- May 15th, 2006, 1:24 am
#15135
Sports cable channel OLN changes name againThis article was dated Apr 24, but I hadn't heard of the name change until I just read it.
By Paul J. Gough
NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - OLN, the cable channel known until last July as the Outdoor Life Network, will change its name to Versus in September.
OLN president Gavin Harvey said the new name captures the essence of where the Comcast Corp.-owned channel is going now and in the future.
"We're all about outdoor sports, and we're not only building on that but also opening it up to other competitive sports and other activities," Harvey said.
It has been a busy year for the channel, which is in about 60 million homes. Late in the summer, OLN snagged national cable rights to the National Hockey League after ESPN gave them up; it began coverage in October and now is carrying the Stanley Cup playoffs. It recently received rights to the Arena Football League as well as World Cup skiing and tennis' Davis Cup. It also carries repeats of "Survivor."
"It seemed like the time to make the break with the past and build on the new positioning," Harvey said.
He said OLN's new programming goes beyond the "outdoor filter" that the brand had been about.
"People didn't really watch us because we were outdoors, people watched us because there was dramatic activity going on," Harvey said. "Like the Davis Cup, which takes place in the outdoors, but it really isn't an outdoor sport."
But OLN, which has a strong brand name among outdoors enthusiasts for its hunting and fishing programming, says it isn't about to give that up. Name change or no, it is still about the so-called field sports.
Harvey declined comment on rumors that OLN -- or Versus -- would be interested in a cable deal with Major League Baseball. But he said Versus would give the channel a new identity that is more than what it has done in the past.
"This new positioning that we have allows us to be opportunistic," Harvey said. "We want to pursue great sporting events wherever they lead us."
OLN probably will have a rough road in the summer, when it faces the Tour de France without Lance Armstrong. The Tour always has been a ratings grabber for OLN, but it is likely that an Armstrong-less race will generate lower ratings.
"We know that we're going to lose viewers because they followed Lance," Harvey said. "Lance not only transcended cycling, but he transcended sports." Harvey said OLN has, since he arrived in early 2004, decided it would build the race beyond Armstrong knowing that he eventually would retire.
Harvey said the name Versus was chosen after an extensive search by focus groups inside and outside the company.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
