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Investigating cricket’s broadcast conundrum

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Roar Rookie
5th June, 2020
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As COVID-19 keeps wreaking havoc worldwide, putting entire countries under severe economic and healthcare stress, it has also brought much of the sporting world to a grinding halt.

Understandably in the grand scheme of things, the world of sports pales in comparison to people losing their jobs and lives. Nevertheless, as Keenan Malik expressed so eloquently, sports still represent “the most important of the least important things”.

Therefore, this pandemic actually presents a glorious opportunity for sports like cricket to reflect upon and re-jig its bloated domestic and international calendar. There is an urgent need for individual cricket boards to unite for the good of the global game and ensure that cricket as a sport remains accessible to all. Boards need to think about long-term sustainability rather than opting for the short-term cash grab to offset losses inflicted by COVID-19.

One such dilemma is choosing between the pay TV, free-to-air and streaming models when it comes to showcasing its cricket. While this issue is universal to all sports, it becomes particularly relevant for associate and emerging cricket.

Detail view of a TV camera

(Photo by Kai Schwoerer-IDI/IDI via Getty Images)

Background
Dr Paul Rouse, an Irish historian who teaches at University College Dublin, has conducted a brilliant in-depth analysis on the pay TV model and its impact on sport. In his own words, pay TV companies desperately crave exclusivity, as it adds value to their model. But this exclusivity comes with a hefty price tag.

Paying sporting organisations huge amounts of money necessitates these pay TV providers such as BT Sports, ESPN, Sky Sports and Foxtel to pass on the cost to customers by charging large subscription fees. The inordinate sums of money provided by pay TV companies not only hikes up the amounts paid to players in professional sports, but also drives the creation of professionals in sports, which were previously amateur.

However, striking lucrative deals with pay TV companies can be bit of a poisoned chalice for sporting organisations. To put it simply, pay TV simply cannot compete with free-to-air television when it comes to viewer numbers. The strength of universal public service broadcasting is that it provides equality of access to every community within a country, as many simply cannot afford the vast subscription fees charged by the likes of Sky, Foxtel and ESPN. The evidence is crystal clear. Consider the case of cricket in England.

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Let us compare the viewing numbers for the 2004 Test series between England and New Zealand. The first Test was shown on free-to-air Channel 4, while the second Test was shown exclusively on Sky Sports. The first Test viewer numbers are six times higher for Day 1 and almost 12 times higher for Day 5. At its peak, the 2005 Ashes on Channel 4 attracted 8.4 million viewers. A decade later, the 2015 Ashes on Sky got just under 500,000.

England’s dramatic World Cup victory in 2019 attracted a peak audience of 4.5 million on Channel 4, as live international cricket returned to free-to-air TV for the first time in 14 years. Furthermore, if you added up all the people watching cricket via streaming, Sky Sports and free-to-air TV, the viewership peaked at eight million, comfortably the largest cricket viewing figures in England in 14 years, since cricket went behind a paywall in 2005.

England lift the World Cup trophy

(Photo by Michael Steele/Getty Images)

The discrepancy in the numbers is undeniable. And it has real world adverse impacts on the sport. The Sport England Active People survey, conducted between 2008 and 2009, found 428,000 individuals aged 16 or over played cricket at least once during the season. A decade later, this has fallen by 32 per cent to 292,200. These numbers should terrify the ECB, who are supposedly one of cricket’s powerful big three boards.

And terrify they have, judging by the ECB’s convoluted machinations in trying to get cricket back on mainstream free-to-air TV. They blew their cash reserves on concocting an entirely new format of the sport, the Hundred, to entice the BBC. And now, they find themselves in a delicate financial position due to the coronavirus crisis and the resultant postponement of the Hundred to 2021. These examples really underlie the importance of cricket exposure on mainstream television.

Emerging cricket
So what’s the best way forward for emerging cricket in gaining this exposure? Well, it is a complicated question that does not have a simple answer. However, we can safely assume that a model that relies solely on pay TV to generate revenue and recoup its costs is not a successful long-term formula.

Euro T20 Slam versus the European Cricket League
Consider the postponed Euro T20 Slam event. On a cursory examination of the tournament, it becomes quickly apparent that it is very unlikely to drive engagement and tribalism among local fans. The franchise team names are atrociously conceived, uninspiring and generic and there is a distinct lack of tradition or tribalism.

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Furthermore, to this day, actual details about the tournament remain scarce. No matter how much charity you extend to the Euro T20 Slam organisers, it seems more and more that the tournament itself was basically a cynical, money-spinning exercise designed to capture as much TV audience as possible from the giant and lucrative Indian market.

A passionate Indian cricket fan

(AP Photo/Gautam Singh)

There was a distinct lack of European flavour in a supposedly European tournament. The Euro T20 Slam draft event featured Bollywood and Punjabi music and to top it all off, the host for the night, Darren Gough, seemed generally unfamiliar with most of the local Irish, Scottish and Dutch cricketers’ names.

Furthermore, in order to make the franchise model work and to pay over-the-top wages to marquee players such as Rashid Khan, Eoin Morgan, JP Duminy and Imran Tahir, the organisers GS Holdings have no other option but to sell their content exclusively to pay TV. This includes providers such as Sky Sports in the UK and Star Sports and HotStar on the Indian subcontinent.

We have already witnessed how viewing figures drop dramatically when sports move away from free-to-air channels to pay TV. Without mainstream coverage on public broadcasting channels such as BBC One in Scotland, RTÉ1 and RTÉ2 in Ireland and NPO 1 in Netherlands, the Euro T20 Slam will make very little contribution to increasing the profile of cricket in these three countries. Sure, you will get some passionate and dedicated cricket fans through the gates but it is highly unlikely to capture the attention of casual observers or bring new fans into the sport.

By contrast to the Euro T20 Slam, the European Cricket League gets many things right. ECL is the brainchild of global macro hedge fund manager and former German men’s national team member Daniel Weston. The founding of ECL is in itself a fascinating story, which I recommend readers to check out here.

The ECL mimics many aspects of the phenomenally successful UEFA Champions League football format, pitting the domestic T20 champions of several European countries against each other in a quickfire group stage and knockout competition. There are no expensive marquee players, no contrived creation of franchises.

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Instead, it gives local European club cricketers a chance to shine by building on the existing competitive structure and cricketing culture in UK and continental Europe. Crucially, the ECL streams all its content for free through its sister European Cricket Network (ECN), giving it the kind of accessibility that the Euro T20 Slam will never be able to provide. Furthermore, the inclusion of big name ex-Champions League and Eurovision executives like Thomas Klooz, Frank Leenders and Roger Feiner lends the project credibility.

(Wiki Creative Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

The inaugural edition of the ECL in 2019 was a tremendous success and while the 2020 edition has been postponed due to COVID-19, I remain hopeful that this tournament will grow from strength to strength in the future.

However, as good as free streaming coverage is, it is still mostly preaching to the converted. Free streaming ensures that the tournament is easily available to everyone worldwide, but unfortunately won’t be enough to pique the interest of the average native European sports fan.

This is because people who are not exposed to cricket are not going to seek out streams of ECL to watch, if they don’t understand cricket or worse, are not even aware that such a tournament is taking place. Therefore, getting local European broadcasters on board, particularly free-to-air broadcasters, is vital.

To its credit, the ECL realises this. They have some discussions going on with local broadcasters in Europe and Weston is encouraged by the likes of the Catalan public broadcaster TV3, who featured the tournament and even added commentary in the local language.

Growing the sport
Getting those eyeballs into actually playing the sport is a different challenge however. And to tackle it, individual cricket boards in emerging countries across Asia-Pacific, Europe, Africa and the Americas need to take a three-pronged approach.

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1. Feature as much cricket as possible on local free-to-air channels.
2. Invest in grassroots cricket including facilities and equipment and get the sport into schools and clubs across the country.
3. Provide a pathway for the junior talent into the senior men’s and women’s national teams.

Philippe Auclair, a French musician who fell in love with cricket after he moved to England, proposes another interesting strategy. In an excellent interview with Wisden Cricket Weekly, Auclair states that cricket can be sold to new audiences in a similar manner to how Sumo was sold to viewers in continental Europe.

Rather than starting off with live games or highlights, he recommends using the actual cricket action as a means to explain what is going on. Such an educational approach is necessary to hook viewers, who might be tempted by the exotic and impenetrable nature of cricket into actually trying to understand the game’s rules.

Once a large enough base of cricket followers has been built up, associate nations can start streaming live games. Another sure-fire method in spreading the gospel of cricket and bringing much needed government funding into the game is of course to put cricket into the Olympics.

Is streaming the future of sports broadcasting?
There are many who suggest that the future of sports broadcasting lies in streaming. Around the world, many established pay TV providers are struggling to retain consumers who are abandoning traditional TV subscriptions in favour of streaming gadgets and apps.

Lower subscription costs (compared to pay TV) and ease of access (being able to watch on portable mobile devices) are two of its biggest selling points. The dedicated sports fans these days want more bang for their buck and demand 24/7 access to broadcast-quality streaming.

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We see established TV providers such as Foxtel in Australia investing heavily in its subsidiary sport streaming service Kayo, to compete with the likes of Netflix, Amazon Prime and Stan. In New Zealand, the domestic cricket board recently signed a deal with a streaming sports service provider Spark Sport, which gave Spark to broadcast domestic New Zealand cricket rights for the next six years.

Josh Hazlewood and Pat Cummins

(Photo by SAEED KHAN/AFP via Getty Images)

And when you look at trends in other sports, similar occurrences can be observed. In 2018, Amazon Prime Video signed a three-year deal worth US$130 million (A$186 million) to stream Thursday night NFL games. They have since also snapped up the rights for streaming 20 live English Premier League matches every season until 2021-22. DAZN, a London-based online sports streaming platform, recently won the rights for streaming nine Bundesliga games for German and Swiss audiences.

Superficially, all the above deals may indicate a revolution in live sports broadcasting. But a closer inspection of the deals suggests that it is not necessarily the case. Amazon’s £90 million (A$163 million) offering for EPL is similar to what BT Sports previously paid to broadcast 20 games per season.

After a dramatic entry into the market, Facebook has also recently had to cut back and sign smaller deals with ICC to showcase cricket highlights in India and Major League Baseball in USA.

All the evidence suggests that far from replacing the traditional TV companies, the emergence of streaming has just provided users with an additional way to consume live sports content.

Furthermore, there are lots of downsides to streaming. NZ Cricket’s deal with Spark provoked fury among rural Kiwi residents, who complained that even with a fibre-optic connection, an entire day of cricket will be a drain on their data usage and finances. The concerns are justified given Spark’s patchy and interrupted coverage of the Rugby World Cup last year and Optus Sport’s well publicised FIFA World Cup streaming problems in Australia in 2018.

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Tom Rogic in action for the Socceroos against Denmark.

(Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Nick Skinner, one of the co-hosts of the Emerging Cricket podcast, has made some interesting suggestions in the digital realm. Skinner recommends that the ICC look into developing something like a Cricket Pass, especially for streaming associate cricket matches, which often suffer due to low visibility and apathetic coverage.

Such a concept is similar to an existing service in NBA called the NBA Pass, whereby customers can watch an entire season’s worth of games for something like US$28.99 (A$42) a month. While it’s a clever concept and great for existing fans of cricket, I remain sceptical of its usefulness in attracting new fans to the game, given that there still remains a paywall and those unfamiliar with the sport are unlikely to seek it out or shell out money to access it.

Conclusion
While it’s true that consumption of digital content has skyrocketed over the last few years, it must be remembered that free-to-air TV still remains the most effective way of reaching people all around the world. And if an emerging cricket board is serious about growing the sport within its national boundaries, free-to-air coverage of the sport is non-negotiable.

Traditional cricket nations can afford a hybrid portfolio of pay TV, streaming and free-to-air coverage, due to cricket being an established part of the local culture. Also, as long as some form of visibility is maintained on free-to-air networks, the sport is still likely to survive in these countries.

Unfortunately, emerging cricket nations don’t have this same luxury and therefore face a starker choice, where growing and mainstream exposure of the sport is more important for long-term sustainability over a quick cash grab with a pay TV or paid streaming provider.

Digital engagement and streaming content can still play a valuable part for emerging cricket nations but they must be accessories to free-to-air coverage, rather than replacements.

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