England: Television teams up for World Cup (11 Mar 1998)
SKY Sports and the BBC will join forces to televise next year's World Cup in England and Wales, sharing production responsibilities for onward transmission to more than 80 countries, writes Christopher Martin-Jenkins
11-Mar-1998
11 March 1998
Television teams up for World Cup
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
SKY Sports and the BBC will join forces to televise next year's
World Cup in England and Wales, sharing production
responsibilities for onward transmission to more than 80
countries, writes Christopher Martin-Jenkins.
The contracts are worth £8 million to the International Cricket
Council, with the England Cricket Board, as the hosts, taking
the largest slice. The tournament organiser, Terry Blake,
described it yesterday as "a great deal for cricket and a great
deal for viewers".
The group matches will be covered on alternate days by one or
other channel, with one of the 30 matches shown live every day
from May 14 to 31. BBC radio will cover the games through
ball-by-ball commentaries on Radio Four and regular updates on
Radio 5 Live. Commentaries will also be carried on the Internet.
The nine matches in the second stage of the tournament will be
covered in a five to four ratio by Sky and the BBC, with each
organisation televising one of the semi-finals at Old Trafford
and Edgbaston on June 16 and 17. The final at Lord's on Sunday
June 20 will be shown live on Sky and the BBC.
This co-operative deal may well increase the chances of the ECB
getting their wish to delist all but the Lord's Test after 1999,
provided they can convince the committee looking at delisted
sports events the BBC will continue to be a major player in the
coverage of Test cricket on television. Blake said: "We have
worked hard to achieve the right balance between Sky Sports and
the BBC."
Outside the UK, television rights have already been sold in
Australia and Africa. Three global sponsors for the World Cup -
Vodafone, NatWest and Pepsi-Cola - have been announced and two
more corporations are expected to come aboard the gravy train
soon.
So long as it does not rain, the tournament already looks likely
to be what Vic Wakeling of Sky called "the major sports event of
1999". Good weather or not, it is guaranteed to rain money on
the game.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)