Would you watch sport on Christmas Day?

By mds1970 / Roar Guru

No professional sport is played in Australia on Christmas Day. For most people, the thinking is that Christmas Day is for spending with family, and competitions can wait for another time. But every now and then someone suggests sport should be played.

In the last week, Sydney Thunder CEO Nick Cummins suggested playing a game on Christmas Day. It may be a piece of lateral thinking by Cummins, to run the idea up the flagpole and see who salutes. Probably nothing will come of it.

A few years ago, Shane Heal, who at the time was Sydney Kings coach, wrote here on The Roar that the NBL should play on Christmas Day. Yet no games have been played on Christmas, and Heal is no longer the Kings coach.

On SEN radio in Melbourne, Cameron Mooney suggested the A-League should take the plunge and play Christmas Day. Mooney, a former Geelong AFL star, has no official connection to the world game, but could this be an idea from outside that people from the round ball code will run with?

Maybe it’s a natural progression. In these increasingly professionalised sporting times, live sport is played over more timeslots than ever before.

Many of us remember the days when footballers trained at night and played in the day. Now, as full-time professionals, game days are spread over entire weekends and even going into Thursday or Monday nights. TV networks pay big dollars for the rights to show games, want to show them live, and not have multiple games of the same code on at the same time to split the audience.

In cricket, the appeal of night cricket has long been known. And in an otherwise lacklustre international summer, the resounding success of the prime-time Test at the Adelaide Oval guarantees we’ll see plenty more of the pink ball in the future.

There was once a time when Sundays were off-limits for sport. The Sabbath was a time for religion, rest and nothing else.

The early days featured in Chariots of Fire, when British sprinter Eric Liddell refused to run on a Sunday. Another event was found for him to run in that didn’t involve Sunday play. These days they’d struggle to find another event.

In Australia, it took longer for Sunday to be accepted as a sporting day. Even into the 1960s, the likes of Test captain Brian Booth refused to play on the Sabbath, which, by the time of his last season at first-class level, had reduced him to one Sheffield Shield game. A cricketer who wouldn’t play on Sundays in this day and age would struggle to get a game at any level higher than third grade.

It took the AFL into the 1980s to get into Sunday play, while rugby league was well set into Sundays before that.

Good Friday was considered off-limits for a long time. But rugby league took the plunge in the early 1990s and was rewarded with strong crowds. These days the NRL, Super Rugby and the A-League all schedule matches on Good Friday. The AFL remains resistant.

In the USA, Christmas Day play is a given for the NBA. Blockbuster matches are scheduled, and the TV ratings are strong. Could there be a market in Australia?

Interestingly, way back in the past, first-class cricket was played on Christmas Day. A Test match in Adelaide in 1951 included play on Christmas Day, but this was never repeated.

From the 1920s into the 1950s, much more conservative Christian times than today, Sheffield Shield cricket was played. A record that still stands was created on Christmas Day in 1928, as Alan Kippax and Hal Hooker put on 307 runs for the last wicket for New South Wales against Victoria at the MCG.

A typical family Christmas in this day and age will start early. Santa Claus has been overnight, and the presents are unwrapped early. As the parents work over the hot oven, the kids are playing with their new toys, then there’s the over-indulgent lunch.

By late afternoon, it’s a lazy day. But ratings figures show that less TV is watched on Christmas Day than any other day. The TV networks know it, and most of the content is recycled rubbish.

I can’t see Christmas Day sport being a big crowd-puller. It’ll be hard for an individual to drag themselves away from the family, or to drag a family away from their new toys, to get to a game. Whoever hosts the game would take a hit with the crowd figure.

And that’s the danger for Sydney Thunder if they were to put their hand up to host it. And with only four home games in a Big Bash season, if one of them is on an unattendable day, membership becomes a hard sell. For the Big Bash, the most family-friendly of the summer sporting events, Christmas Day is a bigger risk.

There are some who would welcome the chance to attend live sport. People without kids. People from non-Christian backgrounds who don’t celebrate Christmas. Maybe there’s a market out there who would jump at the opportunity. Many thought Good Friday wouldn’t work, but it did.

But by the evening; when the toys are played out, the stomach is overloaded and weariness is setting in, the chance to watch some live sport on TV would be welcomed by many. A live game or two would likely be a ratings winner.

The TV networks would be willing to show matches. The ratings they currently get on Christmas Day aren’t great, and we all know that live sport is a winner. They pay big dollars for the rights, and their influence sees big games played in prime-time slots. They’d struggle to get the ratings for any events that started before tea time, but after dinner there’s potential.

I’d struggle to get to a game on Christmas Day. But I’d welcome the chance to watch one on TV. What say you Roarers?

The Crowd Says:

2015-12-24T03:53:57+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


I wish you peace in your quest for meaning, Timmuh. Some say the Indian ODI is meaningless. I think you can find meaning in anything...whether Christmas or an ODI series. Play cricket on Christmas Day, however, and The Boxing Day Test will have its meaning diminished.

2015-12-24T03:50:54+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


It comes from the Australian Council of Churches census. The general census just ticks a multi choice and indicates little. If you want to measure church activity, the church is a reasonable source of information.

2015-12-24T01:55:30+00:00

Timmuh

Roar Guru


Christmas is meaningless to me and a sizeable portion of the populace. It still has meaning to majority though, even many who are not believers in Christ as Saviour, so I'm forced to have time off now rather than when I want to take it.

2015-12-23T23:16:49+00:00

Timmuh

Roar Guru


I might just stream the Afghanistan v Zimbabwe one dayer, two teams I don't see much of and a good chance for the Afghans to notch up a win over a full member nation.

2015-12-21T23:17:04+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Guest


Hell yeah and Good Friday AFL please.

2015-12-21T20:12:35+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


If you feel the need to watch sport on Xmas Day, then the meaning of Xmas is, well, meaningless. So it sort of doesn't compute. No Xmas means yeah, sport on a day that no longer exists & wouldn't be a public holiday. Can't have it both ways.

2015-12-21T20:10:01+00:00

Perry Bridge

Guest


We don't live in the Northern Hemisphere. We don't get snowed in on Chrissie Day - so there's little excuse to not be out in the backyard for a game of cricket in between courses. However - with more and more backyards disappearing and apartment dwellers then I can see why many folk need something to distract them from their social media and gaming focus.

2015-12-21T10:35:56+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Christmas isn't about them.

2015-12-21T09:34:03+00:00

Gentile

Guest


Emergency workers, people in hospitality, those in the mining industry, pilots, media people etc etc all have to work on xmas day for much less than a sports person would.

2015-12-21T08:18:17+00:00

AndyG

Roar Rookie


Reading comprehension not your strong point? Google those other religious holidays if you've never heard of them. And perhaps Google the religions to discover that there are many mythical beings that people believe in other than your own.

2015-12-21T07:46:48+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Good comment. It is a Christian holiday "for Christ's sake".

2015-12-21T07:22:04+00:00

Floyd Calhoun

Guest


'The other point worth making'?! What was the first one for Christ's sake?

2015-12-21T04:22:29+00:00

Brian

Guest


Church going aside there are 1.5m Australian Buddhist, Muslims, Hindus & Jews. I best at least a quarter of them live in each of Sydney and Melbourne which means each city has the population of approx Canberra with absolutely nothing open for 24 hours. Sport of some variety should be a no brainer and I have not even touched on atheists and agnostics. Between the BBL & HAL lets see who has the brains to run with it first. My bet on the BBL

2015-12-21T04:00:05+00:00

James Cattermole

Guest


I'm not telling anybody else what to do. I am stating my position. You can do what you want and so can anybody else. Given the current climate of businesses looking to take penalty rates away from workers that spend weekends away from their families, I would hope that people are paid accordingly though.

2015-12-21T03:52:32+00:00

AndyG

Roar Rookie


Which is all well and good for you - but whose right is it to tell everyone else that they must spend 25 December with their families to the exclusion of all forms of entertainment and/or sport?

2015-12-21T03:49:39+00:00

AndyG

Roar Rookie


We can. But why must it be a Christian holiday? We are supposedly a secular country. We play on Yom Kippur. We play during Ramadan. We play during Diwali. So if we are to endure one day without sport - which, in AFL states is actually two days a year without sport for the same religion - why not recognise Jews, Muslims or Hindus? (If I ruled Australia for a day, I'd move the date of Australia Day, and 26 January would become an annually recognised Day of Mourning for Indigenous Australians - which would be the one day of the year that we don't play sport.) The other point worth making is that not everyone has family to spend holidays with, and in a country as big as Australia there are plenty of people who are "displaced" from their families. As one such person, I would love the opportunity to go and watch a BBL game or an A-League game on Christmas Day in Melbourne before backing up with the Boxing Day test the next day.

2015-12-21T03:20:16+00:00

James Cattermole

Guest


Already had one Christmas lunch yesterday. Big families on both sides, maternal side, paternal side means 3 celebrations are not unusual. It's tiring, but worth it. All live within relatively close proximity which means easy to do. Also makes me careful not to overindulge as I have to drive in between.

2015-12-21T03:16:12+00:00

Paul Nicholls

Roar Guru


It's about balance - Test cricket in the day... BBL at night. Do what we do James - one celebration on Christmas Eve and one on Christmas Day. This two celebrations on the one day thing sounds awfully tiring....

2015-12-21T03:15:41+00:00

onside

Guest


Australian Harness Racing should introduce Reindeer Racing on Christmas day. Several teams of 8 reindeer could race sleighs on wheels around the track like Ben Hur. The main race could be the Rudolph Cup over 10.000 meters , where drivers dressed as Santas steered sleighs around the track, and vertically challenged people dressed as elves , rode in the back and threw all the naughty childrens non delivered toys, un -eaten cake, biscuits, carrots and warm beer, at other competitors throughout the race. Proceeds from the event would go to Red Nose Day in aid of KIDS and SIDS. TV ratings ? Go figure.

2015-12-21T03:15:00+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


There it is, the famed Don Freo changing of the goalposts.. I have no idea how you've come up with those figures, but the breakdown from the 2011 Census using your initial argument showed that there were more than three times as many Australian of 'no religion' than on 'non-Christian'. Link: http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Lookup/2071.0main+features902012-2013

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