http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/7306123.stm The BBC has secured the television rights to show Formula One in the UK from the 2009 season. The five-year deal for an undisclosed fee marks F1's return to BBC screens 12 years after it switched to ITV. The contract covers all platforms and will see F1 broadcast on the BBC Sport website, as well as on TV and radio. F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone said he was "delighted", adding: "The BBC has some innovative ideas to consolidate and expand our UK fan base." Among the new developments will be live video coverage of F1 on the BBC Sport website. Asked why he had decided to split with ITV, Ecclestone told BBC Radio 5 Live: "It's not that we are unhappy with ITV but I think maybe they will have their hands full with other things and maybe the BBC can service us a bit better. "I think it will be good, a fresh face. I'm not complaining about ITV, I'm not saying they did a bad job or anything like that. "But with all the other things they are loaded up with - and who knows they will get some more stuff - maybe it will be a bit more difficult to spend as much time on us. "I think the BBC will do that." Dominic Coles, BBC Sport director of sport rights, said: "The biggest motorsporting event in the world is returning home after 12 years. "We were delighted when Bernie Ecclestone approached us about the return of F1 to the BBC. F1 is a crown jewel of sports broadcasting, so to bring the rights back to their traditional home from 2009 is tremendously exciting. "Fans will be able to enjoy uninterrupted, state of the art and innovative coverage from BBC Sport, across all of our TV, radio and new media platforms, for the first time since 1996." ITV, which was in the third year of a five-year deal, released a statement saying it had "decided to exit F1 at the end of this season". It added that it was a "straightforward commercial decision". BBC director of sport Roger Mosey said: "Our understanding is that F1 did have a termination right at the end of the 2008 season, and that appears to be what has happened, and we're absolutely delighted F1 will be back on the BBC this time next year." Murray Walker, former F1 commentator for both the BBC and ITV, said: "I'm absolutely flabbergasted - I was lying in bed listening to the news this morning and I almost fell out of bed when I heard it. "It's an amazing development because I think ITV did and do a superb job, and I think there is more to this than meets the eye." BBC sports news correspondent Adam Parsons said: "ITV are saying it was a straightforward commercial decision. A lot of people I have spoken to today have queried that. "Within ITV, what they are saying is that even though Lewis Hamilton is great, even though the Brazilian Grand Prix [at the end of last year] got a huge viewing figures, that actually over the course of a year viewing figures are not that impressive, they're not that great. "A lot of races are happening at night, they're not happening at peak time. That it is not particularly good value for money. "The other side of that is the BBC is saying, Lewis Hamilton and the ripple effect of that is wonderful, millions of people tune in and the Brazilian GP was the most-watched sports event of last year. "You might say ITV would rather bad-mouth it because they've just lost the rights but on the one hand they're saying straightforward commercial decision. "But on the other plenty of people are saying that having spent a decade broadcasting when a German, a Finn and a Spaniard were winning world titles, it seems a bit curious [for ITV] to pull out when a Brit is on the verge of winning it."
British network ITV says it decided to end its Formula One broadcasting deal at the end of this season for commercial reasons. The BBC announced on Thursday it has regained the rights to Formula One in a five-year deal starting in 2009. The agreement was seen as a coup for the public broadcaster, with Briton Lewis Hamilton leading the championship so far this year. ITV, who recently announced it would broadcast F1 practice live on their website, has broadcast the sport in Britain since the start of the 1997 season. The BBC said its deal included radio, television and online coverage. ITV said in a statement on Thursday that it was its decision not to continue with their deal. "ITV plc today confirmed that it has decided to exit Formula One at the end of this season," said ITV in a statement. "This was a straightforward commercial decision for ITV and we are pleased that Formula One will continue to be broadcast free-to-air. "ITV will continue to broadcast live coverage of every race this season as Lewis Hamilton attempts to win his first world championship."