Will Channel Seven's new cricket contract ever match its spectacular Melbourne Cup coverage?

By David Lord / Expert

Yesterday, with rain bucketing down on Flemington, Kerrin McEvoy came up with the sporting quote of the year – “I’m getting wet, but I don’t give a stuff” – as he tightly held his coveted third Melbourne Cup jockey’s trophy.

It could be said Channel Seven and Cricket Australia couldn’t give a stuff about the vast majority of cricket fans.

Seven has ignored the first ODI against South Africa and will ignore the next two, and the T20, plus the three T20s against India.

CA and the free-to-air broadcaster have given Fox a massive free kick for those seven internationals, intending to start their new contract with the opening day of the first Test against India, in Adelaide on December 6.

Seven has taken over after Nine’s four decades in charge, which started with Kerry Packer’s World Series Cricket in 1977. Nine never missed a game in all that time, but Seven will miss their first seven, and CA should never have allowed to let that happen.

Just another black mark against CA while it banks $1.182 billion in new television fees, that demands all heads to roll on the board for a complete cleanout.

Yesterday, during Seven’s final year of Cup coverage – the Race that Stops a Nation is heading to Ten – cricket-to-be promos featured the likes of Ricky Ponting, Glenn McGrath, Lisa Sthalekar, and Mel McLaughlin all saying, “Hold on, I’m coming.”

Better late than never.

Glenn McGrath (Credit: Hamish Blair/ALLSPORT)

Even though the current Australian cricketers can’t beat time, let alone any opposition, that free kick from Seven has given the far better-qualified Fox commentary team a dream start.

Adam Gilchrist heads the new Fox lineup, with a smorgasbord of talent such as Shane Warne, Mark Waugh, Mel Jones, Kerry O’Keeffe, Alyssa Healy, and Megan Barnard also on board.

Seven may never recover, as the station will flood the screen with commercials once they get cracking, while Fox will be commercial free on a dedicated channel.

But Seven’s biggest hit will be Bruce McAvaney, now the station has lost the Melbourne Cup, and the tennis after four decades from 2020 to Nine in the latest musical chairs of exclusive television sporting coverage.

McAvaney (65) is a sportscasting legend, having covered ten Olympic Games from Moscow to Rio, and ten AFL grand finals, which he will continue to cover – but losing the Cup, and the tennis, will be huge.

Yesterday at Flemington, in partnership with Francesca Cumani, they were simply brilliant on a trying day where Melbourne turned on its worst rain for hours, followed by sunshine for the big race, followed by more rain at presentation time.

For Ten, the McAvaney-Cumani combination will be mighty hard to toss.

But McAvaney will be missing from Seven’s new cricket coverage while he does the honours at the station’s final Australian Open in January, with American Jim Courier – another mighty hard combination for Nine to top.

No doubt we’ll get used to the new set-ups in the future simply because we have to. But credit must be given to those who have given viewers so much pleasure in the past, and Bruce McAvaney is right at the top of the list.

The Crowd Says:

2018-11-09T02:47:18+00:00

pakistanstar

Roar Rookie


Agreed. Racing people do not care about who's wearing what, and I doubt people interested in fashion would sit through a 6 hour telecast of racing in NSW & VIC just to see what a tent full of posh nobodies are up to.

2018-11-07T21:52:03+00:00

Ben

Guest


Hi David, reading the link JamesB provided was enough to make me double check who has the 2019 rights. If that one link wasn't enough to satisfy you, here are some others: https://www.news.com.au/sport/tennis/channel-nine-secures-tennis-rights-from-seven-a-year-earlier-than-anticipated/news-story/42738dcc91abfb9ee3687704612e1bc5 https://www.smh.com.au/business/companies/nine-secures-rights-to-the-2019-australian-open-tennis-from-seven-20180624-p4zndj.html https://www.sbs.com.au/news/nine-secure-tennis-rights-for-2019 Channel 9 have the rights for 2019.

2018-11-07T09:04:41+00:00

Wayne

Roar Guru


2019 is on Channel 9. Fact check. Channel 9 paid 48.5 million for 2019 rights.

AUTHOR

2018-11-07T03:50:33+00:00

David Lord

Expert


Nine has the tennis contract for five years - 2020 to 2024.

AUTHOR

2018-11-07T01:24:46+00:00

David Lord

Expert


Kangas, Nine never missed a home international in four decades, but Seven will miss seven before they cover their first. And for some reason, editorial slashed the commentary team numbers, so I'll repeat them because that's the point of the column. Seven will have Ricky Ponting, Glenn McGrath, Damien Fleming, Allan Border, Jason Gillespie, Brad Hodge, Bruce McAvaney, Tim Lane, James Brayshaw, Lisa Sthaleka, Mel McLaughlin, Abbey Gelmi, and Alison Mitchell and with so many new to commentary Seven can't afford to give Fox a seven-game start. Fox's lineup - Adam Gilchrist, Shane Warne, Mark Waugh, Allan Border, Kerry O'Keeffe, Brett Lee, Mike Hussey, Brendon Julian, Andrew Symonds, Darren Lehmann, Mitchell Johnson, John Hastings, Mel Jones, Isa Guha, Jessica Yates, Ellyse Perry, Alyssa Healy, Megan Barnard, Alex Blackwell, and Neroli Meadows, with Graeme Smith, Harsha Bhogle, and Russel Arnold on standby depending on the series. Fox has a dedicated channel and no ads, Seven will have plenty of ads.

2018-11-07T00:31:42+00:00

Nick

Roar Rookie


Agree. Only turned the TV on for the race and thought I had macular degeneration. Wasn't someone on the broadcast team watching and then directing non use of the camera. Worst coverage ever. No way do I want to sit there and watch people they have paid thousands to ramble on inanely.

2018-11-06T23:52:39+00:00

Kangas

Roar Rookie


The rail camera is just not necessary is it I do love the post race look via the helicopter camera. Amazing how those jocks steer through the field

2018-11-06T23:50:30+00:00

Kangas

Roar Rookie


Nine s coverage was terrible and I remember a few ashes tours they didn’t bother to cover. Especially 2005 on sbs

2018-11-06T21:51:50+00:00

BA Sports

Roar Guru


I didn't see much of the day, but I did see the Cup. How Ch 7 could stick with the rail camera for a third of the race when it had water on the lens was such a rookie and amateur decision by a Director and poor preparation by the Producer and camera floor team not to have checked before the race jumped. I hope those people are not involved in the Cricket coverage! How can we tell if the ball carried to the outfielder for a catch if there is a smudge on the camera lens?!

2018-11-06T21:28:25+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


Gotta say I love Francesca Cumani... The intelligence, the expertise, the looks, the grace and that lovely posh accent...

2018-11-06T21:19:32+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


This is the first spring carnival I’ve had without Foxtel in 20+ years. I’ve got to say I find the Channel 7 coverage cringe inducing and reflective of everything that’s stereotyped, cliched and awful about racing. C-list “never heard of em” celebrities, so called fashions (it was bad enough when it was all ladies stuff, now men are getting in on it....WTF is short trousers and no socks all about?!?!) and reality TV cross promotion-a-thons. I don’t understand who all that stuff caters for. It annoys the hell out of racing fans and are casual viewers interested in what the latest home and away poppet is up to really tuning in to a five hour telecast...?

2018-11-06T20:22:26+00:00

jamesb

Roar Guru


Hi David. I just want to let you know that Channel Nine will broadcast the Australian Open from January 2019 onwards. John McEnroe will be involved along with Jim Courier and others. http://www.bandt.com.au/marketing/nine-finally-secures-early-rights-tennis

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