logo
Aussie fans' telling response to brutal Channel Nine move for Andrew Johns and co.

Aussie fans' telling response to brutal Channel Nine move for Andrew Johns and co.

Yahoo7 hours ago
Channel Nine's decision to dump its post-match NRL show and feature a live English Premier League match in its place has proved a ratings bonanza. Despite criticism the NRL's chief broadcast partner was ditching the code and robbing it of valuable exposure, a decent Saturday night audience watched the Aston Villa v Newcastle EPL clash immediately after the Souths-Parramatta game at Allianz Stadium.
The EPL fixture – the second game of the 2025/26 season – pulled in 855,000 viewers nationally to be the ninth most-watched program of the day. The game performed strongly in the key age demographics, coming in fourth in the 25-54 age group and third among 16-39-year-olds.
In comparison, the previous week's post-match NRL show attracted 502,000 viewers nationally - the 26th most-watched show of the day - justifying Nine's decision to brush Phil Gould, Billy Slater, Andrew Johns and Co. for English football. Nine, which broadcasts a live NRL Saturday game across the final five rounds of the regular season, will stick with the formula for at least the next three weeks.
Following next Saturday night's Roosters-Eels clash, Nine will go straight to England for the meeting of early league leaders Manchester City and Tottenham. That match will likely torch the viewing figures from Villa v Newcastle, giving Nine another ratings win.
Nine's streaming partner Stan recently acquired the rights for the EPL and the free-to-air station is giving the competition heavy coverage. Nine Managing Director of Streaming and Broadcast, Amanda Laing, said. "We know Australians love big sporting moments and it doesn't get any bigger than two of the world's most exciting and dynamic sporting competitions on the same night. We think this is a win for sports fans."
NRL post-game show scrapped as viewers back Nine's move
And the fans certainly agree, loudly voicing their preference for live sport over post-game analysis and dressing room interviews. One posted: "Who the hell watches pre-game and post-game shows? This is great news... more people will be watching the EPL coverage than that dribble.
Another added: "NRL post-game show vs the English Premier League. That's not even a question that needs answering." NRL bosses are said to be comfortable with the arrangement, albeit disappointed it is costing the game eyeballs.
RELATED:
Payne Haas' Kangaroos dagger blow in wake of cagey post-match act
Walsh has last laugh at critics as game-changing Broncos act hailed
Second Storm star under fire over unseen act in Panthers controversy
Nine face a big decision once the NRL finals roll around next month, with a final call yet to be made as to whether it reverts to its post-match show or keep feedings fans EPL coverage. It's understood the NRL will win out, although strong EPL figures over the next three weeks may result in a re-think.
Premier League at 9:30pm on Channel 9.Absolutely incredible!Box office in prime time on mainstream TV. Magnificent @StanSportFC @wwos 📺 pic.twitter.com/UB8Mzlttjd
— Sebastian Hassett (@sebth) August 16, 2025
Nobody actually watches the post match.
— Nirgal451 🇦🇺🇺🇦 (@Nirgal451) August 17, 2025
I have upgraded to @StanSportAU but how bloody good is it having the 9:30pm PL game on the main FTA @Channel9 channel!Well done @wwos
— Mike Scolz (@skulzy87) August 16, 2025
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ben Jacobs reveals progress in Wissa's move to Newcastle
Ben Jacobs reveals progress in Wissa's move to Newcastle

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Ben Jacobs reveals progress in Wissa's move to Newcastle

Wissa on the way out: Newcastle restart negotiations with Brentford Yoane Wissa / @ British journalist Ben Jacobs has revealed the latest developments in the ongoing talks between Newcastle United and Brentford regarding the transfer of Congolese striker Yoane Wissa during this summer transfer window. At 28 years old, Wissa is eager to leave the Bees after a sensational season, racking up 20 goals and 5 assists in 35 matches. Brentford ready to let Wissa go after Dango Ouattara's arrival While the London club initially resisted his departure, the management now seems open to negotiations, especially after securing a replacement in the form of Dango Ouattara, the Burkina Faso international signed from Bournemouth. In a post published on X, Ben Jacobs confirmed that talks are set to resume soon: "Newcastle United are expected to resume talks for Yoane Wissa in the next 24 to 48 terms between Wissa and #NUFC are not an issue." Yoane Wissa sees this transfer as the perfect opportunity to take on a new challenge and experience the Champions League , a goal now within reach thanks to an ambitious club like Newcastle.

Rivals and Friends: How the World Transplant Games Connected Erik and Elmar
Rivals and Friends: How the World Transplant Games Connected Erik and Elmar

CNN

time19 minutes ago

  • CNN

Rivals and Friends: How the World Transplant Games Connected Erik and Elmar

Can one of your biggest sports rivals also be one of your biggest fans? If you ask World Transplant Games competitors Erik Van Rompaye of Belgium and Germany's Elmar Sprink, the answer is yes. The two met in 2023 at the Games – an Olympic-style event designed to raise awareness about organ donation and encourage recipients to get fit – in Perth, Australia. Van Rompaye, 54, received a liver transplant in 2021. Sprink, 53, got a new heart in 2012. Both were already accomplished endurance athletes long before their surgeries. Ahead of the Games, Van Rompaye heard that Sprink was 'the man' to beat in Perth. He was right. But in the 5K road race and sprint triathlon, Van Rompaye edged the German out for gold with Sprink taking silver and bronze, respectively. On the medal podium, they struck up a conversation and discovered they'd both competed in the prestigious IRONMAN World Championship in Hawaii, a brutal triathlon competition that sees participants complete a 2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike race and a marathon-distance run. 'Before that, I didn't know anyone who was doing so much sport after a transplant,' Van Rompaye told CNN Sports. 'Not those long distances. That was not so common at all.' Since Perth, they've kept in touch, swapping notes on training, injuries and aging. This week, they'll face each other again at the 2025 World Transplant Games in Dresden, Germany, yet both arrive in central Europe with new challenges to overcome. Nerve damage from Van Rompaye's surgery has slowed his running while a recent back injury sidelined Sprink from a half marathon. Around 2,200 participants – including organ donors and donor families – aged 4 to 89 from 51 countries will compete in events ranging from track and field to badminton, swimming, and even pétanque (a French boules sport). Sprink has competed in several endurance competitions since his transplant, including three World Transplant Games and two 691K Cape Epic mountain bike races. He says he's the first person with a heart transplant to complete the IRONMAN World Championship in Hawaii. Van Rompaye's new liver has helped him complete the European Transplant Games, two Olympic distance triathlons – 1.5K swim, a 40K bike ride, and a 10K run – and the New York City Marathon. Before their transplants, they both played soccer and ran other endurance races. Now, their goals are just as ambitious – Sprink wants to qualify for another IRONMAN World Championship, while Van Rompaye is training for the Ultra-Trail du Mont Blanc, one of the world's most prestigious trail races with a distance of roughly 106.3 miles (171km) and an elevation gain of almost 32,940 feet (10,000m). 'It's a bit of chasing dreams,' Van Rompaye said. 'Life is about adapting … It's not what happens to you, it's what you do with it afterwards.' Sprink agrees, telling CNN that he sees sports as a way to build purpose and good health: 'If you look at the side effects of the medication, you can reduce some of them with sport – healthy nutrition, managing your weight and blood pressure, working out every day,' he said. Common side effects of immunosuppressants, medications used to prevent organ rejection, include increased rates of cancer and diabetes , vomiting, and even hair thinning or loss. 'Focus on something and it makes you not think about the organ stuff so much,' he added. The World Transplant Games are built on decades of research showing that exercise improves transplant recipients' physical and mental health. Which organs have the participants had transplanted? Bone marrow/Stem cell - 144 Double Lung - 69 Heart - 169 Heart-Lung - 3 Kidney - 647 Liver - 318 Pancreas - 1 Pancreas-Kidney - 16 Pancreatic Islets Cells - 1 Single Lung - 4 Germany was chosen as this year's host country partly to address its low organ donation rates in comparison to other countries – just 11.6 deceased donors per million compared to 41.9 in the US and Spain's 48.9. The reasons for this include long wait times and cultural and policy barriers to donation. Almost all solid-organ recipients must take lifelong immunosuppressants, which can impact performance. The Games aim to level the playing field by having immunosuppressed athletes compete against one another. Dr. Patricia Painter, a retired clinical exercise physiologist who studied transplant recipients at UCSF and the University of Utah, has measured how their bodies adapt – oxygen intake, muscle growth, recovery. 'Especially when you look at the comorbidities after transplant – hypertension, weight gain, diabetes – the prevention is diet and exercise,' she told CNN Sports. 'Most people die of cardiovascular disease after transplant, not because of their transplant.' Dr. Diethard Monbaliu, an abdominal transplant surgeon in Belgium who was part of Van Rompaye's team, agrees: exercise is medicine. But for transplant athletes, he stresses moderation. Strenuous training combined with immunosuppression can raise infection and cardiovascular problems. 'Mild to moderate exercise – up to about 60% of peak oxygen uptake – actually lowers infections,' he said. 'But above that, you see the opposite.' Transplant athletes are rare; IRONMAN finishers like Van Rompaye and Sprink are rarer still. Monbaliu says more research on high performance athletes is needed, but their presence proves that elite athletes belong at the Games too. World Transplant Games President Liz Schick is a liver transplant recipient and describes herself as the type of athlete who 'meets someone (in a race) who's about to give up, sticks with them and stops them from giving up.' She says the federation has discussed tailoring events for elite competitors, but stresses the Games are also about inclusion. 'It's great to be competitive and to want to win, but we mustn't forget the others,' she told CNN Sports. For Sprink, what makes his friendship with Van Rompaye special is that it isn't dominated by transplant talk. 'In the beginning, sure, we said, 'I've got a new liver, I've got a new heart.' But after two sentences, we were on to racing plans and training problems … I love that much more because I don't want to think over and over again about organ transplantation.' Van Rompaye admits the Games sometimes make him wonder if he honors his donor enough – he has written to his donor's family, while Sprink has not yet had contact with his. Both agree that mental health and well-being are just as critical as physical recovery. 'I always tell people: after the transplant, go look after your mental health right away,' Sprink said. 'In the beginning, everyone is just happy to be alive. But a lot of people struggle in the post-transplant process.' As they prepare to race again in Dresden, the medals matter – but the friendship may matter more. For Van Rompaye and Sprink, the Games are proof that rivalry can deepen respect, and competition can build connection. If you are interested in following the Games, the opening and closing ceremonies and track & field events will live-streamed on YouTube and

Rivals and Friends: How the World Transplant Games Connected Erik and Elmar
Rivals and Friends: How the World Transplant Games Connected Erik and Elmar

CNN

time28 minutes ago

  • CNN

Rivals and Friends: How the World Transplant Games Connected Erik and Elmar

Can one of your biggest sports rivals also be one of your biggest fans? If you ask World Transplant Games competitors Erik Van Rompaye of Belgium and Germany's Elmar Sprink, the answer is yes. The two met in 2023 at the Games – an Olympic-style event designed to raise awareness about organ donation and encourage recipients to get fit – in Perth, Australia. Van Rompaye, 54, received a liver transplant in 2021. Sprink, 53, got a new heart in 2012. Both were already accomplished endurance athletes long before their surgeries. Ahead of the Games, Van Rompaye heard that Sprink was 'the man' to beat in Perth. He was right. But in the 5K road race and sprint triathlon, Van Rompaye edged the German out for gold with Sprink taking silver and bronze, respectively. On the medal podium, they struck up a conversation and discovered they'd both competed in the prestigious IRONMAN World Championship in Hawaii, a brutal triathlon competition that sees participants complete a 2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike race and a marathon-distance run. 'Before that, I didn't know anyone who was doing so much sport after a transplant,' Van Rompaye told CNN Sports. 'Not those long distances. That was not so common at all.' Since Perth, they've kept in touch, swapping notes on training, injuries and aging. This week, they'll face each other again at the 2025 World Transplant Games in Dresden, Germany, yet both arrive in central Europe with new challenges to overcome. Nerve damage from Van Rompaye's surgery has slowed his running while a recent back injury sidelined Sprink from a half marathon. Around 2,200 participants – including organ donors and donor families – aged 4 to 89 from 51 countries will compete in events ranging from track and field to badminton, swimming, and even pétanque (a French boules sport). Sprink has competed in several endurance competitions since his transplant, including three World Transplant Games and two 691K Cape Epic mountain bike races. He says he's the first person with a heart transplant to complete the IRONMAN World Championship in Hawaii. Van Rompaye's new liver has helped him complete the European Transplant Games, two Olympic distance triathlons – 1.5K swim, a 40K bike ride, and a 10K run – and the New York City Marathon. Before their transplants, they both played soccer and ran other endurance races. Now, their goals are just as ambitious – Sprink wants to qualify for another IRONMAN World Championship, while Van Rompaye is training for the Ultra-Trail du Mont Blanc, one of the world's most prestigious trail races with a distance of roughly 106.3 miles (171km) and an elevation gain of almost 32,940 feet (10,000m). 'It's a bit of chasing dreams,' Van Rompaye said. 'Life is about adapting … It's not what happens to you, it's what you do with it afterwards.' Sprink agrees, telling CNN that he sees sports as a way to build purpose and good health: 'If you look at the side effects of the medication, you can reduce some of them with sport – healthy nutrition, managing your weight and blood pressure, working out every day,' he said. Common side effects of immunosuppressants, medications used to prevent organ rejection, include increased rates of cancer and diabetes , vomiting, and even hair thinning or loss. 'Focus on something and it makes you not think about the organ stuff so much,' he added. The World Transplant Games are built on decades of research showing that exercise improves transplant recipients' physical and mental health. Which organs have the participants had transplanted? Bone marrow/Stem cell - 144 Double Lung - 69 Heart - 169 Heart-Lung - 3 Kidney - 647 Liver - 318 Pancreas - 1 Pancreas-Kidney - 16 Pancreatic Islets Cells - 1 Single Lung - 4 Germany was chosen as this year's host country partly to address its low organ donation rates in comparison to other countries – just 11.6 deceased donors per million compared to 41.9 in the US and Spain's 48.9. The reasons for this include long wait times and cultural and policy barriers to donation. Almost all solid-organ recipients must take lifelong immunosuppressants, which can impact performance. The Games aim to level the playing field by having immunosuppressed athletes compete against one another. Dr. Patricia Painter, a retired clinical exercise physiologist who studied transplant recipients at UCSF and the University of Utah, has measured how their bodies adapt – oxygen intake, muscle growth, recovery. 'Especially when you look at the comorbidities after transplant – hypertension, weight gain, diabetes – the prevention is diet and exercise,' she told CNN Sports. 'Most people die of cardiovascular disease after transplant, not because of their transplant.' Dr. Diethard Monbaliu, an abdominal transplant surgeon in Belgium who was part of Van Rompaye's team, agrees: exercise is medicine. But for transplant athletes, he stresses moderation. Strenuous training combined with immunosuppression can raise infection and cardiovascular problems. 'Mild to moderate exercise – up to about 60% of peak oxygen uptake – actually lowers infections,' he said. 'But above that, you see the opposite.' Transplant athletes are rare; IRONMAN finishers like Van Rompaye and Sprink are rarer still. Monbaliu says more research on high performance athletes is needed, but their presence proves that elite athletes belong at the Games too. World Transplant Games President Liz Schick is a liver transplant recipient and describes herself as the type of athlete who 'meets someone (in a race) who's about to give up, sticks with them and stops them from giving up.' She says the federation has discussed tailoring events for elite competitors, but stresses the Games are also about inclusion. 'It's great to be competitive and to want to win, but we mustn't forget the others,' she told CNN Sports. For Sprink, what makes his friendship with Van Rompaye special is that it isn't dominated by transplant talk. 'In the beginning, sure, we said, 'I've got a new liver, I've got a new heart.' But after two sentences, we were on to racing plans and training problems … I love that much more because I don't want to think over and over again about organ transplantation.' Van Rompaye admits the Games sometimes make him wonder if he honors his donor enough – he has written to his donor's family, while Sprink has not yet had contact with his. Both agree that mental health and well-being are just as critical as physical recovery. 'I always tell people: after the transplant, go look after your mental health right away,' Sprink said. 'In the beginning, everyone is just happy to be alive. But a lot of people struggle in the post-transplant process.' As they prepare to race again in Dresden, the medals matter – but the friendship may matter more. For Van Rompaye and Sprink, the Games are proof that rivalry can deepen respect, and competition can build connection. If you are interested in following the Games, the opening and closing ceremonies and track & field events will live-streamed on YouTube and

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store