Latest News About Réseau Des Sports

Updated 2026-04-23 17:04

RDS (Réseau des sports) is a French-language Canadian sports channel owned by Bell Media. Here’s the latest based on available public reporting:

If you’d like, I can pull the very latest headlines from reliable outlets and summarize them with direct citations. I can also filter to a specific sport (e.g., NHL, MLS, curling) or region (Canada-wide vs. Quebec).

Sources

Réseau National Sport et Réemploi

Le réseau national Sport et Réemploi réunit les huit recycleries et ressourceries indépendantes du sport (SupporTerre, ReSport, L'équipière - Ressourcerie Sportive, Lezprit Réquipe, FairePlay!, Ecovestiaire, HexEco et La Recyclerie du Sport Lorraine) qui œuvrent toute l’année pour rendre le sport plus responsable ♻️ et accessible à tous 🤗. Ancrés dans l'économie sociale et solidaire (#ESS), les membres du RNSR ont mis en place un plan d’actions afin de mutualiser leurs compétences et être...

www.sport-reemploi.org

Sports en général | Cision - Newswire.ca

Obtenez des nouvelles de dernière heure sur les sports, de l’information sur les billets et les résultats de saison, aux annonces de décisions portant sur les...

www.newswire.ca

Réseau des sports | Ice Hockey Wiki - Fandom

Réseau des sports (RDS) is a Canadian French language discretionary specialty channel oriented towards sports and sport-related shows. It is available in 2.5 million homes, and is owned by CTV Specialty Television Inc. (Bell Media 80% and ESPN 20%). Its full name (usually prefaced in speech by the French article "le") translates as "The Sports Network", the name of its Anglophone counterpart, TSN. RDS was launched on September 1, 1989, as a sister network to Labatt's highly successful...

icehockey.fandom.com

Réseau des sports

Réseau des sports (RDS), is a Canadian French language specialty channel oriented towards sports and sport-related shows. It is available in 2.5 million homes, and is owned by CTV Specialty Television Inc. (Bell Media 80% and ESPN 20%). Its full name (usually prefaced in speech by the French article "le") translates as "The Sports Network", the name of its Anglophone counterpart, TSN.

dbpedia.org