Radio Pacific Racing network
Radio Pacific began in Auckland in 1978, and became one of the first commercial stations to be networked across the country in the early 1990s. The network combined news, news talkback, sports talkback and live racing commentaries. Radio Pacific became a listed company on the
New Zealand Stock Exchange and the
Totalisator Agency Board became its major shareholder. Radio Pacific's Waikato station began as Radio Waikato, New Zealand's third privately owned station. It originally broadcast in 930AM in 1971, before moving 954AM in 1978. In 1986 Radio Waikato changed to a
country music format and was renamed Country Gold - Waikato 954. In 1988 it was sold to Radio Pacific and transitioned into a local talk radio format with national racing commentary. It changed its name to Radio Pacific and eventually replaced local programmes with Auckland networked programmes. A new station of the same name also operated in Hamilton between 1993 and 1994.
Other radio stations The company also owned the North Island music station group Energy Enterprises and merged with the South Island radio company
Radio Otago in 1999. Between May 2000 and January 2001 it was purchased by
CanWest Global Communications, becoming part of
RadioWorks and later part of
MediaWorks New Zealand. Part of the company was purchased in July 2004, and the entire company was sold off in June 2007. Before 2005 live races and betting odds had been broadcast on Radio Pacific in pre-determined, limited periods during the race day under a contract with the
New Zealand Racing Board. Between 2001 and 2005, this was also complemented by a trial Radio Trackside station in the Southland market dedicated to racing coverage. In 2005
MediaWorks launched new talkback network
Radio Live and moved many of Radio Pacific's talkback personalities across to the new network.
John Banks continued to host Radio Pacific's breakfast programme, and Alice Worsley and Martin Crump co-hosted a new morning talkback programme. A Trackside TV simulcast, branded as Radio Trackside, was broadcast in the afternoon. In January 2010 BSport was renamed LiveSport, the sister network to
Radio Live. It became TAB Trackside Radio on 13 April 2015, when it came under the full ownership of the New Zealand Racing Board. The full-powered broadcast licences previously broadcasting TAB Trackside Radio were purchased by the Australian
Sports Entertainment Network (SEN) in 2021, which began broadcasting a general sport format known as
SENZ, providing a continuous sports-talk format left open by the COVID-19-related closure of
NZME's
Radio Sport the previous year. However, following financial losses at the new station, a deal was reached in - also involving the TAB's then-new operating partner
Entain - for the TAB to buy back the frequencies and SENZ station assets, with SEN continuing to make content available and to source advertising revenue for the network; the sale completed on .
Television Trackside began television broadcasting in 1992 as Action TV - a free-to-air UHF station that only broadcast during live racing events. In 1993, it changed its name to Trackside. From 1994,
Sky Television began using broadcasting
Discovery Channel to subscribers when Trackside was in closedown. The station received a dedicated channel on the new Sky Digital platform in 1999, which began broadcasting 18 hours a day from 2004 and 24 hours a day from 2007. In addition to live New Zealand racing, the channel introduced racing replay, preview and review shows, and live racing and racing shows from Australia. The channel began broadcasting in widescreen from 15 December 2008. In October 2009, TAB introduced a second channel - TAB TV - to accommodate live racing from Hong Kong and Singapore. In December 2010, Trackside became available on the
Freeview terrestrial service. In October 2013 it changed the TVNZ metadata on the Freeview satellite service to unlock access to Trackside TV, keeping TAB TV as a pay-TV channel. On 14 April 2014, it ceased operations on Freeview, becoming only available to Sky subscribers. In August 2014, Trackside TV and TAB TV were relaunched as TAB Trackside 1 and TAB Trackside 2, extending racing coverage from all codes and enabling up to 5000 additional races to be broadcast each year that were previously not scheduled. Trackside own and operate several outside broadcasting vans which tour the country to provide live coverage of races. ==Programmes==