Scheduling: The German Grand Prix

F1 heads off from Britain to a slightly more drier Hockenheim circuit in Germany. I’ve probably just jinxed it saying that… in any case, this weekend Sky Sports F1 have exclusive live coverage with BBC having highlights only. This also applies for the Hungarian Grand Prix, meaning the next live action for BBC viewers will not come until the Belgian Grand Prix at the very back end of August. The BBC highlights are being shown on BBC Two thanks to the Open Golf Championship on BBC One. If you can’t watch the first showing of the race highlights on Sunday, then they are repeated at 23:40 on BBC One.

On the personnel side of things, the BBC’s Summer line-up changes are back into effect this weekend, this time thanks to the Olympic Games. As I noted a while back, due to Jake Humphrey covering the Olympics for BBC, Lee McKenzie is presenting this weekend’s Grand Prix. With McKenzie presenting, it means that Tom Clarkson steps into her shoes again interviewing drivers.

For Sky, they are screening an extended interview with Jenson Button in the build-up to the race, the schedule times for that can be found here. Sky this weekend have Allan McNish again with them, but I am not sure if Johnny Herbert will be there now that his five race deal has expired. Time shall tell.

As I did with Canada, I’ve added the 5 Live F1 schedule below in italics for those without access to Sky Sports F1. Neither Practice 2 or Practice 3 are on 5 Live or 5 Live Sports Extra, thanks to Golf and Cricket.

UPDATE on 17th July: Sky have confirmed on their website that Anthony Davidson is back with them for the remainder of the season after his horrific crash at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, while Johnny Herbert is back with the team. Rachel Brookes of Sky Sports News is replacing Natalie Pinkham for the weekend, the latter is getting married. I’m especially pleased that Brookes is getting a promotion to the Sky Sports F1 channel for the weekend, as I do think her F1 efforts on Sky Sports News do go unnoticed, she has definitely grown as F1 reporter for the channel since February in my opinion.

Thursday 19th July
14:00 to 14:45 – F1: Driver Press Conference (Sky Sports F1)

Friday 20th July
08:45 to 10:55 – F1: Practice 1 (Sky Sports F1)
08:55 to 10:35 – F1: Practice 1 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
10:55 to 11:35 – GP2: Practice (Sky Sports F1)
12:45 to 14:45 – F1: Practice 2 (Sky Sports F1)
14:45 to 15:25 – GP2: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
16:00 to 16:45 – F1: Team Press Conference (Sky Sports F1)
17:00 to 18:00 – The F1 Show (Sky Sports F1)
18:45 to 19:00 – Inside F1 (BBC News Channel)

Saturday 21st July
08:40 to 09:20 – GP3: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
09:45 to 11:10 – F1: Practice 3 (Sky Sports F1)
12:00 to 14:35 – F1: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
13:00 to 14:05 – F1: Qualifying (BBC Radio 5 Live)
14:35 to 16:00 – GP2: Race 1 (Sky Sports F1)
16:15 to 17:05 – GP3: Race 1 (Sky Sports F1)
17:00 to 18:10 – F1: Qualifying Highlights (BBC Two and BBC HD)

Sunday 22nd July
08:20 to 09:10 – GP3: Race 2 (Sky Sports F1)
09:30 to 10:35 – GP2: Race 2 (Sky Sports F1)
11:30 to 16:15 – F1: Race (Sky Sports F1)
13:00 to 14:30 – F1: Race (BBC Radio 5 Live)
17:30 to 19:00 – F1: Race Highlights (BBC Two and BBC HD)
19:00 to 20:00 – F1: Forum (BBC Red Button)
19:00 to 21:30 – IndyCars: Edmonton (Sky Sports 4)

News Articles – British Grand Prix

A summary of all the opinion and blog pieces from BBC and Sky over the past few days since the British Grand Prix.

BBC
Andrew Benson‘s Post-Race blog
Gary Anderson‘s Technical Review
Jaime Alguersuari‘s weekly blog
Mark Webber blogs about his British Grand Prix victory and his new contract

Sky
Ted Kravitz‘s Notebook
Pete Gill‘s Conclusions
Mike Wise‘s Diary
Martin Brundle looks at the lessons from Silverstone
Analysis of how Mark Webber’s contract decision affects the remainder of the pitlane
Mark Hughes on McLaren’s current form
Pete Gill and Mike Wise look at what went wrong at Silverstone off the track

British Grand Prix holds up well against Murray onslaught

So a few weeks ago, I wrote a piece on here regarding the scheduling of yesterday’s British Grand Prix. As I noted in that particular piece:

“One has to wonder if the conclusion of the British Grand Prix is less important than the first few sets of the Wimbledon Men’s Singles final, and also whether the Qualifying session is less important than the Women’s Singles final.”

I have to admit, at that time, I thought no, thinking to myself that it will be an all foreign final and Andy Murray will once again get knocked out in the Quarter or Semi Final. Of course, I was left eating humble pie….

He didn’t win, though. He did however, draw an absolutely mammoth peak of 16.9 million viewers to BBC One yesterday at 18:00 and an 11.45 million viewership average throughout. In comparison, the highest Formula 1 race on record, the 2008 Brazilian Grand Prix, had 8.8 million. So, in reality, the BBC made completely the right decision, as I admitted on Friday on Twitter!

With the mammoth peak, it is no surprise that the F1 was dented, and although the British Grand Prix had its worst viewing figures since 2007, the figures were not bad at all considering the opposition. The weighted programme average was 3.09 million (20.9%) from 12:05 to 15:30. The percentage share, for anyone wondering, is a lot lower than usual due to there being a lot more people watching TV than usual, again due to the Wimbledon final.

I do not have the exact Sky Sports F1 figures, but again you are looking at around about 0.4 million to 0.5 million, which means a combined average of about 3.5 million. Which is actually very respectable when you consider the viewing figures for BBC One. It is not far away from the Monaco Grand Prix figure either. If anything, the Grand Prix did a lot better than I was anticipating. James Allen has helpfully tweeted a peak of 4.2 million for BBC Two, so factoring in Sky Sports F1 will take you to a peak in the 5 million region. I am not sure a ratio is relevant really considering the mammoth opposition, but you are looking at 84% to 16%, approximately give-or-take depending on the exact peak figures.

The delayed Qualifying figure did not do well, a peak of 2.3 million (22.7%) at 13:15 on BBC Two, with an average of 1.9 million viewers. Add an extra 0.2 million or 0.3 million for Sky, which gives you about 2.2 million viewers. Not a very good figure, and the worst for the British Grand Prix Qualifying since 2008. If anything, the rain delay hindered things rather than helped things, as all the casual viewers would have flocked to BBC One when the rain delay started as the Women’s Wimbledon final was getting underway.

One thing that the ratings show is that the scheduling all around has been awful this year from the FIA. The Canadian Grand Prix went against Euro 2012 directly. The British Grand Prix went against the Wimbledon final, and the Hungarian Grand Prix is going to go against the London 2012 Olympics. Who planned this exactly? The schedule should have gone something like this:

– 27th May: Monaco
– 10th June: Europe (Valencia)
– 24th June: Germany
– 1st July: Britain
– 15th July: Canada
– 19th August: Hungary
– 2nd September: Belgium

That just about directly avoids the major sporting events, with nothing directly clashing. I can only assume that there are logistical issues that prevents an event the week before Valencia or a week after in terms of transportation. There would still be a five week break halfway through the season, just slightly different with Hungary after the break rather than before it.

As always, your comments and thoughts are welcome.

BBC to stick “with F1 until the end of the current deal and perhaps longer”

The BBC are set to remain covering Formula 1 until at least 2018. That is according to an interview conducted by Phil Duncan of the Daily Mail with BBC’s Formula 1 presenter Jake Humphrey.

In the interview with Duncan, Humphrey noted that he has “been told categorically that the BBC are sticking with F1 until the end of the current deal and perhaps longer”, while he cannot see “be astounded and massively shocked if the BBC say: “we’re stepping away from F1″”.

The comments from Humphrey follows an interview Bernie Ecclestone gave to The Guardian last month, suggesting that free-to-air Formula 1 could end on the BBC.

This line from Humphrey interests me though: “Internally, I can promise you there has not been a single discussion”. I’m not sure how factually accurate that statement is myself. Let us rewind back to last July and work ourselves up the chain. We have the Head of Formula 1 at the BBC, Ben Gallop. Ahead of Gallop in the chain, so to speak, is Barbara Slater, Head of BBC Sport. And ahead of her is the new Director General at the BBC, George Entwistle. Last July, the new rights deal between BBC and Sky Sports was announced on Friday 29th July at 07:00. The BBC Formula 1 team were not told about the new deal until the night before. We know that, Martin Brundle specifically tweeted that himself.

As they were told the night before, we can assume that Ben Gallop (and Mark Wilkin, the editor for BBC F1) was not told until the Thursday as well as the deal was thrashed out primarily between Barbara Slater, Jeremy Darroch (the managing director of Sky Sports) and Bernie Ecclestone.

The point is, with regards the line from Humphrey above, just because there has been no discussion within the Formula 1 team, it does not mean that discussion has not taken place higher up, if they really wanted to exit the contract earlier. I’m not sure that would be in their financial interests, of course, legally binding contracts have such things called get-out clauses.

Humphrey also said that he has been “have been really impressed” with Sky’s coverage, but noted that he “still think[s that] we hold the edge”.

Scheduling: The British Grand Prix

After a fantastic European Grand Prix, it’s time for Formula 1 to head home. And that means it is time for the British Grand Prix. While Sky are pulling out the stops with Classic F1 in the run up to the race, the same cannot be said for BBC. Due to coverage of Wimbledon, both Qualifying and the Race are on BBC Two, with only the Race Build-Up on BBC One.

As announced at the end of their European Grand Prix show, there is an extra F1 Show on Thursday 5th July, with a two hour build-up to the race on Sunday. Although I have not heard anything concrete, I would expect an increased on-site presence for Silverstone from both the News and F1 team, maybe even with a studio there aside from the Sky Pad, as going on air at 11:00 would be when the Porsche Supercup cars are still on track.

On BBC, there is an extra guy in the pit-lane for Radio 5 Live, former McLaren mechanic Mark Priestley is alongside Jennie Gow. 5 Live also have race car driver Tiffany Chittenden alongside them for the weekend. Finally, don’t be surprised if the F1 Forum overruns, as it is coming live from the main stage as Silverstone, so if you’re going, you may be caught on camera! I’ve also added Inside F1, presented by Lee McKenzie, below the poll for anyone interested.

Thursday 5th July
15:00 to 15:45 – F1: Driver Press Conference (Sky Sports F1)
20:00 to 21:00 – The F1 Show (Sky Sports F1)

Friday 6th July
09:45 to 11:55 – F1: Practice 1 (Sky Sports F1)
09:55 to 11:35 – F1: Practice 1 (BBC Red Button)
11:50 to 12:30 – GP2: Practice (Sky Sports F1)
13:45 to 15:50 – F1: Practice 2 (Sky Sports F1)
13:55 to 15:35 – F1: Practice 2 (BBC Red Button)
15:55 to 16:45 – GP2: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
17:15 to 18:00 – F1: Team Press Conference (Sky Sports F1)
18:00 to 19:00 – The F1 Show (Sky Sports F1)
18:45 to 19:00 – Inside F1 (BBC News Channel)

Saturday 7th July
08:45 to 09:25 – GP3: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
09:45 to 11:10 – F1: Practice 3 (Sky Sports F1)
09:55 to 11:05 – F1: Practice 3 (BBC Red Button)
12:00 to 14:35 – F1: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
12:10 to 14:30 – F1: Qualifying (BBC Two)
14:35 to 16:00 – GP2: Race 1 (Sky Sports F1)
16:15 to 17:05 – GP3: Race 1 (Sky Sports F1)
18:45 to 19:00 – Inside F1 (BBC News Channel)

Sunday 8th July
08:25 to 09:25 – GP3: Race 2 (Sky Sports F1)
09:35 to 10:40 – GP2: Race 2 (Sky Sports F1)
11:00 to 16:15 – F1: Race (Sky Sports F1)
11:30 to 12:55 – MotoGP: Sachsenring (BBC Two)
12:10 to 12:55 – F1: Race Build-Up (BBC One)
12:55 to 15:30 – F1: Race (BBC Two)
15:30 to 16:30 – F1: Forum (BBC Red Button)
17:30 to 20:00 – IndyCars: Toronto (Sky Sports 2)
20:30 to 22:30 – FILM: Senna (Sky Sports F1)

The schedules above are now confirmed, so should not change. I’ve also added BBC’s MotoGP coverage for the Sunday as that is partly the reason why the F1 build-up is on BBC One. IndyCars and a screening of the Senna film is also above.