12 June – The announcement of the rights to the Premier League for the next three seasons reveals that BT has won the rights to 38 matches each season.[1] The news followed speculation that ESPN was reconsidering its position in the UK.[2]
September – BT wins the rights to Premiership Rugby and its associated 7s Series, and in November it picks up the rights to American, Brazilian, French and Italian top-flight football.[3][4]
25 February – BT agrees to acquire ESPN's UK and Ireland TV channels business, consisting of ESPN and ESPN America, as well as the rights associated with the channel, such as the FA Cup. BT will continue to broadcast at least one ESPN branded channel as part of its BT Sport package of services.[6]
2 May – BT Sport 1 and BT Sport 2 are added to the BT TV EPG with an on-screen message saying that the channels are coming soon.
3 May – The channels are added to Sky and are called Sailing 1 and Sailing 2.
7 May – BT Sport acquires the rights to air Ultimate Fighting Championship events and taped programming in the UK and Ireland for three years, from 1 August.[7]
9 May – It is announced that BT Sport had acquired an exclusive five-year deal to broadcast MotoGP races from the 2014 season, including free practices and qualifying as well as full coverage of Moto2 and Moto3.[8] BT Sport also buys the rights to the FA WSL, A-League, the Football Conference for two years with 25-30 live games a season, including the end-of-season play-offs.[9] and programming from Red Bull Media House.
3 August – BT Sport Films launches, showing feature-length sports documentary films.
15 August – BT signs a wholesale deal with Virgin Media bringing the channels free of charge to customers on the TV XL package.[10]
9 November – BT announces an £897 million deal with UEFA to broadcast the Champions League and Europa League exclusively on BT Sport from the 2015–16 season for three years. The deal will end two decades of the competition being broadcast free-to-air on ITV, although BT stated that the finals of both competitions and at least one match per season involving each participating British team would still be broadcast free-to-air.[11]
1 December – BT Sport shows its first NBA match, thereby adding professional basketball to its broadcasting of the college game which it shows as part of its coverage of the NCAA.[12]
12–28 June – BT Sport broadcasts its first multi-sport event when it covers the 2015 European Games.
1 August – BT Sport launches a fourth channel - BT Sport Europe. The channel will be used to show its coverage of European football and European rugby union.[15]
September – BT Sport launches two more channels. BT Sport Showcase will show selected coverage on a free-to-air basis and BT Sport Ultra HD features selected coverage in 4K.
22 May – BT Sport shows the finals of the FA Vase and FA Trophy as a double header. This builds upon BT's coverage of non league cup football as the previous year BT had shown the final of the FA Trophy.[18]
14 February – BT and Sky agree a £4.4bn three-year deal to show live Premier League football matches from 2019 to 2022, but the amount falls short of the £5.1bn deal struck in 2015.[23]
March–May – BT Sport broadcasts the 2018 Indian Premier League. It is a one-off as the following year the event transfers back to Sky Sports.
May – BT Sport shows Serie A for the final time as in July is loses rights to Italian football to Eleven Sports[24]
June – BT Sport shows the NBA for the final time ahead of the rights transferring to Sky Sports.[25]
August – BT Sport becomes the exclusive holder of all rights to the UEFA Champions League. The deal includes live coverage and highlights. Consequently, for the first time, there is no free-to-air coverage of the competition.
March – BT Sport shows the Scottish Professional Football League for the final time.[29] In recent seasons BT had shared the rights with Sky Sports but new deal sees Sky obtaining all of the rights to the SPL.
29 August – BT Sport shows the FA Community Shield for the sixth and final time.
8 September – It is announced that all of September's Premier League fixtures will be shown on TV due to fans not being into stadiums due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This includes a weekly 3pm Saturday afternoon match, shown on TV in the UK for the first time with BT showing three of the additional fixtures, including one on Saturday at 3pm.[30]
13 November – The Premier League confirms that the broadcasting of matches via pay-per-view will end and that all games in December and January will be shown by either Sky Sports and BT Sport with one game also being shown on both Amazon Prime and the BBC.[32]
2021
5 February – BT Sport secures the rights to all international and domestic cricket played in the West Indies and New Zealand for the next two years. This includes England's tour to the West Indies in 2022.[33]
9 May – BT Sport's coverage of the FA Women's Super League ends when the non-terrestrial rights to the competition transfer to Sky Sports.
13 May – The Premier League announces that, for the first time, the next three-year broadcasting contact has been awarded without a bidding process. Consequently, BT Sport is paying the same amount for the same packages as it did for the 2019-2022 contact.[34]
15 May – BT Sport coverage of the FA Cup ends as the rights pass to the BBC and ITV.
May – BT Sport broadcasts German domestic football for the final time. Sky Sports replaces BT Sport as broadcaster of Germany's Bundesliga and Supercup from the start of the following season.[35]
21 August – Serie A football returns to BT Sport after having been shown by other broadcasters since 2018. The new deal sees BT Sport showing six matches per round for the next three seasons.[36]
28 May – BT Sport Score is broadcast for the final time. The rolling scores and results programme ends as part of a review into non-live sports programming ahead of BT Sport becoming TNT Sports.[38]
18 July – After just under ten years on air, BT Sport closes down at 6am, and is immediately replaced by TNT Sports.
TNT Sports
2022
11 May – Warner Bros. Discovery EMEA announces that it has reached an agreement to combine its Eurosport UK business with BT Sport in a 50/50 joint venture, in a transaction scheduled to be completed by the end of 2022 pending approval from regulators and sports bodies.[39][40]
21 February – It is announced that BT Sport will be renamed TNT Sports in July and that Discovery+ will be the new streaming home of the service.[43][44]
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.
24 October – TNT replaces Sky as rights holder to the NBA. The deal will see TNT show more than 250 games each season.[45]
January – TNT Sports' coverage of the WWE will end when all WWE content in the UK will be broadcast through Netflix.[47]
April – TNT's coverage of boxing fights promoted by Queensberry Boxing will end. The rights will be taken over by DAZN.[48]
August – TNT Sports will take over as broadcaster of the FA Community Shield.
August – The new arrangements for broadcasting of the Premier League will see a significant increase in the number of games broadcast on television, with all matches not kicking off at 3pm on a Saturday now being shown live. Sky's number of matches will almost double and will now broadcast a minimum of 215 matches, up from 128, including all ten games from the final day of the season and the two midweek rounds previously shown by Amazon. TNT's total of 52 games/season remains the same. This arrangement runs until the end of the 2028/29 season.[49]
Some television coverage of the FA Cup will, once again, go behind a paywall when TNT Sports begins a four-year deal with the Football Association to show the competition.[50]