Published
for the Fort Bliss/El Paso, Texas Community
January
20, 2005
Are you ready for
some football? AFN to broadcast Super Bowl live for troops
Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
BAGHDAD, Iraq –
In some parts of America, football is almost a religion. And troops
deployed in combat zones will see the High Mass of football –
the Super Bowl – live on the American Forces Network on Feb. 6.
In fact, one of the questions Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld got
during a news conference in Kuwait was whether troops would see the
Super Bowl.
"American Forces Network is pleased to broadcast the Super Bowl
live to everyone in the world on the AFN Prime Service … and on
our AFN Sports Service," said Larry Sichter, the chief of affiliate
relations.
This means troops who don't receive the prime channels will be able
to receive the game without having to retune receivers, Sichter said.
"We normally carry it on the prime channels and counter program
on the sports channels," he said. "But this year, primarily
because of the troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, we're going to be broadcasting
the game and pre-game (show) on AFN Sports."
Sailors on ships at sea also will be able to watch the game through
the Navy's Direct Sailor Service.
Football junkies will get 13 and a half hours of Fox network Super Bowl
programming. And for those who still haven't gotten enough or were on
duty, AFN will rebroadcast the game the next day.
The broadcast will not include the commercials – an aspect of
the game that many people actually enjoy. The affiliates will insert
public service announcements and some of the 33 affiliates will broadcast
messages to the troops. "We're trying to get some command messages
out," said AFN-Iraq Commander Air Force Lt. Col. Doug Smith.
Servicemembers who don't want to watch football also are covered. In
the past year, AFN has launched two new services – AFN—Family
and AFN—Movies – that won't carry the game.
Coverage in the U.S. Central Command region is almost universal. American
Forces Radio and Television Service officials said there are a total
of 7,978 decoders in the area. This includes 4,821 in Iraq, 1,062 in
Central Asia and around 50 in Djibouti.