Australia’s tour of Sri Lanka set to become the first non-Ashes men’s Tests shown on free-to-air TV since 1998 in Australia.
The Seven Network has stepped in to secure the rights for Australia’s Qantas Tour of Sri Lanka just 12 days before the first Test begins.
Australian cricket fans were at risk of being plunged into a television black hole for the two Tests and two ODIs after no network had acquired the rights.
But Seven, which broadcasts home Tests, women’s internationals, and the Big Bash League, will take on the entire tour through their free-to-air stations and on the 7plus app.
What this summer has shown us is that Australians absolutely love their cricket, and we cannot wait to deliver even more action as Australia takes on Sri Lanka,” Seven’s head of cricket Joel Starcevic said.
Every men’s Test tour has been broadcast back to Australia for the past three decades.
The last Test not shown in Australia was during the Pakistan tour in 1994.
But this will be the first non-Ashes overseas men’s Test tour shown on free-to-air TV in Australia since Mark Taylor’s team played in South Africa in 1997, when Seven also had the rights.
Foxtel has had a stranglehold on rights for Australia’s overseas matches since broadcasting tours of India and Pakistan back in 1998.
The Pay TV network broadcast Australia’s most recent Test series in Sri Lanka in 2022.
However, Foxtel has not regularly broadcast Test series from Sri Lanka not involving Australia and therefore do not have a long-running agreement with cricket’s governing body in the subcontinent nation. (Cricket.Co.Au)
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