Fox's commentary cost-cutting has taken their coverage to rock bottom. It's time they were called out

By The Roar / Editor

You might not have noticed it, but a new low for sports broadcasting in Australia was reached in the Big Bash League on Saturday evening.

During the BBL Qualifier final between the Perth Scorchers and the Sydney Sixers, Sixers skipper Moises Henriques lofted quick David Payne high into the Perth sky over mid-wicket.

“He’s picked that up, and sent it high away over the leg side,” called veteran commentator Mark Howard, who through his stints with first Channel 10 and now Fox Cricket has covered more Big Bash than just about anyone.

Then, as the camera panned across and into a throng of Scorchers fans in the crowd, ‘Another six!’

There was just one problem. The ball had, actually, fallen some distance short of the boundary. Making things uglier still, the catch had been comfortably taken by Stephen Eskinazi, an event that viewers had to wait until the replay to have confirmed to them.

Adding the cherry on top, the Fox graphics immediately popped up on screen hailing the six.

If you want to watch the scene in all its ‘glory’, well, Twitterer Lenny Phillips, who has long been among the most vocal of critics on the issue I’m about to touch on, has it saved for all to see.

Most of you are probably aware of just why this happened, but for those of you who aren’t, here’s the long and short: ever since the COVID-19 pandemic blocked interstate travel for all but the most essential of circumstances, Fox have primarily been calling all their sports from studios in Melbourne or Sydney, hundreds or even thousands of kilometres from the action.

This has continued even after the majority of COVID restrictions were eased in late 2021 and early 2022 – I wrote about it being particularly egregious in the AFL early last year – and it has caused problems ranging from the mildly irritating to the irredeemably pathetic on a regular basis.

These issues have been particularly evident this BBL season, where commentators – most obviously Brendon Julian – have made it painfully aware they’re watching off a screen by frequently misjudging whether lofted balls are going for six or falling short for a catch. (Once again, thanks to Lenny Phillips for archiving these moments).

Saturday night’s howler was more disastrous than the rest thanks to some dodgy camerawork – poor Howard didn’t have a prayer as the camera failed to find the ball in the air and instead settled on the crowd – but it proved once and for all just how damaging remote calling is to the quality of a broadcast.

There’s a reason that since the dawn of sports broadcasting, commentators have been in attendance at games. They get a greater feel for the atmosphere at an event that just can’t be replicated off a screen, plus they’re in a position to actively track a game with their eyes to a far greater extent than can be provided off the monitor.

Fox have put a great deal of money and effort into assembling their commentary teams for all sports – some of Australia’s finest cricketers, including Adam Gilchrist, who was present in the studio for Saturday night’s BBL Qualifier, are paid big bucks to offer their insight and expertise on the coverage, while the same is true for AFL, NRL and all the other major sports they cover.

But all of that simply doesn’t wash if those commentators’ raison d’être is being sacrificed. Honestly, what is the point of paying big bucks for Julian (or indeed anyone else) if he can’t even tell viewers with any accuracy whether a ball is going for six or not?

To their credit, Seven have, for the most part, gone back to broadcasting live at games wherever they are – occasionally with local commentators such as Adelaide’s Mark Soderstrom for AFL games in South Australia if it’s too expensive to fly out the big guns.

Allan Border and Adam Gilchrist, Fox Cricket commentators. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

If it’s still doable for Seven, then the same standard should be expected of Fox – especially given their plan for the AFL season is to match what they do with the NRL and provide their own commentators for games instead of running with Seven’s feed.

Adam Papalia is one of Fox’s diamonds in the rough as a caller, particularly for AFL, and he did do the occasional match live on the scene last year – and the quality increase between his calls and those of Dwayne Russell or even Anthony Hudson doing it remotely was substantial.

Surely he would have been a better option for a game – and, indeed, for the BBL final in Perth this weekend – than Howard calling from a studio on the other side of the country?

Frankly, it’s time Fox found other ways to save money other than cheaping out on the thing that should be their highest priority – providing the best possible broadcast to the hundreds of thousands or even millions of eyeballs tuning in.

This isn’t the fault of the commentators at all – they’re being paid to do the job as best they can. Fox are disrespecting them as much as they are the fans who have to tune in to hear them making mistake after mistake after mistake due to the circumstances they find themselves in.

I’m willing to bet the majority of them aren’t exactly thrilled with the current state of play, either. In Ashley Browne’s book on the AFL’s struggle through the COVID-impacted 2020 season, AFL 2020: A Season Like No Other, acclaimed commentator Gerard Whateley lamented the negative impact calling remotely had on both the quality of the broadcast and his own enjoyment of his work.

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“It was a misrepresentation of what it was actually like at the game,” he told Browne. “People at home weren’t watching a faithful representation of what was happening. It echoed.

“I left the last game in Melbourne before the [second] lockdown telling ‘Huddo’ [Anthony Hudson] that I’d never get used to calling the games like that. There was nothing to work with, nothing to react to in the raw sense.”

The majority of fans and viewers likely don’t care too much about this – or if they do, it’s doubtful it would actually offend enough for mass backlash. Hell, I’ll still be watching the rest of this BBL season, and the AFL and NRL seasons after that.

But at the very least, Fox’s pathetic cost-cutting needs to be called out for what it is: a cheap, deplorable ploy that diminishes the quality of the broadcast and disrespects those tuning in.

We all deserve better.

The Crowd Says:

2023-02-06T01:12:14+00:00

Insult_2_Injury

Roar Rookie


Touchy about you style of journalism, Tim! As for the ad thing, that is one of the most ridiculous responses I’ve had in a long time. If I get it right, you’re essentially saying, we moved from non invasive ads within articles that everyone accepted, as I do, to popups from the bottom of the page with a close tab, which opens the ad more often on smaller devices, but YOUR consumers responsibility is to download a third party product to counteract YOUR action, rather than you responding by keeping a clear screen so consumers can use the site for its primary reason for existence, actually reading articles and ads in articles and scrolling pages without constant hijacking? Blame the customer? You don’t pay, so you can’t complain? Strange business model!

2023-02-02T13:06:38+00:00

Tim Miller

Editor


Couple of things there I2I. For starters, if you want to send us a message with a particular example of a pop-up blocking content we can definitely look into it. But at the same time the price paid for a free service that anyone can read and use is that we need ads to keep the lights on. (No one's stopping you from downloading a free ad-blocker either) I think it's also pretty unfair to accuse me of filling up an article with 2 Tweets that are pretty necessary to provide proof of the point I'm making. In addition, while I'd argue we've also done some excellent journalism at times on this site - Christy Doran's recent rugby yarns in particular - the site is by-lined 'Your Sports Opinion' and that's always been our primary focus, and indeed is the focus of this piece. Thirdly, I think it's pretty obvious that a mainstream media outlet with a budget in the millions that asks for a subscription fee to watch its broadcast should be held to a higher standard than a much smaller-time, free to use operation like ours. If you paid $25 a month to come on The Roar like I do for my Kayo, maybe you'd have a leg to stand on.

2023-02-02T02:28:50+00:00

Johnno

Roar Rookie


Yeah....we are different so need different commentators. But we are the same with Ponting.

2023-02-02T01:33:19+00:00

jammel

Roar Rookie


Maxwell still pretty good IMO. Andrew Moore quality - he is a rugby league caller. It is all those from the southern vfl states that dabble in cricket that annoy me! :) Too much shouting, not enough insight - I mostly switch those guys off these days.

2023-02-02T01:30:50+00:00

jammel

Roar Rookie


I like Howie. Of course no commentator brings as much insight as Ricky Ponting (when he's on the air). He's taught me more about T20 strategy than any of the other "experts".

2023-02-01T13:33:23+00:00

The real SC

Roar Rookie


Recently I watched the match between the scorchers and the 6ers. When Stephen eskinazi took thr catch, the camera panned towards the crowd. It was very hard to track the ball as the ball travelled up in the air.

2023-02-01T09:35:10+00:00

Lyndall Georgiades

Guest


I have been banging on about this all summer. It is so obvious they are not at the grounds they may as well get the average punter to call the games for them to save even more money for them

2023-02-01T09:16:57+00:00

Dannybhoi

Guest


" issued a joint ultimatum to management along the lines of ‘Hell No! We Won’t Go!’. " where you get this shiite from?

2023-02-01T04:47:01+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


They call a match like a horse race, non stop. When in fact they exist to commentate.

2023-02-01T02:06:25+00:00

Insult_2_Injury

Roar Rookie


Funny stuff Tim, look at your own site! You just used other people to fill an article by propping it up with twitter comments, another low bar in 21st century journalism taken from the New York Times and Washington Post where 'working from home' journalists make stories from nothing! It's pathetic from your whole industry, but, hey, your site hasn't responded to criticism of constant pop ups covering content, so I guess Fox will keep ignoring critics too!

2023-02-01T01:54:36+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Orange is a great album.

2023-02-01T00:57:40+00:00

Paul Skye

Guest


Totally agree! With cricket coverage in general there has been a deplorable erosion in quality since the deal between CA and Fox. Mr. Benaud would be horrified. Bring back 9!!!

2023-02-01T00:57:03+00:00

Ian

Guest


You can get away with it more on radio

2023-02-01T00:06:10+00:00

Lindylou

Guest


I frequently used the mute button while watching BBL . I also have a few questions about commentary. Why the heck was Kiwi Ian Smith even on the panel. Boring, misogynistic has been. So rude to Isha Gua, who was much more informative. Why put Junior & Mr Cricket on at all? They just tell you how things used to be in their day, similar to the ultra tedious Ian Chapel. Rarely even played BBL. BJ didn't bother me much, or Howie, both amusing, until they cut to endless scenes from previous games while a game is in progress & yes, no need for constant inane prattle. Terrible Fox, just terrible.

2023-01-31T23:19:24+00:00

Naughty's Headband

Roar Rookie


You win some and you lose some, but overall getting away from Channel 7's inanity, "stories" and ridiculously large commentary teams is a good thing. Yeah we will still have Kelli Underwood but we can turn the tele down for that game.

2023-01-31T22:03:25+00:00

Keith Spencer

Guest


The state of commentators is deplorable, constant yelling has resulted in watching games with no sound on. The WBBL has male commentators who believe yelling enhances a viewers experience, the females who are with them carry on in a professional and calm manner which allows insight into the game. Remote commentating is a clear indication that the game is of no consequence therefore no interest. The paranoia regarding “dead air” has resulted in babble mania some commentators suffer extremely from I wish the could “shut up” at times. Television is not radio we don’t need constant commentary.

2023-01-31T21:39:51+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


Great article, thanks mate

2023-01-31T19:40:38+00:00

Ad-O

Guest


I think Australia has too many pro sports and, in a relatively small country, there's not enough talented commentators and pundits to go round. This has always been the case and hasn't got much to do with Foxtel's recent budget.

2023-01-31T11:41:30+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


AppleOff 2023.

2023-01-31T11:38:01+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Rowdy… I couldn’t disagree with you more. A treeripened Lady Williams from the hills of Perth is the pinnacle. Long maturing time means no lollipop flavour. Tropical and real apple scents ,great texture, longkeeping and makes great cider in company with the other old woman, Granny Smith.

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