Black Caps' Zimbabwe tour to be streamed by ThreeNow
Photo:
Kerry Marshall/www.photosport.nz
The Black Caps' tour of Zimbabwe will be broadcast live and free for New Zealand cricket fans after ThreeNow secured the rights for the T20I tri-series as well as two test matches.
ThreeNow first temporarily held streaming rights for Black Caps games in 2023 for two tests against Bangladesh.
The upcoming T20I tri-series between
New Zealand
, South Africa and Zimbabwe starts on 14 July, with each team playing four matches over a two-week period. The top two teams will then compete in the final on 26 July. Games will be late for New Zealand viewers, with start times at 11pm.
The test series, which marks the first test between the Black Caps and Zimbabwe since 2016, starts at 8pm each night.
New Zealand cricket television and streaming rights have shifted between providers in the last five years.
Last year Sky locked in a five-year deal to be the New Zealand broadcaster for all ICC men's and women's events through to the end of 2028, including World Cups and the Test Championship.
Spark Sport secured the rights to cricket in New Zealand in April 2020, but this closed in 2023. TVNZ took over the coverage from Spark, and that deal runs out at the end of the 2025/26 season.
From next season (2026/27)
Sky will begin a six-year deal
with the Black Caps and White Ferns home internationals returning to the pay-TV provider for the first time since 2020.
Free-to-access arrangements for the domestic Super Smash competition are yet to be announced.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter
curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
an hour ago
- Otago Daily Times
Henry delivers as Black Caps triumph
Matt Henry says no. South Africa needed seven off the last over to win the final of the Zimbabwean Tri-Series in Harare. Dewald Brevis was at the wicket and striking it nicely. But experienced Black Caps right-armer Henry sealed the win with a gutsy final over. Instead of going to the yorker to dot-up his opponent, he went for a hard length and the right-hander holed out dramatically. George Linde was brilliantly caught from the penultimate ball as well to help seal a three-run win. The Black Caps posted 180 for five. South Africa were costing but got the wobbles and were restricted to 177 for six. But with just seven runs needed from the final over, and six wickets in hand, South Africa had the whip hand. But turns out Henry had the reins. He was named player of the match for his two for 19 from three overs. Adam Milne (one for 27 from four) proved hard to get away, while New Zealand's top three all made valuable runs. Tim Seifert's innings (28 off 30) was cut off by a quality catch by the captain Rassie van der Dussen at extra cover. Left-arm spinner Senuran Muthusamy had hung the ball out wide and Seifert had to reach for it. But van der Dussen had to reach further. He dived high to his right and intercepted it. Still, Seifert and Devon Conway had put on 75 for the first wicket and the Black Caps had a very solid platform. Conway pushed on to post 47 from 31 balls and Rachin Ravindra slapped 47 from 27. But the Black Caps' innings fell away at the back end. They were not able to push on and bury the game. That left the door ajar for the Proteas and they were cruising at 92 without loss. Did someone say choke? That might be a bit harsh, but the momentum changed when the Black Caps broke the opening stand between Lhuan-dre Pretorius (51 off 35) and Reeza Hendricks (37 off 31). Pretorius was creating memories for the highlight reel on his way to his maiden T20 international half-century, while Hendricks was either blocking the ball or bashing it. When he bashed it, the ball went for six. Michael Bracewell got the important breakthrough. He lured Pretorius out of his crease and Seifert effected the stumping. Hendricks pulled the ball to Conway at deep backward square. Brevis clouted 31 from 16. He smashed three sixes — one of them was a one-handed effort. He was inches away from swatting a fourth, but Bracewell showed great balance and some juggling skills at deep mid-wicket to take the catch right on the rope in a tense last over. The match was still there for the taking, but Daryl Mitchell made a stunning diving catch to dismiss Linde. And Henry closed the game with a dot ball to complete a tremendous over that proved the difference. New Zealand was unbeaten during the series which also involved the home team Zimbabwe. The Black Caps are set to play two tests against Zimbabwe, the first beginning on Wednesday. NEW ZEALAND T Seifert c van der Dussen b Muthusamy 30 (28) D Conway c Burger b Ngidi 47 (31) R Ravindra c Brevis b Burger 47 (27) M Chapman c Hermann b Ngidi 3 (6) D Mitchell not out 16 (14) M Bracewell c Linde b Maphaka 15 (12) M Santner not out 3 (2) Extras (lb 6, w 13)19 Total (for 5wkts, 20 overs)180 Fall: 1-75, 2-101, 3-127, 4-152, 5-174. Bowling: L Ngidi 4-0-24-2 (1w), N Burger 4-0-41-1 (3w) K Maphaka 4-0-35-1 (3w), G Linde 1-0-9-0, S Muthusamy 3-0-27-1, C Bosch 4-0-38-0 (1w). SOUTH AFRICA L Pretorius st Seifert b Bracewell 51 (35) R Hendricks c Conway b Foulkes 37 (31) H van der Dussen c Mitchell b Milne 18 (17) R Hermann c Mitchell b Duffy 11 (8) D Brevis c Bracewell b Henry 31 (16) G Linde c Mitchell b Henry 10 (10) C Bosch not out 3 (2) S Muthusamy not out 0 (1) Extras (lb 1, w 15)16 Total (for 6wkts, 20 overs)177 Bowling: M Henry 3-0-19-2, J Duffy 4-0-36-1 (2w), Z Foulkes 3-0-36-1 (3w), A Milne 4-0-27-1, M Santner 3-0-29-0 (1w), M Bracewell 3-0-29-1 (1w). Result: New Zealand won by three runs.

RNZ News
9 hours ago
- RNZ News
Kiwi Erika Fairweather disqualified from world 400m freestyle title defence
Erika Fairweather narrowly missed bronze at the Paris Olympics. Photo: Photosport Reigning world champion Erica Fairweather has seen her 400m freestyle title defence derailed, when she was disqualified for breaking after her heat in Singapore. The Kiwi swimmer clocked 4m 03.39s, finishing fourth in the third heat, which would have seen her safely through to the final, but she had her performance scrubbed out for allegedly flinching on the starting block before the gun. Her time would have been the sixth fastest in qualifying. Disqualifications in swimming are rare. Fairweather, 21, captured the title at Doha last year in 3m 59.44s, as superstars Ariarne Titmus (Australia), Katie Ledecky (USA) and Summer McIntosh (Canada). She would later finish fourth behind that trio at the Paris Olympics, just 0.26s behind Ledecky for bronze. Ledecky and McIntosh will contest the title , but Olympic champion Titmus has bypassed the meet, while fifth-ranked American Claire Weinstein has also withdrawn from the event. Fairweather is also entered for the 200m freestyle, where she won silver last year, with heats scheduled for Tuesday. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
15 hours ago
- RNZ News
ANZ Premiership grand final live updates: Northern Mystics v Mainland Tactix
Northern Mystics celebrate a halftime lead against Central Pulse. Photo: Marty Melville / Photosport It's grand final time in this year's ANZ Premiership - can the all-conquering Northern Mystics make it three titles in a row? Play starts at 4pm. Follow all the action with RNZ's live blog: