India
India heads list of cricket rights still to be awarded
Doordarshan will have to make do with highlights
IOC hopes to win increased TV rights fees from Asia
TV RIGHTS CLIPS 2: Cricket, rallying, motorcycling and football
TV RIGHTS CLIPS 1: Football, horseracing, boxing and tennis
TV RIGHTS CLIPS 1: Football, golf, cricket, hockey and boxing
Rights for Asian cricket go without any competition
Television rights for Asian cricket have traditionally been among the most competed-for in the world.
Forget TV fees, for now, hockey wants coverage
The revival of the India-Pakistan hockey test series after an interval of five years has attracted high television interest.
Indian cricket will lose TV millions as courts rule on bids and power
TV RIGHTS CLIPS 1: Cricket, football, rugby union and snooker
Cricket: The Board of Control for Cricket in India, after extensive legal wrangles, finally signed a deal for the Indian rights to the three tours taking place this year, a four-Test series against Australia, a two-Test series against South Africa and a one-off one-day international against Pakistan, with state broadcaster Doordarshan.
TV RIGHTS CLIPS 1: Cricket, football, swimming and rugby union
Cricket: Indian broadcaster Zee Telefilms made a $308m (£174m/ €257m) bid for the worldwide television rights to Indian cricket for four years, from October 2004 to September 2008.
India’s deal sets cricket record but can TV afford it?
The sale of Indian cricket television rights for the next four years will be the most valuable cricket deal agreed by a national cricket board
TV RIGHTS CLIPS 2: Cricket, football and German touring cars
Cricket: Indian public-service broadcaster Doordarshan agreed a deal for the terrestrial rights for select matches from International Cricket Council tournaments up until 2007, including 19 matches from the 2007 World Cup and nine from the Champions Trophy this year and in 2006
Dalmiya’s 7-day deadline
Fifa may sell World Cup TV itself
IPL gets flying start but can it keep up the rate?
Can television audiences for cricket’s new India Premier League Twenty20 competition be sustained?
TV RIGHTS CLIPS 1: Football, rugby, golf and more
The Deutscher Fussball-Bund, the German football federation, signed a five-year extension, ending 2009, to its television rights deal with German public-service broadcasters ARD and ZDF