$10 billion TV deal for EPL
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$10 billion TV deal for EPL
$10 billion dollar deal for EPL,under the terms of the new agreement, the two companies will hold all the rights to live Premier League football for three seasons - starting from 2016-2017.
Sky has won the rights to five of the seven packages available, giving it access to 126 matches, which includes the introduction of live Friday evening football.
That is for UK rights only.
Sky has won the rights to five of the seven packages available, giving it access to 126 matches, which includes the introduction of live Friday evening football.
That is for UK rights only.
Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
So who will you be supporting in this period?
How ironic is my avatar?
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
chablisCloister wrote:So who will you be supporting in this period?
"I've missed more than 9000 shots in my career. I've lost almost 300 games. 26 times I've been trusted to take the game winning shot and missed. I've failed over and over and over again in my life. That's why I succeed." -Michael Jordan
Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Sky Plc and BT Group Plc agreed to pay a record 5.14 billion pounds ($US7.84 billion) for the U.K. rights to broadcast live English Premier League soccer, an increase of about 70 per cent for what is already one of sport's richest championships.
Sky will show 126 games each season starting in 2016, with BT getting 42 matches. The auction total compares to the 3 billion pounds paid for the previous three-year package and at least some of the increased costs will be passed on ultimately to British viewers, who already pay some of the highest prices to watch soccer.
The rivalry for sports rights has intensified -- and the price paid rocketed -- as live games have become a proven way to attract large numbers of subscribers and lucrative advertising deals. Sky, 39 per cent owned by Rupert Murdoch's 21st Century Fox Inc., has used the lure of Premier League with teams including Chelsea, Manchester United and Arsenal to become Britain's biggest pay-TV provider. The broadcaster was thought to be facing more competition this time after Discovery Communications Inc. expressed an interest.
"They have preserved the status quo by maintaining their market position, but it's a hefty cost because it was above market consensus," Erhan Gurses, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, said by phone from London.
The Premier League is broadcast in 212 territories worldwide and it claims an audience of 4.7 billion, making it the most-watched soccer league. Sky said it's paying 1.39 billion pounds a year for the rights, while BT said it's paying 320 million pounds a season.
The sale of 168 games a season over three years was divided into seven packages, with no buyer allowed more than 126 matches. BT Group Plc, which surprised competitors in 2012 by winning a quarter of the rights in that year's auction, will keep a similar share this time around.
Sky said the price is 330 million pounds more per year than analysts had forecast and that it will try to minimize passing on the higher costs to consumers by making cost savings through efficiency plans.
Sky will show 126 games each season starting in 2016, with BT getting 42 matches. The auction total compares to the 3 billion pounds paid for the previous three-year package and at least some of the increased costs will be passed on ultimately to British viewers, who already pay some of the highest prices to watch soccer.
The rivalry for sports rights has intensified -- and the price paid rocketed -- as live games have become a proven way to attract large numbers of subscribers and lucrative advertising deals. Sky, 39 per cent owned by Rupert Murdoch's 21st Century Fox Inc., has used the lure of Premier League with teams including Chelsea, Manchester United and Arsenal to become Britain's biggest pay-TV provider. The broadcaster was thought to be facing more competition this time after Discovery Communications Inc. expressed an interest.
"They have preserved the status quo by maintaining their market position, but it's a hefty cost because it was above market consensus," Erhan Gurses, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, said by phone from London.
The Premier League is broadcast in 212 territories worldwide and it claims an audience of 4.7 billion, making it the most-watched soccer league. Sky said it's paying 1.39 billion pounds a year for the rights, while BT said it's paying 320 million pounds a season.
The sale of 168 games a season over three years was divided into seven packages, with no buyer allowed more than 126 matches. BT Group Plc, which surprised competitors in 2012 by winning a quarter of the rights in that year's auction, will keep a similar share this time around.
Sky said the price is 330 million pounds more per year than analysts had forecast and that it will try to minimize passing on the higher costs to consumers by making cost savings through efficiency plans.
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Will this deal see a shift back in power towards the big EPL sides who will no doubt splash the cash on big name signings?
Sadly not enough will be fed through the English football pyramid or to grass roots football.
Sadly not enough will be fed through the English football pyramid or to grass roots football.
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Only 2 million pounds for winning the FA Cup yet the relegated sides get a 99 million pounds parachute payment.
Seems a little bit unfair to me, isn't WINNING supposed to be what it's all about? :?
Seems a little bit unfair to me, isn't WINNING supposed to be what it's all about? :?
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FOOTBALL IS LIFE
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Only the top 4-5 teams will be able to attract the top players. Champions League Football will still count for a lot - you wont be seeing a top quality player going to a team who have no chance of CL qualification. Bad news for the English National team - no way will youngsters get a go now
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Premier League TV deal is "killing" lower league clubs, warns Accrington Stanley chief
22:30, 14 February 2015 By Richard Edwards
The chairman of League Two side made famous by milk marketing board advert in 1980s believes lower league clubs are being milked themselves
Decisions: Sky Sports remained in control of the top-flight
Jordan Ibe looks to have the brightest of futures on the Mersey – but the production line that once developed the English talent of the future could soon run dry.
Premier League stars are already rubbing their hands at the prospect of taking their slice of the 70 per cent hike in the £5.1billion TV bounty announced last week.
But for clubs like Wycombe – whose now defunct academy developed Ibe’s precocious talents – and fellow League Two side Accrington Stanley, the talk is of budgets not billions.
Ibe left Adams Park for Liverpool in a deal worth £500,000 in December 2011.
But Stanley chairman Peter Marsden warns that the days of lower league clubs receiving those kind of funds from the mega-rich elite could be at an end.
Peter Marsden of Accrington Stanley Accrington Stanley, who are they? Peter Marsden fears for future of lower league clubs
“This new TV deal is killing the game, it’s killing clubs like us,” he tells Sunday Mirror Sport.
“It’s just concentrating more money in the hands of a few individuals. The rich are getting richer, the poor are getting poorer and no one seems to care.
“From our club, years ago, if you got a really good young player you could sell them on to a Premier League club. Now you’re lucky if you can sell a player to a club in League One. Those happy days when you thought you could sell someone for £1m or £2m are over.”
Like Wycombe, Yeovil Town and Crawley of League One have also shut their academies as financial reality bites.
And while the Premier League toasts its new £5.1bn deal with BT and Sky, there are precious few glasses being raised to the future in the bottom two tiers of the Football League.
In the January transfer window, only two players – Matt Grimes and Dele Alli – were snapped up by Premier League clubs from League One and League Two.
Grimes arrived at Swansea from Exeter, while Spurs-bound Alli was at MK Dons. With those kind of numbers, it’s little wonder that Marsden sees more and more Football League academies closing down.
“We have a discussion every year and it’s always a knife-edge decision for us to keep it open,” says Marsden. “You’re almost keeping your academies open as an altruistic thing to do rather than a way of generating money. More and more clubs will close their academies I’ve no doubt about that.”
Yeovil chairman John Fry, meanwhile, thinks that the success and size of the Premier League is merely papering over the huge cracks that are emerging lower down.
“It’s good to have a league that’s big and the best in the world,” he says.“But when you look at the rest of it you really have to wonder if the lower league is going to survive.
“I don’t know whether it will happen before the next TV deal is negotiated but there will a lot of clubs naturally falling down the line. There are a lot of clubs in the departure lounge.”
22:30, 14 February 2015 By Richard Edwards
The chairman of League Two side made famous by milk marketing board advert in 1980s believes lower league clubs are being milked themselves
Decisions: Sky Sports remained in control of the top-flight
Jordan Ibe looks to have the brightest of futures on the Mersey – but the production line that once developed the English talent of the future could soon run dry.
Premier League stars are already rubbing their hands at the prospect of taking their slice of the 70 per cent hike in the £5.1billion TV bounty announced last week.
But for clubs like Wycombe – whose now defunct academy developed Ibe’s precocious talents – and fellow League Two side Accrington Stanley, the talk is of budgets not billions.
Ibe left Adams Park for Liverpool in a deal worth £500,000 in December 2011.
But Stanley chairman Peter Marsden warns that the days of lower league clubs receiving those kind of funds from the mega-rich elite could be at an end.
Peter Marsden of Accrington Stanley Accrington Stanley, who are they? Peter Marsden fears for future of lower league clubs
“This new TV deal is killing the game, it’s killing clubs like us,” he tells Sunday Mirror Sport.
“It’s just concentrating more money in the hands of a few individuals. The rich are getting richer, the poor are getting poorer and no one seems to care.
“From our club, years ago, if you got a really good young player you could sell them on to a Premier League club. Now you’re lucky if you can sell a player to a club in League One. Those happy days when you thought you could sell someone for £1m or £2m are over.”
Like Wycombe, Yeovil Town and Crawley of League One have also shut their academies as financial reality bites.
And while the Premier League toasts its new £5.1bn deal with BT and Sky, there are precious few glasses being raised to the future in the bottom two tiers of the Football League.
In the January transfer window, only two players – Matt Grimes and Dele Alli – were snapped up by Premier League clubs from League One and League Two.
Grimes arrived at Swansea from Exeter, while Spurs-bound Alli was at MK Dons. With those kind of numbers, it’s little wonder that Marsden sees more and more Football League academies closing down.
“We have a discussion every year and it’s always a knife-edge decision for us to keep it open,” says Marsden. “You’re almost keeping your academies open as an altruistic thing to do rather than a way of generating money. More and more clubs will close their academies I’ve no doubt about that.”
Yeovil chairman John Fry, meanwhile, thinks that the success and size of the Premier League is merely papering over the huge cracks that are emerging lower down.
“It’s good to have a league that’s big and the best in the world,” he says.“But when you look at the rest of it you really have to wonder if the lower league is going to survive.
“I don’t know whether it will happen before the next TV deal is negotiated but there will a lot of clubs naturally falling down the line. There are a lot of clubs in the departure lounge.”
The older I get the better I was.
FOOTBALL IS LIFE
The Rest Is Just Details
FOOTBALL IS LIFE
The Rest Is Just Details
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Spot on about young English talent,Napoli wrote:Only the top 4-5 teams will be able to attract the top players. Champions League Football will still count for a lot - you wont be seeing a top quality player going to a team who have no chance of CL qualification. Bad news for the English National team - no way will youngsters get a go now
Sadly precious little of the money will flow through to the lower divisions in England.
Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Hmm. Yeah. Butland, Gibbs, Kane, Barkley, Sterling, and so on will struggle??ozzie owl wrote:Spot on about young English talent,Napoli wrote:Only the top 4-5 teams will be able to attract the top players. Champions League Football will still count for a lot - you wont be seeing a top quality player going to a team who have no chance of CL qualification. Bad news for the English National team - no way will youngsters get a go now
Sadly precious little of the money will flow through to the lower divisions in England.
If your good enough. You will succeed.
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Lets wait and see.Chaos wrote:Hmm. Yeah. Butland, Gibbs, Kane, Barkley, Sterling, and so on will struggle??ozzie owl wrote:Spot on about young English talent,Napoli wrote:Only the top 4-5 teams will be able to attract the top players. Champions League Football will still count for a lot - you wont be seeing a top quality player going to a team who have no chance of CL qualification. Bad news for the English National team - no way will youngsters get a go now
Sadly precious little of the money will flow through to the lower divisions in England.
If your good enough. You will succeed.
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Clubs have learnt that relying only on 'buying in' turns their wage bill into a disproportionate burden on their turnover, up to 90% in some cases. Academies may very well only get stronger, Saints have shown a lot of money can be made if run right.ozzie owl wrote:Spot on about young English talent,Napoli wrote:Only the top 4-5 teams will be able to attract the top players. Champions League Football will still count for a lot - you wont be seeing a top quality player going to a team who have no chance of CL qualification. Bad news for the English National team - no way will youngsters get a go now
Sadly precious little of the money will flow through to the lower divisions in England.
300 million a year will flow to div. 2 via the 3 relegated clubs alone.
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
N5 1BH wrote:Clubs have learnt that relying only on 'buying in' turns their wage bill into a disproportionate burden on their turnover, up to 90% in some cases. Academies may very well only get stronger, Saints have shown a lot of money can be made if run right.ozzie owl wrote:Spot on about young English talent,Napoli wrote:Only the top 4-5 teams will be able to attract the top players. Champions League Football will still count for a lot - you wont be seeing a top quality player going to a team who have no chance of CL qualification. Bad news for the English National team - no way will youngsters get a go now
Sadly precious little of the money will flow through to the lower divisions in England.
300 million a year will flow to div. 2 via the 3 relegated clubs alone.
More than likely very little of the "parachute" money will flow anywhere but into the relegated club's balance books, similar to what has happene3d at Blackpool.
Most of their money was re-directed into the owners various entities to pay off debts and hold money for future projects.
The older I get the better I was.
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
ozzie owl wrote:Las Liga boss believes that the new deal will be bad for La Liga as EPL sides will have the finances to buy the best from Spain.
sadly it's modern fans like yourself that are to blame
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
Modern thanks for making me youngerGod is an Englishman wrote:ozzie owl wrote:Las Liga boss believes that the new deal will be bad for La Liga as EPL sides will have the finances to buy the best from Spain.
sadly it's modern fans like yourself that are to blame
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
ozzie owl wrote:Modern thanks for making me youngerGod is an Englishman wrote:ozzie owl wrote:Las Liga boss believes that the new deal will be bad for La Liga as EPL sides will have the finances to buy the best from Spain.
sadly it's modern fans like yourself that are to blame
you don't have to be young to be a "modern" fan. I know a few as old as you that are modern fans. It's an attitude more than an age thing.
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
ozzie owl wrote:Only one team Sheff Wed , hopefully we can return to the EPL in this period.Cloister wrote:So who will you be supporting in this period?
Given up on Adelaide United and comets then?
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
ozzie owl wrote:Watched a football show on Foxtel had piece saying it will have wide implications even across Europe.
Was the show called 'The bleedin' obvious'
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
If I was Chairman of Sky I'd ask for a refund for the Burnley v Tottenham game. Ninety minutes of my life wasted on complete dross.
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
both defences were woeful as well CyrilNice One Cyril wrote:If I was Chairman of Sky I'd ask for a refund for the Burnley v Tottenham game. Ninety minutes of my life wasted on complete dross.
Suldudo biggest flop in the EPL back to back
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Re: $10 billion TV deal for EPL
It wasn't the defences, it was every bloke on the pitch, I'm hoping for a better standard at Salisbury v Hills this arvo!haywood djablowme wrote:both defences were woeful as well CyrilNice One Cyril wrote:If I was Chairman of Sky I'd ask for a refund for the Burnley v Tottenham game. Ninety minutes of my life wasted on complete dross.
Suldudo biggest flop in the EPL back to back
Soldado wasn't playing btw.
"The game is about glory, doing things in style and with a flourish, going out and beating the other lot, not waiting for them to die of boredom."Victor Meldrew wrote:A decent govt..... like uk.
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