Scottish Daily Mail

Six Nations set to remain on terrestria­l TV

- By MATT HUGHES

THE Six Nations is set to stay on free-to-air television during the next broadcast cycle from 2022, with the BBC and ITV confident of retaining the rights when the tender process begins next month. New investors CVC Capital Partners had hoped to land a bigger contract by taking some or all of the tournament to satellite television to begin the process of recouping some of their proposed £300million investment. But the private equity company’s purchase of a 15-per-cent stake in the Six Nations has yet to be completed ahead of the impending rights auction. CVC’s long-term strategy is to bundle all the home nations’ domestic and internatio­nal matches together into one rights package to increase value — their talks with the Six Nations follow previous investment­s in the Gallagher Premiershi­p and the Guinness Pro14 — but that plan may need to wait. While the domestic rights for the autumn internatio­nals, Six Nations, Premiershi­p and Pro14 are all available from the 2022 season and will all come on to the market at a similar time, such a bundling is likely to prove too complex given the need for a deal in the next few months. The Six Nations powerbroke­rs are also largely content with the existing deal with BBC and ITV, which is worth £90m-a-year between them and is delivering record viewing figures. As a result, the broadcaste­rs are confident of retaining the rights they currently share, although Sky Sports or BT Sport may still try to outbid them for one of the packages. Wales’ victory over England in Cardiff last year attracted a peak audience of 8.9m on the BBC — more than an FA Cup tie between Chelsea and Manchester United in the same week. Covering the Celtic nations is particular­ly important to the BBC as it helps fulfil their remit of being a national broadcaste­r, fundamenta­l to keeping licence-fee funding. Sky Sports are expected to focus on retaining live rights to England’s autumn series, leaving the Six Nations to terrestria­l channels.

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