CMJ: Pace steps up as more get chance to bowl out BBC (26 Jun 1998)
THE Government's decision to allow all television companies to bid for coverage of home Test matches is good news for the game and not necessarily bad news for the majority of viewers
26-Jun-1998
26 June 1998
Pace steps up as more get chance to bowl out BBC
By Christopher Martin-Jenkins
THE Government's decision to allow all television companies to bid for
coverage of home Test matches is good news for the game and not
necessarily bad news for the majority of viewers. While rival cable
and satellite companies will be bidding for some of the cricket
package next month and Sky will be making their first bid for home
Tests, the BBC can be expected to mount a serious defence of one of
the last of the genuine jewels in their once resplendent crown.
It would have been premature, perhaps, for senior administrators at
the England and Wales Cricket Board to be popping champagne corks at
Lord's yesterday. Much hard negotiating over television rights lies
ahead. That they should now be able to boost their own investment in
the game with television rights at least double the present £18
million a year is, nevertheless, a triumphant outcome for the ECB
after a long and skilfully fought campaign to get Tests dropped from
the list of national events restricted only to terrestrial channels.
Until very recently some Westminster sources were indicating that
Chris Smith, the Culture Secretary, was wavering in his belief that he
should follow the advice of Lord Gordon's advisory group and insist
only that home Tests should be guaranteed what the report called
"secondary coverage". The advisory group defined that as "partial live
coverage, delayed 'as live' coverage, extended edited highlights soon
after the event, and live radio commentary or score flashes".
This is the very least that disaffected BBC viewers can expect from
next year but the chances are good that they will get at least the
Lord's Test almost in full, as now, and it is more than possible that
a new team of BBC negotiators will bid much more than before to keep
live coverage of all home Tests. The new controller of the amalgamated
BBC television and radio sports departments, Bob Shennan, has made no
secret of his belief that a successful bid is important to the
unwritten contract between the BBC and their public.
Terry Blake, marketing director of the ECB, will lead the
negotiations, due towards the end of July, along with Brian Downing, a
non-executive director of the ECB Management Board. Their aim will be
another three or four-year television contract involving not just the
BBC and Sky but possibly also one or two of the rival cable and
satellite stations who have expressed an interest.
Next year's World Cup is being shared by Sky and the BBC but the
melting pot thereafter also includes the one-day internationals, the
new National (50-over) League, the NatWest, the 'SuperCup' for the top
eight finishers in this year's County Championship, possibly some
championship cricket itself and before long, no doubt, some 'Super
Max' night cricket too.
The forthcoming early retirement of Jonathan Martin, formerly BBC
television's chief negotiator, means that those now charged with
matching or outbidding Sky will be unencumbered by past restrictions.
Cricket chiefs have made clear their belief that if the BBC can afford
£18 million a year for Match of the Day they can offer at least as
much for five or six five-day Tests a year and that this would still
be relatively cheap television. But the ECB and the BBC have to keep
faith with a public which would bitterly oppose the loss of live Test
coverage.
Lord MacLaurin, chairman of the ECB, said yesterday: "This gives
cricket the opportunity to provide much-needed extra investment in the
game while still maintaining a good balance in our broadcasting
arrangements. We will now invite broadcasters to talk to us about the
future. It is not our intention to sell Test match rights to the
highest bidder. We must get the balance right between audience and
revenue. Clearly terrestrial TV remains the key to us achieving that
aim."
Lord MacLaurin added that the National Development Plan for cricket
had identified the need for investment at all levels, especially the
grass roots.
Blake said that he was hoping for an "aggressive" BBC bid, adding: "We
naturally hope that they can retain what we all regard as a jewel both
in their crown and in cricket's."
The knock-on effect of a satisfactory television deal would be
immense. Ironically, Cornhill Insurance are one of only two regular
sponsors of major cricket in the UK with a long-term contract at
present. Would-be sponsors of the one-day internationals, the National
League and the County Championship have been awaiting developments
after the withdrawal of Texaco, AXA and Britannic Assurance. Benson
and Hedges, forced out of the market after their last final in July,
mainly because of Government action on tobacco sponsorship, may yet
lend their patronage to next year's experimental SuperCup.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)