• You may have to login or register before you can post and view our exclusive members only forums.
    To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Lizards be Lizards: LFC deny radio rights to Spartak game

Status
Not open for further replies.

doctor_mac

My cowboy name is Garland Justice
Moderator
So, it seems we're making some short-sighted decisions restricting open access to our games. We denied Radio 5 live radio rights so LFC tV would have exclusive radio commentary. Anyone else think this is unwise, and ultimately, damaging the club for the sake of pennies?





Anyone hoping to listen to live radio commentary of Liverpool’s decisive Champions League tie with Spartak Moscow on Wednesday will not be able to do so after the club made the decision to restrict audio access to the match to their official website.
Liverpool had been in negotiations with BBC Radio 5 Live, who along with Talksport broadcast Champions League matches in this country, about full commentary of the fixture since the 3-3 draw with Sevilla on 21 November, when a late collapse by Jürgen Klopp’s side denied them guaranteed qualification to the knockout stages of the competition and meant they require at least a draw against Spartak at Anfield to progress.
BBC 5 Live fully expected to secure the necessary rights, only to discover on Saturday that the club is limiting them to a reporter who can send brief updates and post-match interviews with the managers and players from both sides.

There is shock at the BBC over the decision, with one insider describing it as “monumentally restrictive” as it will deny a likely listener base of more than one million people the chance to listen to the Group E fixture as it unfolds via a traditional radio service. There is also the suspicion at the station that this is a taste of things to come as major clubs, and Liverpool in particular, look to take live broadcasting of their games, on TV as well as radio, in house.
Liverpool have defended the decision by pointing out that live commentary of each of their five Champions League group matches so far this season have been broadcast via their website and that access to the service for the Spartak match will, like with the others, be free. All would-be listeners have to do is register to the site.
Such a move does somewhat exclude non-Liverpool supporters who may want to listen to commentary of the game as they are unlikely to register to the club’s website to do so, and also excludes anyone who does not own a laptop/home computer/smartphone or access to the internet. Anyone who wants to watch live television coverage of the fixture will require BT Sport to do so, with the channel having retained exclusive rights to show Champions League fixtures in March.



Rights to live radio commentaries of Champions League matches in England are negotiated directly between broadcasters and clubs and done so on a game by game basis. BBC 5 Live has yet to do full commentary of one of Liverpool’s European games at Anfield this season, primarily because they have consistently played on the same evening as Tottenham Hotspur, whose fixtures, namely those against Real Madrid and Borussia Dortmund, have been more high profile. They did broadcast Liverpool draw with Sevilla last month, for which they did not have to pay a rights’ fee as it took place in Spain, and were confident of also having a commentary team on Merseyside in midweek, so much so that full live commentary of Liverpool v Spartak Moscow has already been listed on the schedule page of 5 Live’s website.
Liverpool insist that their decision is not the start of a process that will see an increasing restriction of live broadcast of their European matches to their official channels and that they will continue to make decisions on a game-by-game basis. Klopp’s team are guaranteed European football in the new year as even if they lose against Spartak, with whom they drew 1-1 in Moscow three months ago, the lowest they will finish in Group E is third, which would see them qualify instead for the Europa League.
 
I'm sure there's a wider discussion to be had here, about subscriptions, greed, monopolies and whatever, but the simple fact is that, as far as I'm aware, LFC are still broadcasting coverage FOR FREE, so if you want to fucking listen to it, you can.

So the BBC can fuck off, frankly.
 
It doesn't help that the club's online service is STILL so bloody amateurish. It was only last week they showed about half an hour of the under 19s game in silence because of 'technical problems' that any proper broadcaster would've sorted out in about two minutes maximum. And recently they did give a CL game to the News Corporation-owned TalkSport instead of the BBC. They're all over the place. If there's one aspect of the club that you would've thought that gelatinous blob of incompetence Tom Werner would've sorted out, given that he's been in TV for about 50 years, it's the media aspect, but he's sat back and allowed it to get, if anything, even WORSE.
 
It doesn't matter if they are broadcasting for free. To deny a media like BBC radio coverage is going way too far. The sport as a whole depend on independent media showing interest and cover the games as they see it best. This is a wank decision, and one I would expect from regimes that I don't want to be compared too (Mancs).
 
Could I pick up the free broadcast of the match on an AM/FM radio while driving up the M6?
 
Removing Liverpool from BBC radio does seem foolish as it removes us to an extent from a wider audience and still to this day the BBC is a good corporation to be on...

That said, moving to a digital registered worldwide audience could be profitable and we are up against Abu fucking Dhabi...
 
I'm sure there's a wider discussion to be had here, about subscriptions, greed, monopolies and whatever, but the simple fact is that, as far as I'm aware, LFC are still broadcasting coverage FOR FREE, so if you want to fucking listen to it, you can.

So the BBC can fuck off, frankly.

I don't think they are broadcasting for free, are they? Don't you have to have registered for LFC TV?
 
Removing Liverpool from BBC radio does seem foolish as it removes us to an extent from a wider audience and still to this day the BBC is a good corporation to be on...

That said, moving to a digital registered worldwide audience could be profitable and we are up against Abu fucking Dhabi...

The small beans we'd get from this won't exactly have the Sheiks quaking.
 
Last edited:
I don't think they are broadcasting for free, are they? Don't you have to have registered for LFC TV?

I thought you could register, for free, and listen to it, for free.

What's the live commentary situation in Liverpool anyway now? City can't do live commentary of Liverpool or Everton and only BBC Radio Merseyside can?

Or has that changed again?
 
I thought you could register, for free, and listen to it, for free.

What's the live commentary situation in Liverpool anyway now? City can't do live commentary of Liverpool or Everton and only BBC Radio Merseyside can?

Or has that changed again?
I could be wrong, but you can register for free for some of the content, but that doesn't include live match coverage and lots of other shit.
 
I could be wrong, but you can register for free for some of the content, but that doesn't include live match coverage and lots of other shit.

"Liverpool have defended the decision by pointing out that live commentary of each of their five Champions League group matches so far this season have been broadcast via their website and that access to the service for the Spartak match will, like with the others, be free. All would-be listeners have to do is register to the site."
 
"Liverpool have defended the decision by pointing out that live commentary of each of their five Champions League group matches so far this season have been broadcast via their website and that access to the service for the Spartak match will, like with the others, be free. All would-be listeners have to do is register to the site."
Ahh, ok. I could have researched that, but I've got research to do.
 
The ONLY reason I'd be listening to this on the radio would be because I'm driving. And Liverpool seem to have fucked that element right up with this decision
 
The ONLY reason I'd be listening to this on the radio would be because I'm driving. And Liverpool seem to have fucked that element right up with this decision
That's the only reason ANYONE listens to the match anymore. Well, & working a job that doesn't involve a pc to stream on.

Even OAPs stream the match now.
 
That's what I'm getting at. Would be interested in their stats and whether more than a thousand people tune in. And if so, should we send them to the camps?
 
Whilst not siding with the lizards here, but I did read that 5live have not shown any interest in commentating on any of the previous 5 games of ours in the group stages.

Some of the articles are misleading as they insinuate there's no coverage at all, but of course there is but via the club website if you register.

There's some email harvesting marketing bloke having a wank over this, but if you don't want to give proper details, get a blag email account. It's not that much of a chore these days.

Fuck, I reread that back and I sound resigned to this shit. Sad times.

And yeah radio listening is for when you're driving. Couldn't get a stream for Saturday so both kids suggested a drive so we could listen on radio. So proud, that I didn't even think to just stream radio commentary and not waste fuel and contribute to the death of the planet in my diesel automobile.
 
After all the shit Klopp is taking for celebrating...maybe the media should have a break from LFC...I mean i dont want any of the pudits to get upset if Klopp wins and celebrates each goal.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom