Waikato Times

Silent airwaves another turnoff for sport in NZ

- Richard Knowler The KickOff Sidelines On The

First Radio Sport. Now TAB Trackside Radio. This isn’t good. There are no upsides to the decimation of another specialise­d sports programme in New Zealand.

Radio Sport became the first victim of the economic uncertaint­y created by Covid-19 when, without warning, it was suddenly ditched by owner NZME on March 30.

On Tuesday, Trackside Radio, a station that promoted much more than just horses and dogs speeding around a track, was added to the scrapheap by the TAB.

Although the morning hosts and race commentato­rs on Trackside Radio had mostly been silent since March 23, when the station went into hiatus along with many other companies during lockdown, staff still crossed their fingers and tried to be optimistic.

With Radio Sport no longer in existence, they hoped their bosses at the TAB would seize the opportunit­y to promote their channel when sport and racing was permitted to restart.

morning show, hosted by Glen Larmer and Riccardo Ball, entertaine­d listeners with their opinions and interviews in the mornings before the live race commentari­es took over.

TAB media manager Mark Stafford and veteran Sky commentato­r Grant Nisbett were familiar voices on

show at the weekend. Now they, like Larmer and Ball and a number of producers who helped make these shows tick, are no longer required.

The TAB cut 230 jobs, including 150 permanent staff, in the wake of the financial turmoil caused by Covid-19. The sports and racing betting company’s parent, the Racing Industry

Transition Agency, formerly the Racing Board, has stated the reduction is 30 per cent of its workforce.

It’s understood 10 full-time staff who worked on the Trackside Radio programme have been made redundant, as well as a number of contract workers.

A month ago those staff were asked to provide feedback as management reviewed the operation. With Radio Sport no longer in the market, employees put forward their ideas on how their show could take advantage of their competitor­s’ decision to step out of the market.

It was no avail. Some staff, understand­ably, were angry and disappoint­ed to learn they were not listened to.

Although NZME effectivel­y blamed Covid-19 for the demise of Radio Sport, its decision not to renew the rights to broadcast live commentary of New Zealand Cricket’s domestic and internatio­nal matches played in New Zealand suggested all was not well. But it was still a shock when it was shuttered.

With the benefit of hindsight the demise of Trackside Radio shouldn’t have come as a great surprise, either, but that doesn’t make it any more palatable for staff or listeners.

While its market share was small (for example Radio Sport was understood to have cornered only around two per cent of the country’s listeners) presenters such as Larmer, Ball, Stafford and Nisbett, along with their guests, offered lively and colourful comment about the sporting issues of the week.

They went out on a limb and questioned the administra­tors’ decisions and the players’ actions which, in turn, kept the public informed – just as the presenters on Radio Sport did. Not any more.

Trackside Radio might have been a small-time operator in the media industry but it played an important role.

It’s another blow to sport in this country.

 ??  ?? Trackside Radio was about more than horseracin­g, offering views on a variety of sporting issues.
Trackside Radio was about more than horseracin­g, offering views on a variety of sporting issues.

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