In these days it's very rare for competing channels to both show the
same thing, but Sunday night, 13th July in the UK, that's exactly what
happened, as both BBC1 and ITV went head to head with competing coverage
of the FIFA World Cup final. How is this possible you ask? BBC and ITV
are both members of the EBU, the European Broadcasting Union, who
actualy have the rights to show the World Cup across Europe, which they
do via their various member stations.
Now, there is a history
when it comes to BBC1 and ITV both showing the same event at the same
time. Usually ITV loses, and it was the same here, although the margin
in terms of viewing figures is huge.
According to
a report on the BBC News website,
the overnight figures showed that BBC1 had an average of 12.1 million
viewers for the World Cup final, against 2.9 million viewers for ITV.
The peaks for both channels were 16.7 million for BBC1 and 3.9 million
for ITV.
This is becoming so routine for ITV, that you'd think
they'd either give up, or try something else, but no, they seem happy to
take the hit generally. However, this is a mere symptom of a much
bigger problem at ITV Sport, and it is this. ITV Sport generally
underperforms against similar BBC Sport coverage. If you were to look at
the averages of live football coverage on BBC against similar live
coverage on ITV, BBC is more watched, more often. But why?
It's a
weird thing really, but in general terms, ITV Sport has a major image
problem. It's too often seen to be style over substance, where BBC Sport
is often felt to be more substantive. Is that a fair criticism? Not
really. At one time, back in ITV's heyday, their coverage of sports was
often just as substantive as BBC's, even though sometimes they'd have to
settle for lower profile sports and events. But ITV's image took a
general hit overall from about 1993 onwards. The hit was mainly in News
and Sports coverage and Comedy, which had been areas that various ITV
companies had excelled in. It was painful at times to watch what had
been a great broadcaster slowly decay.
But in 2000, the rights
for Premiership highlights went from BBC to ITV, and ITV announced what
they hoped would be their saving grace for Sports coverage. "The
Premiership" was to be the first time that Premier League football
highlights were to air in PrimeTime, indeed, airing at 7pm from the
start of the 2001/2002 season. ITV hoped that this would make them the
new goto company for sports coverage. At around the same time, ITV
launched the ITV Sport Channel on their digital terrestrial subscription
service, ITV Digital, previously known as On Digital. ITV Digital had
acquired the Football League rights at around the same time, and were
showing these games on the new ITV Sport Channel. For some baffling
reason, ITV, in the form of Carlton and Granada, decided that the ITV
Sport Channel should not air on Sky, to try to give ITV Digital a
competitive advantage.
It was a mistake. One of many that ITV did around that time. I should know. I was covering the whole
ITV Digital debacle at the time for Transdiffusion.
It was one of the lowest periods in ITV's history. A news service that
was pretty universally derided as being style over substance; a failed
platform in ITV digital, and a failed sports channel. 2002 was a low
point for ITV, and their Premiership highlights were not helping
matters. Instead of being at 7pm, the highlights had gotten relegated to
a 10.30pm slot, due to low ratings, and would remain there until the
end of the rights package in 2004, where upon the rights for Premiership
highlights returned to the BBC, and have stayed there ever since.
But
why did the Premiership highlights programme do so badly? That truly
was style over substance. A typical 75 minute programme contained just
under 30 minutes of highlights, far less than BBC had given to
highlights previously, usually almost an hour out of an 80 minute show.
Since
then, ITV has learned their lesson about substance, although some high
profile automation problems that interrupted live football coverage at
key times, have not helped their reputation. But now, ITV need to do
something rather more radical if they are to undo all the years of
damage and neglect that they have done to their Sports department. They
need to be as radical as Sky Sports was when they first appeared on the
scene back in 1991. But again, they mustn't over-emphasise style over
substance, as substance is what wins ratings, something Sky Sports knew
about in 1991, although they had their own style, they backed it up with
substance.
ITV needs to create their own style, and back it up
with substance, something ITV News has had to relearn to do since their
1999-2004 low point. Now ITV Sport needs to do the same. At the moment,
they don't really do a lot to distinguish themselves, and sacrificing
substance for style just isn't an option, not with the state of the
sports broadcasting industry today. EuroSport, BT Sport and Sky Sports
are all big players these days in the world of sports rights, along with
the BBC. ITV do have some major events, such as The Tour De France, The
French Open Tennis, and some Darts and Snooker tournaments, but most
sport now is relegated to ITV4, rather than on the main channel. If ITV
want to make themselves a sports powerhouse, then they need to have
coverage with a lot of substance, in a strong authoritative style, that
defines ITV, the way ITV News is now defined by the greater emphasis on
human interest news. Maybe ITV Sport should emphasise the match
coverage, rather than analysis. It would differentiate them from BBC and
just about everybody else in sports broadcasting. Such a strategy would
be a radical departure from ITV's long time emphasis on celebrities and
personalities in sports coverage, but it would be enough of a departure
that might get them noticed again in the sports broadcasting world.
ITV
have been stuck in a rut for too long. They say a change is as good as a
rest. ITV certainly need to make some major changes.