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US Senate appeal to NFL over game day broadcasts

Members of the US Senate have asked the NFL commissioner to make more game-day broadcasts available to local fans at no cost on broadcast television.

Members of the US Senate have asked the NFL commissioner to make more game-day broadcasts available to local fans at no cost on broadcast television.

The league already provides free broadcasts in the home cities of competing teams, but in a letter to Commissioner, Roger Goodell, 13 members of the Senate said that the NFL is too narrowly interpreting what a home city is.

“The policy leaves behind NFL fans across the country simply because they live outside cities to which the NFL has granted franchises,” the senators told Goodell, pointing out that the NFL does not consider the western Pennsylvania town of Johnstown part of the Pittsburgh Steelers’ home market.

The NFL Network and several cable operators, including Comcast and Time Warner, are in a dispute over football carriage. The NFL wants the network placed on cable’s basic tier, while the cable companies want it to be a premium channel or part of a paid sports tier.

In a statement to the press, the NFL, said: “The goal of our NFL Network games is to show [games] to a national audience. However, that goal has been undercut by several of the largest cable operators that are discriminating against our network by either refusing to carry it or placing it on a much more costly tier than the sports networks that the cable operators themselves own. These cable operators are denying their consumers fair access to this popular NFL programming.”