Radio-Canada has aired National Hockey League (NHL) broadcasts, usually Montreal Canadiens', under the La Soirée du hockey (literally translated to The Night of Hockey) brand; which was the French language equivalent of the English Canadian CBC's NHL broadcasts Hockey Night in Canada. Similar to its English language counterpart, the show used "The Hockey Theme" as its theme song. The show ran from 1952 to 2004.
La Soirée du hockey | |
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Also known as | La Soirée du hockey Molson à Radio-Canada (1988–1998) La Soirée du hockey Molson Export à Radio-Canada (1998–2004) |
Presented by |
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Starring |
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Theme music composer | Dolores Claman |
Opening theme | "The Hockey Theme" |
Country of origin | Canada |
Original language | French |
Production | |
Production locations | Montreal Forum, Montreal (until 1996) Bell Centre (formerly Molson Centre), Montreal (since 1996) |
Camera setup | multi-camera |
Running time | >3 hours |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network |
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Release | October 11, 1952 June 13, 2002 | –
Related | |
LNH à RDS |
Games covered
editLa Soirée du hockey most frequently featured Montreal Canadiens games on Saturday evenings, usually in parallel with English-language broadcasts on CBC. In later years, CBC would drop some of its split-national telecasts in the 7 p.m. ET window, resulting in a single national telecast at that time (most of the time featuring the Toronto Maple Leafs), while Radio-Canada continued to feature the Canadiens. The broadcast featured Quebec Nordiques and Ottawa Senators games occasionally during the regular season on rare occasions where the Canadiens were idle on Saturday night.
During the playoffs, SDH featured all games involving the Montreal Canadiens. After they were eliminated from further contention (or if they did not make the playoffs that season), the program usually featured series of interest to French Canadians, all the way to the Stanley Cup Finals.
Collaboration with Réseau des sports
editBeginning with the 2002–03 season, RDS secured exclusive French language rights to the NHL. The deal, reached with the Canadiens and not directly with the league, was meant to ensure a consistent home for all Canadiens games; as a general-interest network, Radio-Canada cannot give up so much airtime to Canadiens games. The announcement drew the ire of, among others, then-Heritage Minister Sheila Copps, who suggested that the network would somehow be violating its conditions of licence by not airing La Soirée du hockey. In fact, there is no specific mention in the CBC's licence from the CRTC (or any other legal document governing the CBC) that the CBC's networks carry coverage of NHL games, nor that there be parity between the two networks' carriage of such games.
Radio-Canada soon reached an agreement to produce the Saturday night games, to remain branded La Soirée du hockey, to be simulcast on both SRC and RDS.
Le Hockey du samedi soir
editFor reasons that are unclear, the SRC production agreement was terminated after the 2004 playoffs.[3] Instead, RDS began to produce its own Saturday night broadcasts, titled Le Hockey du samedi soir. These were simulcast on SRC—but only outside Quebec, where RDS has limited distribution—for two further seasons through 2006. At that point, French-language rights to NHL hockey became fully exclusive to RDS.
Present day
editThe national French-language NHL package, including all Saturday broadcasts, moved to TVA Sports (under sub-licence from Rogers Communications) in 2014. While Rogers has licensed the rights to the "Hockey Night in Canada" name from the CBC for its Saturday broadcasts (some of have continued to air on CBC), there has been no indication that the rights to the "La Soirée du hockey" branding are included in that deal. Instead, TVA Sports has branded its Saturday telecasts as La super soirée LNH (NHL Super Evening) and, unlike its English language counterpart, has not offered broadcasts to Radio-Canada.[4]
List of commentators
editRadio personnel
edit- Roland Beaudry (1937), play-by-play announcer
- Charles Mayer (1940s–1950s), established and hosted the French language equivalent of the Hot Stove League on radio broadcasts, and made the choice of the game's three stars[5]
- Michel Normandin (1945), play-by-play announcer[6]
- René Lecavalier - He was also the first commentator for La Soirée du hockey. He broadcast games for the Montreal Canadiens on radio and television for over 30 years and retired in 1985. He was as revered in French Canada as Foster Hewitt was in English Canada.
- Lionel Duval [when?], play-by-play announcer
- Richard Garneau (1957–1985), play-by-play announcer[7]
- Claude Quenneville (1980), play-by-play announcer
- René Pothier (1991), play-by-play announcer
TV play-by-play announcers
edit- René Lecavalier (1952–1985)
- Raymond Lebrun (1973–1977)
- Winston McQuade (1977–1982)
- Serge Arsenault (1982–1988)
- Richard Garneau (1985–1990)
- Jean Pagé (1988–1989)
- Camille Dubé (1989–1997)
- Claude Quenneville (1990–2002)
TV colour commentators
edit- Jean-Maurice Bailly (1952–1970)
- Gilles Tremblay (1970–1998)
- Robert Pépin (1972)
- Claude Mailhot (1972–1982)
- Paul Larivée (1978)
- Bernard Brisset (1980)
- Gérard Potvin (1981)
- Mario Tremblay (1986–1988)
- Yvon Pedneault (1994)
- Michel Bergeron (1998–2002)
- Ron Fournier [when?]
- Pierre Bouchard [when?]
References
edit- ^ McKee, Ken (May 24, 1986). "Hockey Night in Canada sold to Molson's, U.S. firm". Toronto Star.
- ^ McKee, Ken (January 8, 1988). "Hockey magazines bidding for a piece of TV market". Toronto Star.
- ^ TSN : NHL - Canada's Sports Leader
- ^ "TVA SPORTS DÉVOILE SON CALENDRIER". TVA Sports. 2014-08-05. Retrieved 2014-09-20.
- ^ "Charles Mayer". Canada's Sports Hall of Fame. 1971. Retrieved 25 December 2020.
- ^ imperial Oil magazine "The Sales Motor" October 1952
- ^ "Richard Garneau, médias". 14 July 2006.