The BBC will be disappointed that it will not be showing full live TV coverage of the Commonwealth Games.
But the bigger issue is not about the fact BBC Television won’t have live coverage.
It is about the fact the games will not be shown live in full on any major free-to-air TV channel
A major sporting event on a free tv channel – such as the BBC, ITV or Channel 4 – can bring huge numbers of viewers from disparate backgrounds together.
Next year’s World Cup games involving Scotland and England are bound to attract large ratings, even late at night.
The BBC has shown wall-to-wall live coverage of every Commonwealth Games hosted in the UK since 1970.
But it has also helped to make recent games in the UK – Manchester in 2002, Glasgow in 2014 and Birmingham in 2022 – feel like special times for the host cities.
In 2014, the BBC organised a wide range of cultural events outside BBC Scotland’s Glasgow headquarters during the games.
Several network programmes were broadcast from Glasgow, not just the coverage of the Games.
These are scaled-down Commonwealth Games. Glasgow is hosting them at short notice with no public funding and the organisers will want to raise as much revenue as possible.
Despite the organisers’ attempts to drum up excitement, the event feels very different this time.
There is no talk of a lasting legacy to the city – from new buildings or major sports facilities to public health benefits.
There will still be highlights on a terrestrial TV channel and some live coverage on a major channel may still be possible.
But without the full live coverage on a channel which everyone can watch for free, will there be the same sense of wider public engagement or feeling that the Games are a special time for Glasgow and Scotland?