TUDN (brand)

TUDN (formerly Univision Deportes) is a sports programming division of Univision, a Spanish language broadcast television network owned by TelevisaUnivision, that is responsible for the production of televised coverage of sports events and magazine programs that air on the parent Univision network and sister network UniMás, and cable channels Galavisión and TUDN TV channel. The division's premier sports properties are its broadcast rights to Liga MX, select matches involving the Mexico and United States men's national soccer teams, tournament matches from the CONCACAF Gold Cup and Copa América. The division's headquarters are at TelevisaUnivision's South Florida headquarters in the Miami suburb of Doral, Florida.

History
On May 7, 2019, in conjunction with announcing its partnership with Grupo Televisa, Univision announced that it would rename their Univision Deportes brand to TUDN. The new branding is a combination of abbreviations TDN and UDN, but the first two letters are also pronounced as the Spanish adjective "tu" (your), allowing the name to also be read as "Tu deportes network" ("Your sports network"). TUDN will be promoted as a multi-platform brand, and there will be closer collaboration between the American and Mexican counterparts—allowing for expanded studio programming in the morning and daytime hours (to bolster its expansion into European soccer with its recent acquisition of UEFA rights, and existing content such as Liga MX soccer). The rebranding took place on July 20 with a new slate of content built around live programming. UDN and Univision Deportes Radio were also renamed in line with this rebranding.

Current broadcast rights

 * Soccer
 * Liga MX (encompassing Univision, UniMás, TUDN and ViX) home matches for the following teams:
 * América
 * Atlas
 * Atlético San Luis
 * Cruz Azul
 * Juárez (only ViX)
 * León
 * Mazatlán
 * Monterrey
 * Necaxa
 * Pachuca
 * Puebla
 * Querétaro
 * Santos Laguna (only ViX)
 * Tijuana
 * Toluca
 * UANL
 * UNAM
 * Liga MX Femenil
 * América
 * Cruz Azul
 * Monterrey
 * Toluca
 * UANL
 * UNAM
 * Mexico national team
 * CONCACAF (2012–present)
 * CONCACAF Gold Cup (2000–present)
 * CONCACAF Champions League
 * CONCACAF Nations League
 * CONCACAF Futsal Championship
 * CONCACAF U-20 Championship
 * CONCACAF U-17 Championship
 * CONCACAF Women's U-20 Championship
 * CONCACAF Women's U-17 Championship
 * CONMEBOL
 * Copa América (2016, 2021, 2024)
 * Copa América Femenina (2022)
 * CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament
 * Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup (2012–present; TUDN)
 * UEFA (2018–2028)
 * UEFA Euro 2020 (inc. qualifiers)
 * UEFA Nations League
 * 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification
 * UEFA Youth and Junior Championships (U-21, U-19, and U-17)
 * UEFA Men's (A-team and U-19) and Women's Futsal Championships
 * UEFA Champions League (2018–2027)
 * UEFA Europa League (2018–2027)
 * UEFA Europa Conference League (2021–2027)
 * UEFA Super Cup (2018–2026)
 * UEFA Youth League (2018–2024)
 * Women's Finalissima (2023)


 * American football


 * NFL on UniMas (2013-present)
 * Super Bowl (2024–Present, on years when CBS airs the game in English)


 * Bull riding


 * PBR Camping World Team Series (2023–present)
 * PBR Unleash the Beast Series (2024–present)


 * Other programming
 * Contacto Deportivo – weeknight sports news program (Univision, 2015–present; UniMás, 2002–2015)
 * Fútbol Central – weekly soccer analysis/pre-game show (TUDN, 2012–present; Univision, 2015–present)


 * Fútbol Club – soccer analysis program on TUDN (2012–present)
 * Línea de 4 – In-depth analysis and opinion program of the most important sporting events of the day.
 * Misión Europa – The best information about European soccer including Champions League and Europa League.
 * Republica Deportiva – Sunday sports news/talk program (daytime edition, 1999–present; late-night edition, 2015–present)
 * Sábado Futbolero – Full coverage of the Liga MX matches on Saturday.

Former programs

 * Auto racing
 * Formula One (2013–2017; TUDN, UniMas)


 * Soccer
 * FIFA Confederations Cup (1997, 2001, 2005, 2009 and 2013)
 * FIFA World Cup (1970, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2014)
 * FIFA Women's World Cup (1999, 2003, 2007, 2011)
 * Ligue 1
 * Bundesliga (2017–2020, sub-licensed deal with Fox Deportes)
 * A-League
 * Major League Soccer (2007–2022)
 * MLS Cup (2007–2022)
 * MLS All-Star Game (2007–2022)
 * U.S. men's national soccer team
 * U.S. women's national soccer team

Play-by-play

 * Alfredo Tame
 * Andrés Vaca
 * Antonio Gómez Luna
 * Chris Wittyngham (English SAP only)
 * Daniel Nohra
 * Emilio Fernando Alonso
 * Enrique Bermúdez
 * Felipe Sebastián Muñoz
 * Francisco "Paco" Villa
 * Jorge Sánchez
 * José Cerna (English SAP only)
 * José Hernández (both Spanish and English SAP)
 * José Luis López Salido
 * Luis Alberto Martínez (both Spanish and English SAP)
 * Marco Cancino
 * Pedro Antonio Flores
 * Ramon Aranza


 * Ramsés Sandoval (both Spanish and English SAP)
 * Raúl Méndez
 * Raúl Pérez
 * Xavier Sol

Anchors

 * Lindsay Casinelli
 * Alejandro Berry
 * Ana Caty Hernández (Based at Televisa Deportes in Mexico City)
 * Tania Rincón
 * Ramsés Sandoval
 * Felipe Sebastián Muñoz

Analysts

 * Alejandro Berry (both Spanish and English SAP)
 * Carlos Pavon
 * Damián Zamogilny
 * Emanuel Villa
 * Enrique Borja
 * Francisco Fonseca
 * Georgina Gonzalez
 * Hugo Salcedo
 * Hristo Stoichkov
 * Iván Zamorano
 * Manuel Barrera
 * Marc Crosas
 * Marcelo Balboa
 * María Fernanda Mora
 * Mauricio Cienfuegos
 * Moisés Muñoz
 * Paulo Wanchope
 * Ramon Ramirez
 * Reinaldo Navia

Field Reporters

 * Alonso Cabral
 * Antonio Gomez Luna
 * Cristina Romero (Europe-based reporter)
 * Daniel Chanona (Europe-based reporter)
 * Daniel Schvartzman (US-based reporter)
 * Daniel Velasco
 * Diana Ballinas
 * Diego Armando Medina
 * Diego Peña
 * Fernando Jesús Torres
 * Francisco Arredondo
 * Gibrán Araige
 * Guadalupe Flores Peña
 * Hugo Ramirez
 * Karina Herrera
 * Israel Romo
 * Javier Rojas
 * Juan Carlos Zamora
 * Mafer Alonso (Mexican men's national soccer team reporter)
 * Mario Alberto Valdez
 * Michele Giannone (US-based reporter)
 * Nathalie Juarez
 * Xavier Sol
 * Vladimir Garcia
 * Yussif Caro

Play-by-play

 * Nicolás Cantor
 * Jorge Pérez Navarro
 * Luis Omar Tapia
 * Rodolfo Landeros
 * Juan Carlos 'Chiquis' Cruz
 * Pablo Ramírez

Analysts

 * Norberto Longo
 * Jesús Bracamontes
 * Diego Balado

Studio hosts

 * Fernando Fiore
 * Iván Kasanzew (nicknamed "El Conde K")
 * Lucía Villalón
 * Rosana Franco
 * Tony Cherchi
 * Adriana Monsalve

Presidents

 * Alexander "Sandy" Brown (2011–2012)
 * Juan Carlos Rodríguez (2012–2022)
 * Olek Loewenstein (2022–Present)

Television channel
TUDN (formerly known as Univision Deportes Network) is a digital cable and satellite channel that was launched by Univision Communications on April 7, 2012; the network mainly broadcasts soccer events (from leagues such as Liga MX (through individual teams rights held by the division), the CONCACAF Champions League and Major League Soccer); related news, analysis and documentary programming (such as its flagship sports news program Univision Deportes Fútbol Club and Univision Deportes Extra); and shows originated by the Mexican counterpart channel through Univision's longstanding programming agreement with Televisa.

During its times as UDN, it previously operated a secondary channel, Univision Deportes Network 2, which carried additional sports content including rebroadcasts of sports events originally seen on its parent network and studio programming; Univision Deportes Network 2, which was exclusive to Dish Network and created through a carriage agreement with the satellite provider struck in January 2012, ceased operations in 2014.

TUDN Radio
TUDN Radio (formerly Univision Deportes Radio) is a Spanish language sports radio network with a main focus on soccer. It was launched on April 19, 2017 on 10 Univision owned-and-operated stations previously affiliated with Univision America.