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Euro 2008 to rule TV slots - despite England's absence
Owen Gibson, media correspondent The Guardian
Football widows and widowers hoping for unrestricted access to the TV
this summer due to the failure of the home nations to qualify for Euro
2008 are in for a shock. ITV and the BBC are bracing themselves for complaints
next month when live matches will dominate prime time despite the absence
of any domestic interest.
Thanks to the legislation under which major international football tournaments
are reserved for broadcast on free-to-air television, they must all be
shown live and in full on the main channels of the rights holders. Only
when they are scheduled to show two matches at the same time can they
move one to a digital channel.
Between June 7, when the tournament kicks off with joint hosts Switzerland
playing Czech Republic, and the final on June 29, the two channels will
show 27 live games on BBC1 or ITV1, plus a further four on the digital
channels BBC3 and ITV4.
Of those, 23 will kick off at 7.45pm in the middle of prime time, necessitating
the rescheduling of soaps and other shows.
On June 7, for example, ITV's prime-time Saturday night schedule will
be dominated by Portugal v Turkey. And on Thursday June 12, EastEnders
will make way for Austria v Poland on BBC1.
Scheduling requirements have already caused problems for ITV, which provoked
complaints last month when it dropped the second episode of the US import
Pushing Daisies to shoehorn nine episodes into eight weeks before the
tournament started.
The decision annoyed many viewers who had been looking forward to the
heavily trailed show, which stars the British actor Anna Friel.
Pushing Daisies follows Ned, a man with the ability to bring the dead
back to life. Friel plays his childhood neighbour and the object of his
first crush, who is resurrected by Ned.
An ITV spokesman said the station bought dramas in six or eight parts,
adding: "Unfortunately, given the high-profile nature of the 9pm
Saturday slot, we only have eight windows at the moment."
Last time England failed to qualify for a major tournament, the 1994 World
Cup in the US, most games kicked off outside prime time.
But both broadcasters are confident that viewers will tune in and that
excitement will build, citing the familiarity of British audiences with
many of Europe's top players thanks to expanded coverage of the Champions
League and the fact that many of the biggest stars ply their trade in
the Premier League.
They point to a combined audience of 20.5 million for the last World Cup
final between Italy and France and suggest that the lack of home interest
will allow for a different take on the tournament.
"There won't be the swell of optimism that there has been at previous
tournaments, which is a shame. It's a big blow that England aren't there.
But there is enough quality there for a very exciting football tournament,"
said BBC pundit Alan Shearer.
"It just goes to show how lucky we are to have the likes of Torres,
Fabregas and Ronaldo in the Premier League and be able to watch them every
week."
But ITV, already counting the cost of ?10m to ?12m in lost advertising
revenue due to England's failure to qualify, could lose out further if
peak-time audiences are hit and has scaled back its plans.
It will have commentators and reporters on the ground in Austria and Switzerland
but anchors Steve Rider, Matt Smith and Craig Doyle will host the games
from a studio in the UK. The BBC, meanwhile, will send a full team, including
Steve McClaren, the former England manager who lost his job after failing
to qualify for the tournament, who has been signed up as a co-commentator
by Radio 5 Live.
Uefa has been looking into the possibility of challenging the "crown
jewels" list that reserves all matches in European championships
for free-to-air broadcasters. While it accepts that games involving the
home nations and the latter stages should be reserved for terrestrial
free-to-air television, it would like to open up the earlier rounds to
more bidders.
Guardian.co.uk,
May 5 2008
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