When NBC carried the Kentucky Derby for the first time in 2001, the broadcast lasted only 90 minutes.
On Saturday, when it carries the Run for the Roses for the 25th time, 90 minutes wouldn鈥檛 be enough for all the feature stories that will run leading up to post time.
NBC Sports will present 12 1/2 hours of coverage across two days on NBC, USA Network and Peacock. There will be five hours for Friday鈥檚 Kentucky Oaks on USA Network and Peacock. Saturday鈥檚 coverage begins on USA Network at noon ET before moving to NBC at 2:30 p.m. while Peacock will stream all 7 1/2 hours.
鈥淪o much has changed since we first started in 2001. At that time, we thought 90 minutes to cover a two-minute race. How are we going to fill all this time? Now we are still trying to figure out how we鈥檙e going to get this story in and that story in because there are so many great stories to tell,鈥 said Donna Brothers, the only member of the broadcast team involved with all 25 Derbys on NBC.
NBC has done five hours of coverage on the main network on Derby Day since 2018. Sam Flood, the executive producer and president of NBC Sports Production, said the true evolution behind adding more hours while making the coverage appeal to a cross-section of viewers began after he produced his first Derby in 2006.
鈥淚 remember getting done with the show, which I think was two hours. I kept thinking, we can do so much more,鈥 Flood said. 鈥淭here are so many assets here that should be showcased, and that鈥檚 when we started blowing it out, adding more hours and slowly shifting more and more hours on to NBC and off the cable platforms.鈥
The expansion has also included the Kentucky Oaks. It started airing on Bravo in 2009 before moving to the NBC Sports Network and then USA Network.
The Derby broadcast has evolved into one of the most diverse sports events that NBC does yearly and is on par with the Olympics, which it carries once every two years, and the Super Bowl, which it has once every four years.
It also might be the only place where a viewer can see fashion, recipes from one of the hosts of Bravo鈥檚 鈥淭op Chef,鈥 and race predictions from NBC News chief data analyst Steve Kornacki.
Mike Tirico, the host of NBC鈥檚 coverage since 2017, said doing the Derby served as good preparation for hosting the Olympics as well as a stint as a guest host on the 鈥淭oday鈥 show last week.
鈥淢y time doing the Derby helped me to do the 鈥楾oday鈥 show last week, not vice versa,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his show is so cool. It goes from speed figures to fascinators. It goes from betting to bourbon. We cover it all in the five hours with a great team of people who dive in and take their space and own it. We all build towards the race. The audience does the same.鈥
Tirico succeeded Tom Hammond as host. Hammond, a University of Kentucky graduate, was a guiding force around NBC鈥檚 early coverage and introducing the sport鈥檚 most prominent personalities to viewers.
Lindsay Schanzer, the supervising producer of NBC鈥檚 coverage, said one of the advantages of having nearly 4 1/2 hours leading up to post time at 6:57 p.m. ET is the chance to focus on the stories of the 20 horses that will line up in the starting gate.
Among the stories planned are the return of trainer Bob Baffert 鈥 who served a three-year suspension after Medina Spirit failed a drug test 鈥 89-year-old trainer D. Wayne Lukas and Michael McCarthy, the trainer of prerace favorite Journalism, whose family was displaced from home in Southern California due to the wildfires.
Because of the many different topics in the broadcast, Schanzer has an interesting approach in how she books the coverage with what she calls a colors document, where each element of coverage has its own color.
鈥淚 like to look at it from a broad perspective to make sure there鈥檚 not too much of one color in one area, and every color is kind of represented across the show so that if you鈥檙e watching it, you鈥檙e getting a little bit of a taste of everything,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ne color could be a fashion element, one could be Kornacki鈥檚 insights, one could be an interview with a horseman. I try to look at it in a holistic way like that.鈥
The approach has certainly worked. Last year鈥檚 broadcast averaged 16.7 million viewers, the largest Derby audience since 1989. That included an average minute audience of 714,000 streaming on Peacock.
Overall, 11 of the past 15 Derbys held in May have averaged at least 15 million.
鈥淲e鈥檝e had all kinds of things happen (since 2001), and that鈥檚 what鈥檚 so unique about the sport, but specifically about the Derby,鈥 said Jon Miller, NBC Sports president of acquisitions and partnerships. 鈥淵ou have 20 horses that come into that gate and long shots that can pull off the upset. You have favorites, you have great ownership stories, and you have legendary trainers. Who knows who is going to surprise this year? But that鈥檚 what鈥檚 great about it.鈥
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