meltiger said:
Dean Moriarty said:
Building audiences is the responsibility of the sport itself.
This is not neccesarily true... You may have been talking in the context of commercial networks but one extremely large media organisation does have a large stake in the game,
The development of the sport needs to be a shared responsibility between the Rugby League people and News Ltd... News Ltd through their essential dominance of the newspaper market
should take a much greater lead in promoting the game.
You/they could argue the market is not there, but as in investor with a 50% stake... Shouldn't you be doing your best to promote the game into new markets if you have the ability too? Packer I believe has a stake in Fox Sports? (i could be wrong there i am happy to concede) ... If that is true... Then his commercial network should also be taking a greater lead in promoting what is essentially fox sports biggest investment.
Good points. But remember that Fox is a
sports broadcaster, not just a league broadcaster, with fingers in the pies of a lot of sports. It has a dedicated AFL channel, so you can't expect the Telegraph to not promote Aussie Rules as well as league. As a populist tabloid newspaper, it will inevitably jump on any bandwagon going, because that's what sells papers.
I am not sure I follow your point about Packer, though. He has an investment in Foxtel, along with News Ltd and Telstra. As I say, Fox Sports wants to build the audience for sports in general. Packer would have no interest beyond that in News Ltd's investments. As far as Nine goes, it has rights to both NRL and AFL. In an ideal world, they would take a long-term audience view and work to promote the sports. In practice, no channel (except maybe SBS) takes that long-term view with sports, and hence they will do whatever they can get away with for short-term ratings. The AFL was smart enough to include certain commitments from broadcasters in its contracts; the NRL was not.