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.[5][6][7]. David Coleman succeeded Vine—remaining as presenter until 1997. Sue Barker has presented A Question of Sport since 1997. The What Happened Next? Ten broadcast Saturday afternoon and Saturday night games and had exclusive rights for all finals games, the network also alternated in showing the pre-season Grand Final and Brownlow Medal count with Nine (Ten telecasted the events in 2002, 2004 and 2006) while they showed each local state teams games that were played by WA, SA, QLD and NSW teams. In March 2010 however, it was announced that Network 10 and digital channel One would show NBL games for the next 5 years. Each contestant can answer a one-point "home question" on the sport they participate or participated in or can answer an "away question" on a different sport for up to three points—away questions require three answers, a point per correct answer. For the sport channels in India formerly known as TEN Sports, see, Sport division of Network 10 in Australia, ANZ Championship/Australian Diamonds Netball Internationals, Sports broadcasting contracts in Australia, New Big Bash League broadcaster Channel Ten thrilled with ratings for season opening derby, "Seven withdraws from bidding for Olympics as price tag proves too great for TV networks", "Ten Network signs $20 million deal to broadcast Sochi 2014 in Australia, claim reports", "TEN and Foxtel win 2010 Commonwealth Games", "Network Ten takes pole position in Formula 1", V8 Supercars signs $241m media rightsdeal with FOX SPORTS, Foxtel and Ten Networkfrom 2015, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=10_Sport&oldid=983755373, Articles with dead external links from September 2010, Short description is different from Wikidata, All Wikipedia articles written in Australian English, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. JD Sports Fashion plc, more commonly known as just JD Sports, is a British sports-fashion retail company based in Bury, Greater Manchester, England with shops throughout the United Kingdom, Europe, the United States, Asia and Australia.It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.It is a subsidiary of the Pentland Group. Instead, the networks shared the broadcasting of the finals series and alternated the broadcast of the grand final. John Parrott (1996–2002). Presenter David Vine was joined by captains Henry Cooper and Cliff Morgan. It is the "world's longest running TV sports quiz". On 3 January 2020, Sue Barker presented a 50th anniversary special. "Sue Barker leaving BBC's A Question of Sport after 24 years", "A Question of Sport: The history of the show", "Frankie Dettori joins A Question of Sport", "One Thousand Not Out for A Question of Sport", "Remember When: A Question of Sport celebrates 45 years", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 11 January 1971", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 5 April 1971", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 20 March 1972", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 19 June 1972", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 8 January 1974", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 2 April 1974", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 10 July 1975", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 28 August 1975", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 3 May 1976", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 12 July 1976", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 18 April 1977", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 30 May 1977", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 8 January 1979", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 2 April 1979", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 7 January 1980", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 18 March 1980", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 27 February 1981", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 22 May 1981", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 5 January 1982", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 30 March 1982", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 12 January 1983", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 30 March 1983", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 29 December 1983", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 8 May 1984", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 31 December 1984", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 11 April 1985", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 5 December 1985", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 1 May 1986", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 11 December 1986", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 14 May 1987", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 3 December 1987", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 26 April 1988", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 25 October 1988", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 11 April 1989", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 24 October 1989", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 1 May 1990", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 23 October 1990", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 23 April 1991", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 15 October 1991", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 21 April 1992", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 27 October 1992", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 20 April 1993", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 19 October 1993", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 30 May 1994", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 11 October 1994", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 2 May 1995", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 11 October 1995", "A Question of Sport – BBC One London – 3 May 1996", "TVBrain - Kaleidoscope - Lost shows - TV Archive - TV History", https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=A_Question_of_Sport&oldid=980401133, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. On 7 September 2016, the Olympic Champions special featured gold medal winners, including Callum Skinner. 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. Some people like to watch other people play sports. The commentary team remained relatively unchanged over its 10-year telecast journey, notable mentions: Note: It will also broadcast 10 matches of the 2019 Rugby World Cup. At the end of 2011 Network Ten their rights to the AFL with Seven taking over the free-to-air Saturday games. They need coaches to teach or train teams or individuals how to do better.