Manawatu Standard

Spark hooks Black Sticks rights

- Tom Pullar-strecker

Spark has picked up the broadcasti­ng rights for the FIH Hockey event series, including all Vantage Black Sticks men’s and women’s competitio­ns.

The broadband and phone company said it would produce and be the host broadcaste­r for all FIH (Internatio­nal Hockey Federation) Pro League matches played in New Zealand, in partnershi­p with production company NEP New Zealand.

The four-year deal marks Spark’s first move into sports production. It said in a statement to the New Zealand stock exchange that the move demonstrat­ed its ambition to become ‘‘a key player in the local sports market’’.

It said it will announce more sports rights in coming weeks.

Last month Spark announced it had secured the New Zealand rights to the Formula One championsh­ip, starting with the Australian Grand Prix in March.

Spark first threw down the gauntlet to Sky Television in April when it announced it had won the rights to next year’s Rugby World Cup in Tokyo.

It followed that up in August by winning the rights to broadcast English Premier League matches for three seasons, starting from next August.

Spark will launch a new sports streaming service, Spark Sport, early next year to deliver the programmin­g, Spark chief financial officer David Chalmers said. United States firm istreampla­net,

Telco’s big wins

❚ Rugby World Cup 2019

❚ Women’s Rugby World Cup 2021

❚ World Rugby U20 Champs 2019

❚ Heineken Champions Cup

❚ English Premier League ❚ Manchester United TV

❚ Hockey World Cup

❚ Hockey Pro League and Olympic Qualificat­ion, plus rights to the National Hockey League

❚ All ‘‘Black Sticks’’ fixtures

❚ Formula One World Champs

❚ Formula 2 Championsh­ip

❚ GP3 Series

❚ 2019 Porsche Super Cup Series a subsidiary of Warnermedi­a, would be providing the technology for Spark Sport, he said.

Plans and pricing have yet to be disclosed.

But Spark spokeswoma­n Ellie Cross has indicated the company might have enough sports content for it to offer all its sports for a single price as well as letting customers – who need not be Spark broadband customers – subscribe to watch individual events and competitio­ns.

Cross confirmed Spark was in a legal dispute with a retailer that used the Spark Sport name. The web address ‘‘sparksport.co.nz’’ was bagged in April, registered to a residentia­l address in Birkdale. She said Spark was not the registrant and would not comment on whether it might take action to try to claim the domain.

NEP entered the New Zealand market earlier this year through a takeover of NZ Live, sparking speculatio­n – which has now been borne out – that it could loosen Sky’s grip on local sports production.

NEP said at the time that it had the technology to produce Kiwi sports broadcasts either in New Zealand, or at ‘‘hubs’’ it has set up in Sydney or Melbourne. Vodafone will make a second attempt to float its New Zealand business, after shelving a plan to list on the New Zealand stock exchange earlier this year.

Newly appointed Vodafone NZ chief executive Jason Paris said he was tasked with getting the telecommun­ications firm ‘‘in shape’’ for an initial public offering (IPO).

‘‘The target is an IPO in 2020. It is not a hard stop, but that is what we would like to see.’’

That strategy was being driven by the fact that Vodafone Group wanted to free up capital for higher-growth markets, he said.

Preparatio­n would involve cutting costs and seeking growth opportunit­ies, but Paris said Vodafone NZ had ‘‘no interest’’ in following Spark by building its own standalone television entertainm­ent or sports business.

Vodafone would instead continue to partner with Sky Television, while also hoping to add other content – including Spark’s Lightbox streaming television service and the forthcomin­g Spark Sport service – to its Vodafone TV platform, he said.

‘‘We have a very strong relationsh­ip with Sky and that will continue. By a large stretch they are our preferred content partner. But our goal is to make all content New Zealanders want to watch accessible and that means [we] will want to partner with Spark in entertainm­ent and sport. I haven’t had any conversati­ons with Sky yet about that, but that will happen.’’

Paris said Vodafone TV would begin offering a new range of

Rugby

Football

Hockey

Motorsport­s

 ??  ?? Jason Paris
Jason Paris

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