Ed,
I certainly got to watch the Us Open and USPGA on British terrestrial telly during the 80's.
In an interview on BBC Five Live Radio Peter Dawson admitted that the R&A would not have ended the 60+ year association with the BBC had there not been a SUBSTANTIAL difference in the money Sky offered. He then went on to say two things which says it all. The R&A had invested large sums of money into grassroots yet the game was still showing falling numbers of participation. The extra money they get from the TV deal will mean more investment in grassroots. So basically the Peter Dawson admits the R&A has being ineffectual in boosting the game so far and is planning to through good money after bad.
It certainly does not give one much hope for the future of the R&A who are in danger of ....... golf hari-kari maybe?
Jon
Jon
To apply the same logic, participation is declining despite the terrestrial showcase. Why would the R & A continue to throw good money after bad by accepting below the market rate when the benefit of the BBC is either ineffective/immaterial when aligned to participation? The BBC are either crucial to participation or they're not. We can't have it both ways.
Everyone else
I think it's a shame its not on BBC and would rather see it on there than not. I just think we're overstating the impact of one weekend a year coverage.
Darts is thriving at elite and grass roots level through Sky.
Boxing which has always been used, abused and tossed away by terrestrial tv is thriving again with Sky/Box nation with gate attendances up. Ricky Hatton never appeared on terrestrial ever yet was a huge star. Froch Groves last year had massive cross over appeal and even heavyweight boxing looks like it might be interesting again in 18 months. Participation through gyms, white collar boxing nights, amateur level is thriving
Snooker stays on terrestrial and is still nowhere near its peak and appears moribund.
What I'm getting at is that the growth or decline of a sport is impacted by far more important issues, trends and barriers to entry.
BBC isn't propping up participation/take up in golf and nor has it for 20 years. Its ineffectual in its current form and therefore I believe the impact will be negligible. We're all wrapped up in nostalgia and what got us into the game, or what we think got us into the game.
Plenty to bash the R&A for but I think they do a great job with the Open and despite Niall being correct about costs rising, I know of no comparable event sporting or otherwise where under 16's go free or can compete on value and accessibility for a family.