Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Exclusive by Matt Hughes

MPs back UK broadcasters in push to expand sport’s free-to-air ‘crown jewels’

Henry Arundell scores England’s first try during the Six Nations match against Wales at Allianz Stadium on 7 February.
BBC and ITV have joint rights to rugby union’s Six Nations Championship but it is not part of the group A list. Photograph: Bob Bradford/CameraSport/Getty Images

Public service broadcasters are making renewed attempts to persuade the government to expand the list of televised sport’s free-to-air “crown jewels”.

A call from the then BBC director of sport, Barbara Slater, to add the Six Nations Championship to the group A list of events that must be offered to terrestrial channels was rejected three years ago, but a group of Labour MPs is understood to be working with broadcasters to force a change of policy.

BBC and ITV have since extended their joint rights for the Six Nations until 2029 despite fears they would be outbid by a subscription service such as Sky Sports and TNT Sport, but with budgets tight they are still seeking legislative protection.

While BBC and ITV would be the main beneficiaries of any change, Channel 4 has significantly increased its sport offering in recent years and will be the free-to-air home of the Winter Paralympics next month, as well as beginning exclusive contracts to broadcast the men’s and women’s Boat Races and Women’s FA Cup this year.

In addition to pushing for the Six Nations to be moved from the group B list, which permits live events to be behind a paywall as long as highlights are made available free-to-air, the public service broadcasters also want the A list expanded to include the home nations’ men’s and women’s international qualifiers for the World Cup and European Championship, one Champions League tie involving a British team from each round of matches and the men’s FA Cup.

A growing number of Labour MPs are understood to be supportive, with the issue likely to be raised in public at the culture, media and sport committee, alongside continued private lobbying of ministers. The issue It has yet to be discussed at the select committee, which has not sat for the past fortnight due to the parliamentary recess.

With the cost of sports subscriptions rising due to the fragmentation of the rights market, the MPs argue there is a significant public benefit in making sure fans can watch their national team in the major sports regardless of means.

Group A

Summer and Winter Olympics

Summer and Winter Paralympics

Fifa World Cup

Fifa Women’s World Cup

Uefa European Championship

Uefa Women’s European Championship

FA Cup final

Scottish FA Cup final (in Scotland)

Grand National

Wimbledon tennis finals

Rugby World Cup final

The Derby

Rugby League Challenge Cup final

Group B

Test cricket played in England

Wimbledon (non-finals)

Rugby World Cup (matches other than final)

Six Nations matches Involving home nations

Commonwealth Games

World Athletics Championships

Cricket World Cup final, semi-finals and matches Involving home nations

Ryder Cup

The Open Golf Championship

Ofcom say: "Group A events are afforded most protection by the regime, which places importance on these events being available live so that audiences across the UK can enjoy the biggest sporting events together, helping to create national moments.

"The aim for Group B events is that some coverage is available to audiences for free, be that live or alternative coverage, such as highlights."

Many of the events the broadcasters want to be protected are available free-to-air, with the main rights holder of the FA Cup, TNT Sports, sub-licensing 14 ties to the BBC each season, but others are not.

While the BBC has highlights rights and produce a weekly programme, live Champions League matches are available only on TNT Sports and Amazon Prime, with games switching to Paramount in a new four-year deal from 2027.

Listing an event does not guarantee free-to-air coverage, but the legislation states that public service broadcasters must be given the opportunity to buy the rights at a “reasonable price” they can afford, rather than being outbid by a subscription service.

The core events protected for free-to-air TV are the Olympics and Paralympics, men’s and women’s World Cups and European Championships, the FA Cup and Scottish FA Cup finals, Wimbledon finals, the rugby union World Cup final and rugby league’s Challenge Cup final, as well as the Grand National and the Derby.

The secondary B list – which must feature highlights free-to-air – includes the Six Nations and the rest of the Rugby World Cup, the Cricket World Cup and men’s Test matches, the Commonwealth Games and World Athletics Championships, plus golf’s Open and Ryder Cup.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.