A Small Victory

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Relief.

The only word which can describe my feelings in learning the BBC will be able to broadcast Test Match Special throughout England’s cricket series in India.

Prior to Thursday’s discussions it seemed the BBC and Sky would be locked out of the stadiums during the four-match tour following complications with the BCCI (Board of Control for Cricket in India).

The negotiations surrounded contractual issues which saw the BCCI requesting additional payments for productions to be broadcast during the upcoming series.

Although there has been no official figure released a number of sources suggest it has cost the BBC in the region of £50,000 to maintain their flagship cricket show.

Sky’s prospects of covering the series which begins in Ahmedabad on Thursday 15th November still remains somewhat cloudy as they face stumping up half a million pounds to seal a deal with the BCCI.

It was considered essential for the BBC to broker the deal but Sky are currently formulating plans to broadcast commentary from their studios in Isleworth while using pictures from commercial partners of the BCCI, Star TV.

Although the situation has been resolved to a certain extent, it is a saga which continues to cause concern for many in cricketing spheres.

Indeed, England fans will be able to follow the action without missing a move.

All is well on that frontier.

But the question still remains, who is in charge?

The cost of the BBC covering cricket has been dictated by a contract drawn up by a national governing body.

Sports fans in the majority realise cricket in India is not just a sport; it is a cult, a following, a religion some may say.

Yet the spiral of events in recent years has seen Indian cricket become defined by economic gain rather than on-field prowess.

The Indian Premier League’s franchise system has seen teams compete in auctions to secure signatures of the biggest stars while many have been lured by big pay packets and glamorous lights.

This situation in itself affected the international scene as players began to opt for money rather than the pride of representing their nation.

And now we have the Indian cricketing authorities basically holding the world’s media to ransom.

If English broadcasters are to cover England’s cricket in India then their fate lays in the hands of those in power.

The BBC, a publically funded organisation, surely cannot afford to be restricted and forced in such a fashion.

Unless the International Cricket Council (ICC) can step in and retake control of world cricket and all that comes with it, maybe the only way forward would be to launch a giant protest.

If Indian authorities demand such sums again, maybe all foreign broadcasters should abstain from covering tours while enforcing similar penalties when India themselves become the visitors.

Cricket is calling for its international governing body to regain control of all aspects of the sport in order to ensure fans worldwide can rest assured they can easily follow their team.

For the sake of cricket we must all be grateful this dispute has been resolved, even if only temporarily.

Ben Hampshire (@BH92)

Bumper Sporting Weekend Ahead

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Sports fans across Britain will be licking their lips as the working week draws to a close and the bumper weekend of sporting action takes centre stage.

It has been a while since we have had such a vast array of elite level sport to choose from on a weekend.

As always there will be a whole host of football fixtures across Friday, Saturday and Sunday with all the British clubs in action. The Premier League stages the Merseyside derby while action will climax with Chelsea’s top of the league showdown with Manchester United on Sunday afternoon.

In rugby league meanwhile the autumn international season is underway and Kevin Sinfield is set to lead England out in Wrexham on Saturday afternoon as they take on Wales.

Red Bull Racing set the pace in Friday’s second practice session in New Delhi with Sebastian Vettel topping the leaderboard, closely followed by teammate Mark Webber. Vettel triumphed last year in Formula One’s inaugural race at the Buddh International Circuit and will be out for pole on Saturday ahead of Sunday’s battle.

The stage is set at Wembley for the annual visit of American Football with the New England Patriots and St Louis Rams taking to the field in Sunday’s NFL clash.

For the die-hard cricket fan who still has eyes on the Twenty20 Champions League Friday sees the second semi-final between  the Sydney Sixers and Titans as they look to book a place in Sunday’s final against Highveld Lions at the Wanderers in Johannesburg.

Rugby union’s top flight, the Aviva Premiership has six games scheduled across Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Whatever your sport there will be some live action to tingle any taste buds out there and hopefully if you’re undecided the guide below will be of use.

All that is left to say from is…Enjoy! May the sporting festivities begin…

Where can you catch it all?

Friday

Football: Motherwell V Hibernian – Live on ESPN from 19:00.

Saturday

Formula One: Indian Grand Prix Qualifying highlights on BBC One at 13:00.

Rugby League: Wales V England – Live on BBC One and BBC HD from 14:15.

Football: Manchester City V Swansea City – Live on ESPN from 16:30.

Football: Match of the Day is on at 22:25 on BBC One with Manchester City against Swansea City and Arsenal’s Clash with QPR topping the bill.

Football: Following on from Match of the Day at 23:45 will be the Football League show with highlights from all the lower leagues.

Sunday

Formula One: Indian Grand Prix race highlights on BBC One at 17:30 with live coverage on Sky F1 from 08:00.

Football: Everton V Liverpool – Live on SkySports 1 from 13:00.

Rugby Union: London Irish V Harlequins – Live on ESPN from 13:45.

Football: Chelsea V Manchester United – Live on SkySports 1 from 16:00.

Football: Match of the Day 2 will show highlights from the Merseyside derby as well as the top of the league clash between Chelsea and Manchester United at 22:25 on BBC One.

NFL: New England Patriots V St Louis Rams – Live commentary on BBC 5 live Sports Extra from 16:45 and highlights on BBC One at 23:45.

Ben Hampshire (@BH92)