Nine's Wide World of Sports
Nine's Wide World of Sports is a long running sports anthology brand on Australian television, aired on the Nine Network. All major sports, events and series covered by the network are broadcast under this brand, the flagship sports being rugby league and Australian Open Tennis. Previous sporting rights include the Australian rules football, Australian Cricket Team home season, spring and autumn horse racing, swimming until 2008, and golf since 2018.
History
Wide World of Sports is a long-used title for Nine's sport programming. All sports broadcasts on Nine air under the WWoS brand. It was also the name of a popular sports magazine program that aired most Saturdays and Sundays. This program filled many of the summer daytime hours. The program premiered at 1:00 pm on Saturday, 23 May 1981, and was initially hosted by Mike Gibson and Ian Chappell, before being hosted in the 1990s by Max Walker and Ken Sutcliffe. Ian Maurice was the regular anchor at the WWOS Update Desk. The show ended in 1999, due in large part to the rise of Fox Sports and other subscription sport channels., but the show returned in 2008 on Sunday mornings.From the early 1970s, the main sport aired nationally under the WWoS brand was cricket. Nine's majority owner Kerry Packer created World Series Cricket in part because he couldn't obtain the rights to Australian test matches at home, even though he offered the Australian Cricket Board a $1.5 million 3-year contract which was rejected by the ACB who signed a 3-year deal with the ABC to broadcast test matches. This led to Packer signing in secret some of the world's best cricket players for a breakaway competition. The ABC and Nine then signed a truce after a long dispute in 1979, with Nine securing the exclusive rights to telecast Australian cricket.
From that point until 2006, Nine based its summer schedule around broadcasts of cricket internationally and domestic. Its cricket broadcasts in that era revolutionised the way the sport was covered, featuring cameras placed at both ends of the field, instant replays, and other innovations. World Series Cricket made many other changes to cricket, having a huge impact on the game.
In 1984, Billy Birmingham released a best-selling comedy album making fun of the cricket portion of the show. He went on to release a series of albums ridiculing all aspects of Wide World of Sports, calling the show "Wired World of Sports". From the first to the most recent, all have reached number one on the Australian album chart.
January 1995 saw the beginning of Premier Sports Network, the channel that was to become Fox Sports. It secured the rights to Australia's cricket tour of the West Indies, Nine's first challenge since winning its World Series war. Nine tried to stop the broadcast under Australia's "anti-siphoning" rules, which exist to stop certain popular sporting events being screened exclusively on pay television. But it failed when Premier Sports Network came to an agreement to broadcast the tour free to air on Network 10.
WWoS's other main sport was and is rugby league. This was challenged in 1997 by the establishment of Super League, the repercussions of which led to Nine's parent company owning half of Fox Sports that year, and ultimately Nine's move away from popular live sport.
This partial purchase of Fox Sports roughly coincided with the end of Nine's traditional Saturday and Sunday daytime schedule of sports programming. What had once filled it now filled subscription channels, mainly Fox Sports. Old movies and other low rating programs filled much of the space.
Between the late 1970s and 1997, when Australians had wanted to watch continuous sport at home on a summer weekend, they had largely done so by tuning to Nine. Those in NSW, Queensland and the ACT did this all year round, due to rugby league's popularity in those areas. Now Fox Sports had that mantle, and gave viewers continuous sport all week long.
On 25 January 2001, The Nine Network acquired broadcast rights for Friday night and Sunday games in the Australian Football League, the elite Australian rules football competition in 2001. They shared the rights with Network Ten and Foxtel from 2002 through to 2006, but the deal assigned the rights for finals matches to Network Ten, a deal which reportedly flabbergasted Nine boss Kerry Packer.
As it also had the rights for all major swimming competitions until 2008, with major swimming competitions shown in primetime. During the early to mid-2000s, Nine for the first time had the FTA rights to the highest competitions of Australia's four biggest spectator sports: rugby league, Australian rules, cricket and swimming.
While Nine no longer had the volume of sport it once had, during the 2000-2006 period it dominated non-Olympic sport broadcasting in Australia.
In January 2006, the Seven Network and Network Ten exercised their "first and last" rights agreement with the AFL to trump the Nine Network's $780 million bid for broadcasting rights for the years 2007 to 2011. If Seven and Ten were unable to match the AFL's "quality of coverage" demands by 5 May 2006 the AFL would have been allowed to award the broadcasting rights back to Nine. The Seven/Ten consortium, however, obtained the rights, with Nine broadcasting its last AFL match on Sunday September 3 2006, hosted by Tony Jones with a guest appearance from Nine's then chief executive and former AFL commentator Eddie McGuire.
From the beginning of the 2006-2007 cricket season, Nine no longer broadcast Australian domestic cricket but replaced the coverage with delayed National Basketball League matches. The domestic cricket matches, long a mainstay of Nine's summer programming, moved exclusively to Fox Sports.
It was thought that the Seven Network would continue its tradition of airing the Olympic Games for the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. However, Nine in joint partnership with Foxtel, has secured broadcasting rights which the network has described as the most comprehensive coverage of the Olympics. The partnership also won the rights to the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.
For more than 40 years, the Nine Network had also broadcast the prestigious Wimbledon tennis tournament before ultimately dropping it after the 2010 tournament, citing declining ratings. The last Wimbledon match televised by Nine was the men's singles final played between Rafael Nadal and Tomáš Berdych, which Nadal won. The Seven Network have since picked up the broadcasting rights to Wimbledon, from 2011 onwards.
Return
After a ten-year hiatus, it was announced that the Wide World of Sports program would return to Nine on 16 March 2008. This show is hosted by the previous host Ken Sutcliffe, with footy show star James Brayshaw as well as former Australian cricketer Adam Gilchrist.In 2009, revolving co-hosts included former swimmers Giaan Rooney, Nicole Livingstone and former cricketer Michael Slater. The show originally aired for 90 minutes but was recently extended to two hours. It airs on Sunday mornings at 9am till 11am.
Wide World of Sports returned for another year in 2009. Michael Slater and Grant Hackett joined the team as co-hosts alongside Ken Sutcliffe and Giaan Rooney. Nicole Livingstone did not return to the program in 2009, as she joined Network Ten as a commentator. Giaan Rooney resigned from the Nine Network at the end of 2012 to join the Seven Network.
The show was nominated for the "Most Popular Sports Program" award at the 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014 and 2015 Logie Awards, being beaten by The NRL Footy Show on all occasions.
The show is no longer airing as of 2017. Sports Sunday replaced the show in the Sunday 10am timeslot.
Events
Nine's Wide World of Sports holds broadcast rights to the following events:Current
Past
1 The Nine Network televised the 2011 US Open final between Serena Williams and Samantha Stosur in its entirety.Programs
Nine's Wide World of Sports has presented the following recurring programs:Presenters and commentators
Nine's Wide World of Sports has hosts and commentators for a variety of sporting events. The following is a list of past and present personalities featured:Sports Sunday (2017-present)
- James Bracey
- Liz Ellis
- Peter FitzSimons
- Catherine Cox
- Emma Freedman
Wide World of Sports
Past
- Michael Slater
- Emma Freedman
- John Steffenson
- Clint Stanaway
- Sally Fitzgibbons
- Ian Chappell
- Lisa Curry
- Ian Maurice
- Mike Gibson
- Tony Greig
- Max Walker
- Adam Gilchrist
- Giaan Rooney
- Yvonne Sampson
- Ken Sutcliffe
- Richie Calendar
- Kerryn Pratt
''Any Given Sunday''
- James Brayshaw
- Nicole Livingstone
- Garry Lyon
- Mick Molloy
- Sam Newman
2012 London Olympics
- Eddie McGuire
- Ken Sutcliffe
- Giaan Rooney
- James Brayshaw
- Ray Warren
- Garry Lyon
- Karl Stefanovic
- Leila McKinnon
- James Tomkins
- Kerri Pottharst
- Scott McGrory
- Debbie Watson
- Melinda Gainsford-Taylor
- Michael Slater
- Andrew Gaze
- Andrew Voss
- Grant Hackett
- Jane Flemming
- Mark Nicholas
- Cameron Williams
- Phil Liggett
- Simon O'Donnell
- Billy Brownless
- Tony Jones
- Daley Thompson
- Steve Ovett
Rugby league
Current
- James Bracey
- Erin Molan
- Ray Warren,
- Mathew Thompson
- Peter Psaltis
- Peter Sterling
- Paul Vautin
- Phil Gould
- Wally Lewis
- Andrew Johns
- Brad Fittler
- Allana Ferguson
- Ruan Sims
- Johnathan Thurston
- Darren Lockyer
- Billy Slater
- Sam Thaiday
NSW Cup
- Peter Psaltis
- Jamie Soward
- Danika Mason
QLD Cup
- Mark Braybrook
- Scott Sattler
- Peter Badel
The NRL Footy Show
Current
- Erin Molan
- Andrew Johns
- Brad Fittler
- Ryan Girdler
- Darryl Brohman
- Beau Ryan (regular appearances, 2010-present
Former
- Peter Sterling
- Steve Roach
- Ray Hadley
- Paul Harrogan
- Matthew Johns
- Laurie Daley
- Andrew Voss
- Benji Marshall
- Brad Fittler
- Michael Slater
- Gorden Tallis
The Sunday NRL Footy Show
- Erin Molan
- Peter Sterling
- Brad Fittler
- Allana Ferguson
Former
- Darrell Eastlake
- Jack Gibson
- Mick Cronin
- Warren Ryan
- Michael Cleary
- Ellery Hanley
- Gavin Miller
- Gene Miles
- Matthew Johns
- Gary Belcher
- Steve "Blocker" Roach
- Andrew Voss
- Paul Harragon
- Mark Geyer
- Steve Walters
- Ben Ikin Qld Cup
- Wendell Sailor
- Jason Taylor
- Laurie Daley
- Tim Gilbert
- Gorden Tallis
- Yvonne Sampson
- Brett Finch
- Erin Molan
Tennis
- Tony Jones
- Rebecca Maddern
- John McEnroe
- Jim Courier
- Todd Woodbridge
- Dylan Alcott
- Jelena Dokic
- Sam Groth
- Alicia Molik
Cricket
Cricket World Cup 2019, Women's Ashes 2019, Ashes 2019
- Rebecca Maddern
- James Bracey
- Clint Stanaway
- Alicia Muling
- Todd Woodbridge
- Mark Taylor
- Lisa Sthalekar
- Ian Healy
- Mel Jones
- Rob Canning
Final
- Mark Nicholas,
- Michael Slater
- Ian Chappell
- Ian Healy
- Bill Lawry
- Mark Taylor
- Shane Warne
- Michael Clarke
- Tom Moody
- Lisa Sthalekar
- Mel Jones
Past
- Richie Benaud
- Stephanie Brantz,
- Greg Chappell
- Mike Hussey
- Tony Cozier
- Kate Fitzpatrick
- Adam Gilchrist
- Tony Greig
- David Hookes
- Brendon Julian
- Geoff Lawson
- Rod Marsh
- Simon O'Donnell,
- Greg Ritchie
- Brett Lee
- Keith Stackpole
- Jeff Thomson
- Frank Tyson
- Max Walker
- Doug Walters
- Mark Waugh
- Mike Whitney
- Glenn McGrath
- James Brayshaw
- Yvonne Sampson
Guest international commentators
- Michael Atherton Ashes tour to Australia
- Fred Trueman 1982/83 Ashes tour to Australia
- Bob Willis Ashes tour to Australia
- Geoff Boycott and Ashes tours to Australia
- Ian Botham 1998/99 Ashes tour to Australia
- Colin Croft and
- Sunil Gavaskar
- David Gower
- Sir Richard Hadlee and
- Michael Holding
- Waqar Younis
- David Lloyd,
- Ian Smith
- Michael Vaughan
- Kevin Pietersen
- VVS Laxman
- Russell Arnold
Netball
Current
- Clint Stanaway
- Jayne Azzopardi
- Aislin Kriukelis
- Warren Tredrea
- Sue Gaudion
- Anne Sargeant
- Liz Ellis
- Sharelle McMahon
- Catherine Cox
- Clare McMeniman
- Julie Snook
- Jack Berketa
- Paddy Sweeney
- Alexis Daish
- Carrie-Anne Greenbank
- Michael Atkinson
Former
- Seb Costello
- Erin Molan
- Laura Geitz
- Sharni Layton
- Sylvia Jeffreys
- Tom Mitchell
- Christine Ahern
Soccer
- Clint Stanaway
- Michael Bridges
- David Zdrilic
- Harry Kewell
- Craig Moore
- Brenton Speed
Tour Down Under cycling
- Tim Gilbert
- John Steffensen
- Phil Liggett
- Paul Sherwen
- Robbie McEwen
2015 Rugby World Cup
- Ken Sutcliffe
- Cameron Williams
- Bill Baxter
- Brendan Cannon
- Benn Robinson
- Phil Waugh
- Nathan Sharpe
National Basketball League
- Bill Baxter
- Brad Rosen
Australian Football League
- Eddie McGuire, host of The Footy Show, AFL commentator
- James Brayshaw, host of The Footy Show, AFL commentator
- Garry Lyon, host of The Footy Show, AFL commentator
- Dermott Brereton
- Dennis Cometti
- Gerard Healy
- Craig Hutchison
- Tony Jones, boundary rider
- Anthony Mithen, boundary rider
- Sam Newman
- Michael Roberts, boundary rider
- Dwayne Russell
- Brian Taylor
- Matthew Lloyd, Footy Show panelist
''The Footy Show'' (Sunday edition) panellists
- Max Walker, original host
- Mal Brown
- Billy Brownless
- Doug Hawkins
- Sam Kekovich
- Simon O'Donnell
- Lou Richards
- Ted Whitten