The Post

Poor ratings could hit Cricket Australia for six

- CHRIS BARRETT

Cricket’s worrying television ratings slide has continued into Australia’s home one-day internatio­nals, with audience numbers falling 23 per cent from last summer in another setback for Cricket Australia’s ambitions for a big increase in its next domestic broadcast rights deal.

Cricket Australia’s decision to schedule the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy series against New Zealand in early December backfired in terms of eyes on television screens on internatio­nal broadcaste­r Channel Nine, OzTAM ratings reveal.

The three matches, all won by Australia and featuring some brilliant batting from David Warner and Steve Smith, recorded a five-city metro average of 936,000 for the prime-time evening session, down from 1.215 million for the first three ODIs of last summer between Australia and India. Those matches were played a month later in mid-January but the size of the drop-off in ratings has not been missed by industry figures following similarly significan­t ratings decreases for Australia’s test series against South Africa.

They included a 23 per cent fall in east-cast prime time for the Perth test and an average 20 per cent slide for each evening of the pink-ball test in Adelaide.

While the opening night of the Women’s Big Bash League on Channel Ten posted the highest ratings for a game since the competitio­n launched last year – a capital city audience of 286,000 tuned into Sydney Thunder’s loss to Melbourne Stars at North Sydney Oval – the men’s internatio­nal numbers have not been what CA would have been hoping in a summer leading into a new round of broadcast rights negotiatio­ns for the rights to televise cricket from 2018 to 2023.

CA plans to go to market in the new year and while long-time rights holder Nine is keen to continue broadcasti­ng Australia’s home internatio­nals, as well as intending to bid for the Big Bash League, the network’s chief executive Hugh Marks has already said it would be ‘‘uneconomic­al’’ to pay any more than they have in their existing deal.

Nine in 2013 agreed to dish out nearly A$100 million (NZ$104m) for the rights to home tests, ODIs and Twenty20 internatio­nals, while Ten paid A$20 million a year for the BBL in an overall rights package worth A$590 million to CA over the five years.

The nosediving ratings this summer have done CA no favours in its hopes of a sizeable boost to the internatio­nal portion of the next rights package, and led industry figures to predict that the governing body may end up delaying formal negotiatio­ns for the next deal.

A likely outcome is that CA will wait until after ICC meetings in February at which groundbrea­king changes to the make-up of internatio­nal cricket including a potential two-tier conference system for tests and a league structure for ODIs and T20Is could be pushed through.

Such a revamp to the program stands to be beneficial to CA as a selling point for its rights, adding context to series such as the 50-overs contest just played against New Zealand. Crowds were underwhelm­ing, too, with 22,502 watching in Sydney, 9174 in Canberra and 20,591 at the cavernous Melbourne Cricket Ground.

CA’s intention has been to finalise a new Asian broadcast deal before beginning the bidding process with local networks.

Broadcasti­ng giants Star Sports and Sony will be the main contenders. They are duelling for the 10-year rights to the Indian Premier League, which could be sold for more than A$4 billion.

 ??  ?? Australia celebrated a 3-0 win over New Zealand in the ODI series but the hosts weren’t smiling over TV ratings.
Australia celebrated a 3-0 win over New Zealand in the ODI series but the hosts weren’t smiling over TV ratings.

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