These broadcasts helped make up my list of top 10 high-def sports telecasts, but what’s No. 1?
SlideshowHas any genre of television broadcasting benefited more from the advent of high-definition than sports?
The first events I watched on my HD plasma after picking it up last year were the Thanksgiving NFL games, and they certainly gave me one of those “holy cow, this looks amazing” moments. This past year, there have been moment after moment like that thanks to the combination of HD and sports, with some competitions truly standing apart from others.
Watching season after sports season, championship after championship definitely made me wish I had bought into HD earlier, so I tried to keep track of my favorite events of the year—and taking into consideration the look and sound of the particular events almost as much as the games themselves.
So I present to you my top 10 favorites from 2008, and it wasn’t easy. This year was especially entertaining with more nail-biting, all-the-marbles games than usual—even the Super Bowl and NCAA Men’s Basketball final were close for a change, and only one of those games cracked my top 10.
Am I partial to certain sports? Sure, and I’ll admit there is some bias on my list—sorry, NASCAR fans, I appreciate how great your sport is in HD, but I just couldn’t flag a race for the top 10. I’ll view the lush fairways and lakes of your average golf tournament before I turn on auto racing.
To me, one event clearly exhibited the jaw-dropping spectacle of high-def more than any. But I hope you have fun scrolling through the first nine as well. There’s an honorable mention bonus at the end, too.
So what sporting events kept you on the edge of your home theater seats in 2008? Any glaring omissions I forgot?
Click here to view the Top 10 HD Sports Broadcasts of 2008.

2008 Formula 1 drivers’ championship (Louis Hamilton) decided on on the final corner of the final lap of the final race of the year. Can’t get closer than that.
Disqualified/dishonorable mention: opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics for digitally augmenting the broadcast (adding in fireworks plus whatever else we haven’t yet figured out).
Should TV manufacturers offer dumbed-down TVs that focus on image quality rather than apps?
Centralized home control and automation plus boatload of A/V options including dropdown theater screen revitalize 12K-square-foot home.
Should TV manufacturers offer dumbed-down TVs that focus on image quality rather than apps?
Say hello to home control in this high-tech palace, circa 2006.
Who cares about them adding fireworks? How does this take anything away from the presentation that China was trying to do. It actually made the opening ceremonies that much more incredible on television, which is how the games are watched anyways.