The Scotsman

BBC back in the middle as broadcaste­r secures rights

-

Live English cricket will return to free-to-air television in 2020 after the BBC won the rights for 21 matches each summer, while Sky Sports held off stern competitio­n from BT Sport to remain its status as the sport’s primary broadcaste­r.

The England and Wales Cricket Board announced the results of its next fiveyear rights package, covering the 2020-2024 period, yesterday and hailed the new arrangemen­t – which will bring in £1.1 billion – as a significan­t boost for the game at large.

English cricket has not been available live on freeto-air TV since the 2005 Ashes series, shown by Channel 4, and was last seen on the BBC in 1999. The deal will see the corporatio­n show two Twenty20 internatio­nals, one women’s T20 internatio­nal, ten games from the new T20 competitio­n and eight from the women’s equivalent.

The BBC has also guaranteed a primetime slot for highlights packages of all other England matches, a bundle currently held by Channel 5, while digital clips will be made available on social media and web platforms.

will continue to be part of the landscape, with BBC Radio winning exclusive radio rights amid a push from talksport. Sky Sports will remain the home of all live Test, one-day and T20 internatio­nals and a Sky Cricket channel is expected to follow.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom