NBC and CBS to simulcast NFL Network telecast of Patriots at Giants game

The NFL has arranged with
broadcast television partners NBC and CBS for an unprecedented three-way
national simulcast of the NFL Network telecast of Saturday night’s New England
Patriots at New York Giants game when the Patriots will try to become the first
NFL team to go 16-0 in a regular season, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell
announced.

“We have taken this
extraordinary step because it is in the best interest of our fans,”
Commissioner Goodell said. “What we have seen for the past year is a very
strong consumer demand for NFL Network. We appreciate CBS and NBC delivering
the NFL Network telecast on Saturday night to the broad audience that deserves
to see this potentially historic game. Our commitment to the NFL Network is
stronger than ever.”

DICK EBERSOL, Chairman,
NBC Universal Sports & Olympics said: “We’re happy to accommodate the
NFL’s request for a joint national simulcast of this potentially historic game
to make it available to the widest possible audience. We are proud to be
part of the first joint simulcast, with the NFL Network and CBS, of an NFL game
since Super Bowl I with CBS.”

NBC and CBS will carry the
NFL Network feed of the game with their regular announce team of Bryant Gumbel
and NBC Football Night in America’s Cris Collinsworth in the broadcast booth.
The game also will be televised by WCVB-ABC (Channel 5) in

Boston,
WMUR-ABC in

Manchester (Channel 9) and WWOR
(Channel 9) in

New York.
The telecast begins at 8 p.m. ET with kickoff set at 8:15 p.m. ET.

This will be the first
three-network simulcast in NFL history and the first simulcast of any kind of
an NFL game since Super Bowl I in 1967 when CBS and NBC both televised the
first meeting of the champions of the newly merged National Football League and
American Football League.

CBS was the network
partner of the NFL at that time and NBC televised the AFL. In that first Super
Bowl – in which the NFL Green Bay Packers beat the AFL Kansas City Chiefs 35-10
in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on January 15, 1967 – Ray Scott, Jack
Whitaker and Frank Gifford called the game for CBS while Curt Gowdy and Paul
Christman broadcast the game on NBC.

Against the 10-5
playoff-bound Giants, the 15-0 Patriots on Saturday night will seek to become
the first NFL team to complete an unbeaten regular season since the Miami
Dolphins went 14-0 in 1972. The Dolphins proceeded to win three more games,
including Super Bowl VII, to finish 17-0 for the only perfect season in NFL
history. The NFL regular season was expanded to 16 games in 1978.

The Patriots also are
aiming for their record 19th consecutive regular-season victory dating back to
the 2006 season. With six points, they also will become the highest scoring
team in one NFL season, breaking the Minnesota Vikings’ total of 556 in 1998.
Individually, quarterback Tom Brady (48) is in position to break Peyton
Manning’s NFL record for most touchdown passes in a season (49 in 2004) and
wide receiver Randy Moss (21) will set a new league mark if he catches
two touchdown passes to surpass Jerry Rice’s 22 in 1987.

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