philadelphia and
SUPER BOWL XXXIX Among Regular and Postseason Highlights
FOX Sports Becomes First Network to Present Up To 6 Games Each Week in HD
2004 Preseason Schedule Features Thursday and Friday
Prime Time Games on August 19 and 27
The 2004 NFL on FOX season, one that will culminate with the live presentation of SUPER BOWL XXXIX, premieres Sunday, Sept. 12 with doubleheader coverage of seven games, highlighted by Joe Gibbs’ return to the Redskins’ sidelines when Washington hosts Tampa Bay, and Bill Parcells’ Dallas Cowboys against the Minnesota Vikings. In total, FOX Sports broadcasts a 111-game regular season slate, including nine doubleheader Sundays, the traditional Thanksgiving Day game and two special late-season non-Sunday national broadcasts. Each week, coverage begins with FOX NFL SUNDAY (12:00-1:00 PM ET/9:00-10:00 AM PT), America’s most watched pregame show for ten straight years, starring co-hosts James Brown and Terry Bradshaw, and analysts Howie Long and Jimmy Johnson.
FOX Sports’ 2004 NFL regular and postseason broadcast schedule boasts an unprecedented presentation of high definition programming. Beginning Sept. 12, the network will present up to six games in 720p high definition every week during the regular season. In addition, all nationally televised regular and postseason games, including the NFC Championship Game and SUPER BOWL XXXIX, will be offered in the 720p (progressive) high definition format, which takes 60 razor sharp, complete pictures per second, producing spectacular moving images. No other network has ever produced as many as six NFL games in HD on the same day.
The NFL on FOX’ eleventh season boasts 64 games featuring last season’s playoff teams, including: the Seattle Seahawks (13); the NFC Champion Carolina Panthers (12); the NFC North champion Green Bay Packers (11); the NFC East champion Philadelphia Eagles (10); the NFC West champion St. Louis Rams (10); and the Dallas Cowboys (10). FOX’ 2004 schedule also includes 12 games featuring the Washington Redskins’ crusade for the Lombardi Trophy, back under the direction of the last man to lead the storied franchise to glory, head coach Joe Gibbs.
Once the playoff teams are determined, the NFL on FOX presents exclusive live postseason coverage, including: an NFC Wild Card Game on Sunday, Jan. 9; the NFC Divisional Playoffs, Saturday, Jan. 15 and Sunday, Jan. 16; the NFC Championship Game on Sunday, Jan. 23 and culminates with SUPER BOWL XXXIX on Sunday, Feb. 7 from ALLTEL Stadium in Jacksonville, FL.
This season’s NFL on FOX coverage again kicks off with three regular-season NFL Europe League contests in June leading up to World Bowl 2004, the league’s championship game, Saturday, June 12 (12:00 PM ET), live from Gelsenkirchen, Germany.
The NFL on FOX’s 2004 preseason schedule features Jeremy Shockey and the re-tuned New York Giants against the NFC Champion Carolina Panthers, led by former Giant defensive coordinator John Fox, on Thursday, August 19 (8:00 PM ET), live from Ericsson Stadium in Charlotte. Eight days later on Friday, August 27 (8:00 PM ET), Joe Gibbs and the Washington Redskins visit Marshall Faulk and the defending AFC West Champion St. Louis Rams at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis.
David Hill and Ed Goren are the Executive Producers of the NFL on FOX. Bill Brown is Senior Producer. Scott Ackerson is the Coordinating Producer of FOX NFL SUNDAY.
Following is a complete list of games on the 2004 NFL on FOX regular and postseason broadcast schedules:
FOX SPORTS 2004 NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE SCHEDULE
(ALL TIMES ET)
Sunday, September 12
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Seattle Seahawks at New Orleans Saints
Detroit Lions at Chicago Bears
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Washington Redskins
Arizona Cardinals at St. Louis Rams
4:00 PM Dallas Cowboys at Minnesota Vikings
New York Giants at Philadelphia Eagles
Atlanta Falcons at San Francisco 49ers
Sunday, September 19
1:00 PM Washington Redskins at New York Giants
Chicago Bears at Green Bay Packers
St. Louis Rams at Atlanta Falcons
San Francisco 49ers at New Orleans Saints
Carolina Panthers at Kansas City Chiefs
4:00 PM Seattle Seahawks at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Sunday, September 26
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Chicago Bears at Minnesota Vikings
Philadelphia Eagles at Detroit Lions
Arizona Cardinals at Atlanta Falcons
New Orleans Saints at St. Louis Rams
4:00 PM Green Bay Packers at Indianapolis Colts
San Francisco 49ers at Seattle Seahawks
Sunday, October 3
1:00 PM New York Giants at Green Bay Packers
Philadelphia Eagles at Chicago Bears
Washington Redskins at Cleveland Browns
4:00 PM New Orleans Saints at Arizona Cardinals
Atlanta Falcons at Carolina Panthers
Sunday, October 10
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys
Minnesota Vikings at Houston Texans
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at New Orleans Saints
Detroit Lions at Atlanta Falcons
4:00 PM Carolina Panthers at Denver Broncos
Arizona Cardinals at San Francisco 49ers
St. Louis Rams at Seattle Seahawks
Sunday, October 17
1:00 PM Carolina Panthers at Philadelphia Eagles
Washington Redskins at Chicago Bears
Green Bay Packers at Detroit Lions
San Francisco 49ers at New York Jets
Seattle Seahawks at New England Patriots
Sunday, October 24
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Chicago Bears at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Philadelphia Eagles at Cleveland Browns
Detroit Lions at New York Giants
St. Louis Rams at Miami Dolphins
Atlanta Falcons at Kansas City Chiefs
4:00 PM Dallas Cowboys at Green Bay Packers
Seattle Seahawks at Arizona Cardinals
New Orleans Saints at Oakland Raiders
Sunday, October 31
1:00 PM Detroit Lions at Dallas Cowboys
Green Bay Packers at Washington Redskins
New York Giants at Minnesota Vikings
Arizona Cardinals at Buffalo Bills
4:00 PM Carolina Panthers at Seattle Seahawks
Atlanta Falcons at Denver Broncos
Sunday, November 7
1:00 PM Dallas Cowboys at Cincinnati Bengals
Philadelphia Eagles at Pittsburgh Steelers
Washington Redskins at Detroit Lions
Arizona Cardinals at Miami Dolphins
4:00 PM Chicago Bears at New York Giants
New Orleans Saints at San Diego Chargers
Seattle Seahawks at San Francisco 49ers
Sunday, November 14
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Atlanta Falcons
Chicago Bears at Tennessee Titans
Detroit Lions at Jacksonville Jaguars
Seattle Seahawks at St. Louis Rams
4:00 PM Minnesota Vikings at Green Bay Packers
Carolina Panthers at San Francisco 49ers
New York Giants at Arizona Cardinals
Sunday, November 21
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM San Francisco 49ers at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Arizona Cardinals at Carolina Panthers
Detroit Lions at Minnesota Vikings
Dallas Cowboys at Baltimore Ravens
St. Louis Rams at Buffalo Bills
4:00 PM Washington Redskins at Philadelphia Eagles
Atlanta Falcons at New York Giants
Thursday, November 25 (Thanksgiving Day)
4:00 PM Chicago Bears at Dallas Cowboys
Sunday, November 28
1:00 PM Philadelphia Eagles at New York Giants
Washington Redskins at Pittsburgh Steelers
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Carolina Panthers
4:00 PM New Orleans Saints at Atlanta Falcons
Sunday, December 5
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM Carolina Panthers at New Orleans Saints
San Francisco 49ers at St. Louis Rams
Arizona Cardinals at Detroit Lions
Minnesota Vikings at Chicago Bears
Atlanta Falcons at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
4:00 PM Green Bay Packers at Philadelphia Eagles
New York Giants at Washington Redskins
Sunday, December 12
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM New York Giants at Baltimore Ravens
Chicago Bears at Jacksonville Jaguars
New Orleans Saints at Dallas Cowboys
Seattle Seahawks at Minnesota Vikings
Detroit Lions at Green Bay Packers
4:00 PM St. Louis Rams at Carolina Panthers
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at San Diego Chargers
San Francisco 49ers at Arizona Cardinals
Saturday, December 18
5:00 PM Washington Redskins at San Francisco 49ers
Sunday, December 19
1:00 PM Dallas Cowboys at Philadelphia Eagles
Seattle Seahawks at New York Jets
Minnesota Vikings at Detroit Lions
4:00 PM New Orleans Saints at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
St. Louis Rams at Arizona Cardinals
Friday, December 24
3:00 PM Green Bay Packers at Minnesota Vikings
Sunday, December 26
(FOX NFL SUNDAY Doubleheader)
1:00 PM New York Giants at Cincinnati Bengals
Chicago Bears at Detroit Lions
Carolina Panthers at Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Atlanta Falcons at New Orleans Saints
4:00 PM Washington Redskins at Dallas Cowboys
Arizona Cardinals at Seattle Seahawks
Sunday, January 2, 2005
1:00 PM Minnesota Vikings at Washington Redskins
Detroit Lions at Tennessee Titans
Green Bay Packers at Chicago Bears
New Orleans Saints at Carolina Panthers
San Francisco 49ers at New England Patriots
4:00 PM Atlanta Falcons at Seattle Seahawks
Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Arizona Cardinals
Sunday, January 9, 2005
NFC Wild Card Game (teams, site & time to be determined)
Saturday, January 15, 2005
NFC Divisional Playoff Game (teams, site & time to be determined)
Sunday, January 16, 2005
NFC Divisional Playoff Game (teams, site & time to be determined)
Sunday, January 23, 2005
NFC Championship Game (teams, site & time to be determined)
Sunday, February 7, 2005
SUPER BOWL XXXIX
ALLTEL STADIUM, Jacksonville, FL
-- FOX SPORTS --