10 Sport
10 Sport is the brand that all sporting events broadcast on Network 10, an Australian free-to-air commercial television network.
All sport events were broadcast under the One HD banner from 2009 until it ceased being a sole sports channel in early 2011.
History
Australian rules
In 2002, Ten combined with the Nine Network to acquire free-to-air broadcast rights for the AFL, the elite Australian rules competition, displacing the Seven Network which had held the rights for more than 40 years. Ten broadcast Saturday afternoon and Saturday night games and had exclusive rights for all finals games. Along with the Seven Network, Ten placed a successful $780 million bid to jointly broadcast the game from 2007 to 2011. Under this deal, Ten continued to broadcast the Saturday component of the competition. However, unlike the previous deal, Ten did not hold the exclusive rights to the finals series. Instead, the networks shared the broadcasting of the finals series and alternated the broadcast of the grand final. In the years when Ten did not televise the Grand Final, it telecast the Brownlow Medal presentation. Ten ended AFL broadcasting at the conclusion of the 2011 season. Ten Sport won a Logie Award for "Most Popular Sport Program" at the 2012 TV Week Logie Awards for its telecast of the 2011 AFL Grand Final.Basketball
In 1992, Network 10 also used to air the National Basketball League during the middle of the basketball boom in Australia from 1992 to 1997, but after delegating games to extremely late night time slots the network eventually ended its broadcasting. In March 2010 however, it was announced that Network 10 and digital channel One would show NBL games for the next 5 years. Starting with 2 games per week, and raising to 5 per week in the 2014/15 season. The network also screened Boomers and Opals games.Cricket
In 2013, Ten paid $100 million for exclusive rights to broadcast the Big Bash League from 2013 to 2018, marking the channel's first foray in elite domestic cricket coverage. Ten previously held the broadcast rights to the Indian Premier League.Horse racing
Network 10 broadcast the Melbourne Cup between 1978 and 2001, and again since 2019.Motorsport
Ten has been a long-standing broadcaster of motorsport events. It has produced the motoring show RPM to complement its coverage.In 2003, Ten started broadcasting the Formula One World Championship after the Nine Network dropped the rights in 2002 after more than twenty years of coverage. Other series broadcast include the Supercars Championship and MotoGP.
Rugby league
Ten broadcast the New South Wales Rugby League premiership from 1983 until 1991. The network was experiencing severe financial problems in the early 1990s, and it was the New South Wales Rugby League that successfully applied to place the network in liquidation in 1991.Rugby union
Network 10 broadcast the 1995 and 2007 Rugby World Cups. It has broadcast Wallabies test matches since 2013. It will also broadcast 10 matches of the 2019 Rugby World Cup.Olympic and Commonwealth Games
Ten broadcast both the summer and winter Olympics in 1984 and 1988. Network 10 acquired broadcast rights to the 2014 Winter Olympics for $20 million after all three major commercial networks pulled out of bidding on rights to both the 2014 and 2016 Olympic Games due to cost concerns. The Nine Network had lost $22 million on its joint coverage of the 2012 Games with Foxtel, and the Seven Network's bid was rejected for being lower than what Nine/Foxtel had previously paid.Network 10, in joint partnership with subscription television provider Foxtel, had broadcast rights for the 2010 Commonwealth Games. It also broadcast the 1994 and 2014 games.
Events
10 Sport holds broadcast rights to the following events:Current
Past
Programs
10 Sport has presented the following recurring programs:Staff and commentators
Australian Football League
10 Sport previously broadcast Australian Rules Football. The 10 Sport AFL commentary team, won the 2012 Silver Logie Award for "Most Outstanding Sport Program", for its telecast of the 2011 AFL Grand Final hosted by Stephen Quartermain.The commentary team remained relatively unchanged over its 10-year telecast journey, notable mentions:
- Gerard Whateley was a boundary rider during their first two years of broadcasting, 2002–2003.
- Veteran VFL player and Western Bulldogs coach Terry Wallace was an expert commentator from 2002–2004. He expert commentated during the 2005 AFL Grand Final.
- Christi Malthouse was a key part of the team from 2002–2008. Christi stepped down from the role at the end of 2008 for unexplained reasons. She remained with Network Ten until 2010 as a fill-in sport presenter on Melbourne's Ten News at Five with Mal Walden & Helen Kapalos.
- Luke Darcy joined the team in 2007.
- Corey Wingard, joined the team as a boundary rider for Adelaide Crows and Port Adelaide home matches and Grand Finals.
- Mark Howard & Kelli Underwood joined the team from 2009, replacing Christi. Kelli joined the network in 2006 as a sport reporter for Ten News at Five in Melbourne and eventually Sports Tonight. Mark also joined in 2006, as a pit reporter for the networks Supercars coverage and later 9am with David & Kim.
- Matthew Lloyd joined as an expert commentator in 2010.
- Andrew Maher. Original member from 2002.
- Matthew Lloyd
- Robert Walls. Original member from 2002.
- Mark Howard.
- Stephen Quartermain. Original member from 2002.
- Anthony Hudson. Original member from 2002.
- Michael Christian. Original member from 2002.
- Peter Daicos. Original member from 2002 until 2003.
- Tim Lane. Commentated from 2003 onwards.
- Luke Darcy.
- Malcolm Blight. Original member from 2002.
- Kelli Underwood.
- Neil Cordy. Original member from 2002.
- Tim Gossage. Original member from 2002.
- Bill McDonald. Original member from 2002.
Matches played in Tasmania, Canberra, Darwin or on the Gold Coast had either Mark Howard or Kelli Underwood as the boundary rider. Christi Malthouse would normally fill this role.
Commonwealth Games
2014
From Glasgow studio- Mel McLaughlin
- Matthew White
- Ian Thorpe
- Steve Hooker
- Leisel Jones
- Mark Howard
- Tim Gossage
Various Ten programs including Toasted TV, Totally Wild, Puzzle Play, Huey's Kitchen, Neighbours, The 7PM Project, and Sports Tonight goes on hiatus during Ten's broadcast of the Commonwealth Games.
- Brad McEwan
- Kathryn Robinson
- Stephen Quartermain
- Bill Woods
- Tim Lane
- Andrew Maher
- Anthony Hudson
- Nicole Livingstone
- Mark Howard
- Dean Pullar
- Michael Turtur
- Liz Ellis
- Luke Darcy
Motorsport
Supercars Championship
- Matthew White
- Rick Kelly
- Mark Howard
- Scott Mackinnon
- Grant Denyer
- Aaron Noonan
- Kate Peck
Formula 1
- Matthew White
- Roz Kelly
- Mark Webber
- Alan Jones
- Tom Clarkson
- Scott Mackinnon
MotoGP
- Daryl Beattie
- Mark Howard
- Sam Charlwood
RPM
- Matthew White
- Scott Mackinnon
- Alan Jones
- Daryl Beattie
- Aaron Noonan
Past
- Bill Woods
- Barry Sheene
- Neil Crompton
- Leigh Diffey
- Greg Rust
- Craig Baird
- Cameron McConville
- Mel McLaughlin
- Mark Larkham
- Adam Gilchrist
- Mark Howard
- James Allen
- Richard Craill
Rugby Union
Current
- Matthew White
- Roz Kelly
- Gordon Bray
- Matt Burke
- Nathan Sharpe
- Scott Mackinnon
Former
- Stirling Mortlock
- Stephen Moore
2007 Rugby World Cup
- Bill Woods
- Ben Darwin
- Ben Tune
National Basketball League
- Stephen Quartermain
- Steve Carfino
- Bill Woods
- Andrew Gaze
- Brett Maher
- Tony Ronaldson
- Tim Gossage
- Shane Heal
Big Bash League
- Roz Kelly
- Mark Howard
- Adam Gilchrist
- Andrew Maher
- Ricky Ponting
- Damien Fleming
- Mark Waugh
- Tim Gossage
- Roger Oldridge
- Adam Hawse
- Mel Jones
- Lisa Sthalekar
- Kevin Pietersen
- Darren Lehmann
- Andrew Symonds
- Brendon McCullum
- Michael Vaughan
- Graeme Swann
- Viv Richards
- Mel McLaughlin
- Andrew Flintoff
Women's Big Bash League
- Roz Kelly
- Andrew Maher
- Adam Gilchrist
- Mel Jones
- Lisa Sthalekar
- Belinda Clark
- Melinda Farrell
- Roger Oldridge
- Mel McLaughlin
Swimming
- Lachy Reid
- Nicole Livingstone
- Mark Howard
- Tim Gossage
- Mel McLaughlin
- Anthony Hudson
- Stephen Quartermain
- Leisel Jones
A-League/Socceroos Internationals
- Robbie Slater
- Tara Rushton
- Mark Bosnich
- Adam Peacock
- Archie Thompson
- Daniel McBreen
Logo history