Is the Seven Network’s Olympic coverage hitting the spot or missing the mark?

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

When sports journalist Patrick Smith let rip after what he felt was an “unprofessional” call of the men’s 10,000 metres by iconic broadcaster Bruce McAvaney, we were all reminded just how much personal preference and taste dictates our enjoyment of sports commentary.

Personally, I felt McAvaney’s call – made via a studio TV monitor instead of live in the stadium due of COVID – was as efficient, knowledgeable and professional as the many thousands he has broadcast over his long and distinguished career.

Social media reaction suggested that Smith had seriously misread the room, with McAvaney’s attention to the place-getters not necessarily the result of ignoring the efforts of Australia’s Patrick Tiernan, as he collapsed his way through the final lap of the race.

Yet, for some reason, McAvaney had riled the veteran journalist.

The free-to-air coverage of the games has been far from smooth sailing.

Serious questions have been raised around events being deceptively broadcast in delay, nothing new for Olympics coverage, and the requirement for fans to frantically change channels at key stages of play has led many to feel a little peeved at what the network has served up thus far.

The somewhat imperfect images beaming in from Tokyo have also disappointed many. However, the control over them may indeed be well beyond that of the Australian broadcaster, with Seven admirably attempting to cover an Olympics remotely.

The voices we hear on our screens can often fill the emotional and factual spaces of the sports we watch and at other times, rub us the wrong way to the point of annoyance.

Such variation was clearly on show as the Australian team kicked off its aquatic charge, in what now looks like being an incredibly successful overall Olympic campaign.

Ian Thorpe was understated, blunt, economical and most importantly, honest in his assessments of individual swimmers and their opposition throughout the opening week of competition in the pool.

Ian Thorpe (Photo by Getty Images)

Sadly, Lord Mayor of Perth Basil Zempilas struggled, with Thorpe forced on numerous occasions to correct clumsy and awkward statements.

The harder Zempilas tried, the better off he would have been to mute his microphone and leave it to Thorpe, the highlight being a question about Katie Ledecky’s kick rate, to which Thorpe simply replied, “She’s not kicking.”

Many football fans resorted to the use of the 7plus app, as opposed to suffering through the commentary of Brenton Speed on the main channel.

A divisive figure in the Australian round ball game after his extended run in commentary on Fox Sports, Speed calls just about everything there is to call; something that continues to suggest to football fans that his knowledge of the game itself may not be up to the standard required.

Together with Georgia Yeoman-Dale, Speed caused many to head elsewhere for commentary, as the Matildas continued their run to the medal matches.

After writing some weeks back that Yeoman-Dale should be a part of Paramount+/Network Ten’s new football broadcasting team, I have changed my mind.

Her analysis has been weak, comments forced and both littered with error after error in expression.

McAvaney has been blessed with the brilliantly passionate and expressive Tamsyn Manou by his side.

(Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

As a world indoor 800-metre champion, her pedigree speaks for itself and as a viewer, their ability as a duo to leave one feeling more informed about the Australian athletes and the entire athletics competition is impressive.

With former Olympian Dave Culbert dealing predominantly with the field events, the trio set a high bar.

In a similar vein, former Olympians Scott McGrory and Anna Meares have been superb at the velodrome, despite Australian fortunes not producing many medals to this point in the competition.

John Casey and one of Australia’s most loved athletes Andrew Gaze have worked well together on the basketball. Gaze’s passion cuts through the screen and Casey always calls a decent game.

The rather subdued, yet knowledgeable, insights offered by Andrew Bogut have also contributed to their excellent broadcasts.

The thoughts of swimming legend Leisel Jones and rowing gold medallist Nick Green have been refined and insightful, while Sydney 2000 water polo gold medallist Debbie Watson was brilliant in explaining all the mysterious underwater action that takes place during an average match.

All in all, there have been many hits for the network, but along with Speed and Zempilas, some distinct misses as well.

Hamish McLachlan, Abbey Gelmi, Luke Darcy and Edwina Bartholomew have been a little too fuelled with patriotism as hosts in the main studio, despite some of their ex-Olympian colleagues like Matt Shirvington and Johanna Griggs desperately attempting to show them the way.

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Poolside, Nathan Templeton managed to continue his penchant to ask inane questions that do little more than plant words and ideas into our swimmers’ minds soon after their events and despite enjoyment of the event and my best efforts to understand it, I’m not too sure what language Nick Boserio and Mitchell Tomlinson were speaking while commentating on the skate-boarding.

Overall, Tokyo 2020 appears to have been the morale boost many hoped it would be. Sadly, in amongst some of the superb broadcasts that have brought us to tears and smiles, we’ve also had to listen to plenty of nonsense.

Overall, though, the Seven Network has done well and I guess you just can’t please everyone.

The Crowd Says:

2021-08-09T02:18:59+00:00

Goalsonly

Roar Rookie


I turned down 'the sound more than 9 times out of 10. I like to make my own connections to the drama unfolding and the even the spectacle itself is often enough. Too often the experts introduce other times and places that dilute the attention units necessary to be absorbed by the contest. So the surfing commentary was the only one that was never turned off...oh and the skateboarding. Have times changed? Is the over dramatization fading away? I kinda think so...

2021-08-08T10:32:21+00:00

Vivalasvegan

Roar Rookie


As an Australian born elsewhere I have been beyond frustrated at the parochial coverage of the olympics. Extraordinary

2021-08-08T10:14:32+00:00

Charles Eller

Roar Rookie


The sooner Mcaveny goes the better.

2021-08-07T14:13:46+00:00

The real SC

Roar Rookie


I never rated Leisel Jones as a commentator. She is ordinary and lacks charisma and is quite complacent. Same for Basil Zempilas. Basil gets names incorrect when calling swimming. Cut Jo Griggs some slack. She could have done better in commentary for Opening ceremony but she is a lot better than Hamish who gets facts wrong. But nevertheless she did well in hosting the morning session.

2021-08-07T12:51:07+00:00

Michael

Guest


I think channel 7 is/has done a great job.

2021-08-07T11:40:06+00:00

The real SC

Roar Rookie


I have been watching the Tokyo 2021 Olympics on 7Plus on my computer as well as on the Fetch TV. However, when I watched the Game on the Fetch TV, they didn't update the events. I watched the Rock Climbing on 7+ and the event has been finished. Nevertheless, the Athletics streams were fantastic where people can stream either the Jumps, Throws, Track with no commentary. I was very happy that I don't have to put up with the commentary at all. I was able to stream the coverage for free. Back in Rio 2016, people have to pay to access all events. The bad thing is that Channel 7 and 7mate was only used for the Tokyo Games. However, they didnt use 7Two for the entire session. However, 7Two was used when there is the Chase (with Larry Emdur as new host), News Breaks and AFL. 7flix was even used for the TOkyo Games. HOwever, many areas didn't have 7Flix. As I have looked through the TV guides, I noticed that the Opening Ceremony will be shown on a delayed telecast in WA, NT and SA. THis was where the Voice will take its priority on the primary channel. To make matters worse, 7mate will not be used for live coverage of the CLosing Ceremony. (This was similar in 2018 when the Gold Coast Closing Ceremony was shown on a delayed telecast around Australia.)

2021-08-07T03:41:55+00:00

Inala Rose

Roar Rookie


I've enjoyed being able to choose what I want to watch online, but I don't understand why they never tell you that you don't need the app, just go the website and watch it full screen on your computer monitor. It's also been a great way to hear commentary from people other than those from Channel 7. I was particularly taken by the gravel voiced Irish man paired with a more lispy English woman for the synchronised diving. The one thing I haven't appreciated is the way the television coverage has deliberately mislead us about what is live coverage and what is a replay of something that happened earlier. It becomes very clear when you watch an event online way before it's broacast 'live' on 7.

2021-08-07T01:39:20+00:00

Diamond Jackie

Roar Rookie


Very good.

2021-08-06T13:16:10+00:00

jamesb

Roar Guru


Dave Culbert is such an underrated commentator.

2021-08-06T10:54:53+00:00

Brian

Guest


Overall been great. McAveney & Thorpe have both been great. Much better then their AFL coverage. If there is a theme I would improve on is more commentators and ex-olympians and less people who have no idea like Andy Maher. If you have nothing to add why are you there?

2021-08-06T10:52:57+00:00

Nick

Guest


No we still have our 15 yr old digital tv. Can't get HD. Still waiting for it to stop working but going strong That's what happens when you buy an LG.

2021-08-06T10:34:43+00:00

Kathy Hancock

Guest


I think Seven has done a spectacular job with the Olympics. Ian Thorpe’s explanations of how the swimmers were swimming and winning and Hamish Maclaghlan’s questions and explanations are very professional and interesting. Bruce and Tamsin have made field events interesting and informative. Not everything can be live as it all happens at same time. Never before have we had access to so many sports. Go Seven. Hope the Paralympics is as good

2021-08-06T08:40:32+00:00

Monorchid

Roar Rookie


Try doing all this and living on a pension PTA. And the government stuff isn't nonsense. The requirement to use a smart 'phone to scan a QR code as part of the COVID management programme has finally convinced governments that there are large numbers of people who don't have smart 'phones. For example, the Queensland Government has finally ordained that commercial enterprises have to again keep paper registrations because of this. Excuse my ramblings.

2021-08-06T08:24:27+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Basil was fantastic. So accurate, so passionate, and a wonderful connector with the special comments.

2021-08-06T08:19:16+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


The exact opposite for me. This is the best that's ever been. Classy, knowledgeable, incisive.

AUTHOR

2021-08-06T07:58:28+00:00

Stuart Thomas

Expert


LOL, you win the thread!

AUTHOR

2021-08-06T07:55:35+00:00

Stuart Thomas

Expert


Let's not forget insane and hectic!

AUTHOR

2021-08-06T07:54:17+00:00

Stuart Thomas

Expert


If he says double-team again I'm going to explode.

AUTHOR

2021-08-06T07:53:14+00:00

Stuart Thomas

Expert


Made lockdown a lot easier but a few weeks to wait for the Paralympics to keep that light burning.

AUTHOR

2021-08-06T07:51:29+00:00

Stuart Thomas

Expert


It has been utterly superb hasn't it? Out in the garden with a bottle of wine and Roy and HG..........wouldn't be dead for quids!

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