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2023-2028 next tv deal discussion

Colk

First Grade
Messages
6,338
There’s a few things
1. we have to get a 5 city metro reach
2. we have to get rid of Vlandys and Abdo, they’ve proven they are not up to the job
3. we have to stop giving favours to fox and. Ine and have faith in our products value
4. we have to change the public perception of nrl as a working class boguns game
5. we have to change the arlc constitution and remove the clubs and states representations from it so it is truly independent

until we do that we won’t get close to them.

I would say that the second and third point would need to be the first points undertaken. I also think the last point would need to done as well before going to the five metro reach
 
Messages
12,420
There’s a few things
1. we have to get a 5 city metro reach
2. we have to get rid of Vlandys and Abdo, they’ve proven they are not up to the job
3. we have to stop giving favours to fox and. Ine and have faith in our products value
4. we have to change the public perception of nrl as a working class boguns game
5. we have to change the arlc constitution and remove the clubs and states representations from it so it is truly independent

until we do that we won’t get close to them.
We're so far behind AwFuL it's impossible for us to ever challenge them as the country's main winter sport. The NSWRL and News Ltd made that a reality when they placed the best interests of small Sydney clubs ahead of growing a national profile.

AwFuL have fielded teams in Sydney and Brisbane for 40 and 35 years. We haven't had teams in Adelaide and Perth for 25 and 24 years. The Storm have proven it is possible to have a share of the market in the southern states, but it takes time.

If we get the Pirates in by 2028 then AwFuL will have had Perth all to itself for three decades.

That's how much damage the NSWRL and Sydney clubs have inflicted on our game. Irreversible damage that has condemned us to second-tier status.
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
65,420
We're so far behind AwFuL it's impossible for us to ever challenge them as the country's main winter sport. The NSWRL and News Ltd made that a reality when they placed the best interests of small Sydney clubs ahead of growing a national profile.

AwFuL have fielded teams in Sydney and Brisbane for 40 and 35 years. We haven't had teams in Adelaide and Perth for 25 and 24 years. The Storm have proven it is possible to have a share of the market in the southern states, but it takes time.

If we get the Pirates in by 2028 then AwFuL will have had Perth all to itself for three decades.

That's how much damage the NSWRL and Sydney clubs have inflicted on our game. Irreversible damage that has condemned us to second-tier status.
Never say never! Sure we are setting off from 3 miles back but still we know our product is better. We just need to brand it better and get the masses outside of two states to see it.
 
Messages
12,420
Never say never! Sure we are setting off from 3 miles back but still we know our product is better. We just need to brand it better and get the masses outside of two states to see it.
Being a better product doesn’t guarantee success. McDonald's is an awful product but is marketed just like AwFuL. The results speak for themselves.
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
65,420
Being a better product doesn’t guarantee success. McDonald's is an awful product but is marketed just like AwFuL. The results speak for themselves.
Thats my point. If you've got a good product and good marketing and hype then bingo! Of course you also need to actually be selling that product to everyone, not just one side of the country! We've been fighting this fight with one hand behind our back (of our own doing) since 1997, now Vlandys has tied both our hands behind our back so I expect we will get a good beating over the next 3-4 years. But then we can hopefully break the cuffs and come out swinging. I'm ever the optimist lol
 

Frank Burge

Juniors
Messages
203
With all these racial issues afl may implode rugby style and we will be the last ones standing. The problems run deep and you have to think it will do some damage to the game apparently they had a middle aged white man doing the welcome to country on Saturday
 
Messages
12,420
Thats my point. If you've got a good product and good marketing and hype then bingo! Of course you also need to actually be selling that product to everyone, not just one side of the country! We've been fighting this fight with one hand behind our back (of our own doing) since 1997, now Vlandys has tied both our hands behind our back so I expect we will get a good beating over the next 3-4 years. But then we can hopefully break the cuffs and come out swinging. I'm ever the optimist lol
I don't have any hope. In 2027 the 17 NRL clubs and RLPA will continue to demand the game reserve most of its funding for them. None of the clubs will want to split the pie with an 18th club.

QRL and NSWRL will still fight over what's left.

Test football will be viewed as a nuisance by the clubs. The media will still fuss over Sydney.

The GF will still be based in Sydney.

Non-Sydney clubs will continue to be shafted by corrupt NRL officials who want an all-Sydney GF every year.

Cronulla will still be a basketcase holding back RL in Southern Sydney. They will continue to control a valuable licence that would be better served in Adelaide and Perth, but nothing will be done about it "cuz tradition".
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
65,420
I don't have any hope. In 2027 the 17 NRL clubs and RLPA will continue to demand the game reserve most of its funding for them. None of the clubs will want to split the pie with an 18th club.

QRL and NSWRL will still fight over what's left.

Test football will be viewed as a nuisance by the clubs. The media will still fuss over Sydney.

The GF will still be based in Sydney.

Non-Sydney clubs will continue to be shafted by corrupt NRL officials who want an all-Sydney GF every year.

Cronulla will still be a basketcase holding back RL in Southern Sydney. They will continue to control a valuable licence that would be better served in Adelaide and Perth, but nothing will be done about it "cuz tradition".
Vlandys managed to pull the wool over their eyes when he told them dolphins would bring in $20mill a year from fox. Clubs maybe arent as bright as we think!
 
Messages
13,797
The following was published today by the Sydney Morning Herald (source: https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/nr...games-under-new-proposal-20220926-p5bl74.html) -

NRL set to scrap early Friday night games under new proposal​

Adam Pengilly

ByAdam Pengilly

September 27, 2022 — 8.30am

The NRL is set to reduce the amount of Friday night double-headers in next year’s schedule and add a third Sunday game in the latest overhaul of the competition structure.

After years of clubs struggling to draw crowds to the Friday 6pm kick-off, the NRL is in the advanced stages of working on a draw which will remove the timeslot from several rounds in a 17-team competition.

According to sources familiar with the situation, the NRL has discussed a proposal which will scrap the early Friday kick-off in rounds directly following each State of Origin match and replace it with a Sunday night fixture.
It will allow the NRL to have up to three matches on Sundays, with the last fixture proving a ratings hit on Fox League when it was used for the first five weeks this season.

While the NRL won’t completely abolish the first of two Friday night games, executives have discussed Sunday night being a more fan-friendly window, particularly for matches played in Sydney and Brisbane when fans struggle to get to venues at the end of the working week.

The change will also help alleviate concerns from the Rugby League Players Association, which has lobbied for all NSW and Queensland players to have a mandatory stand-down period after Origin matches.

All three interstate fixtures will return to Wednesday nights in 2023 under the new television rights deal with Nine Entertainment Co, the publisher of this masthead.

The issue of representative players potentially missing club games straight after Origin matches is set to be finalised during ongoing talks between the players’ union, clubs and the NRL over a collective bargaining agreement, which has dragged on into grand final week.

But the switch of a Friday night game to Sunday night will mean players from at least two teams will have an extra 48 hours to recover from the gruelling Origin contests.

Foxtel has had exclusive rights to the early Friday night kick-off and often captures a market which will stay with the subscription provider for the second match, which is also broadcast by Nine on its free-to-air platform.

The NRL is planning for next year’s 27-round season to start on March 2, a week earlier than usual, in a radical change first revealed by the Herald.

The longest NRL season in history will also include each club being allocated three byes across the course of the campaign, with a concentration of those around the Origin period.

The NRL has still not given up hope of starting the competition proper in the United States in a match which would feature Manly, but is running out of time to organise the logistics and tap into the growing and lucrative American sports betting market.

The introduction of the Dolphins to the competition will also create the need for at least one team to have a bye each week, including Magic Round in Brisbane.

Wayne Bennett’s Dolphins have been guaranteed a spot in the three-day festival, which brings together all 16 teams to one location, and is being discussed by the AFL as it plans to add an extra round to its season in 2023.
 

Nerd

Bench
Messages
2,825

‘We’re always negotiating’: The NRL approach to media deal-making​

Edmund Tadros and Mark Di Stefano
Oct 2, 2022 – 3.51pm

The NRL will be forced to offer an enhanced product if it wants more money from pay-TV broadcast partner Foxtel, with National Rugby League chairman Peter V’landys confirming that the record-breaking AFL deal would not translate to any upward revision to the current rugby league deal.
Senior sources at News Corp and Foxtel have confirmed that no additional payments will be made to the NRL under the existing contract, which is set to run until 2027. The AFL’s new deal runs from 2025 to 2031.
Mr V’landys said the NRL was working to make the league’s product more valuable to rights holders. He is confident the code will be able to take advantage of the new financial benchmarks set by the AFL’s media deal when the next formal round of NRL rights negotiations begins.
Mr V’landys also denied the NRL sought tens of millions in extra payments from broadcast partner Foxtel to bring its existing rights deal closer in value to the one recently inked by the AFL.
Panthers’ Nathan Cleary attends the 2022 NRL grand final media conference. Cameron Spencer/Getty Images
“That’s a misunderstanding because we never asked for a retrospective payment. As I said, we have other things [we are developing] that I cannot discuss,” Mr V’landys said before Sunday’s NRL grand final between the Paramatta Eels and the Penrith Panthers.


I congratulate the AFL in getting what they got, but we’re not finalised.
— NRL chairman Peter V’landys
Peter V’landys thinks the NRL will be well placed when the next formal round of media rights negotiations begins. Kate Geraghty
A report in the Sydney Morning Herald from mid-September claimed that some NRL clubs were under the impression the code would seek “tens of millions of dollars in compensation” from Foxtel after details of the new higher-value AFL deal were announced.
Estimates from multiple media reports about the difference in the cash value of the deal, that is income that can be distributed to clubs, begin at $100 million a year and go upwards. The rights deals between the codes only cross over between 2025 and 2027.
Mr V’landys said that media rights deals were always being varied, but confirmed the NRL would not seek specific compensation because of the AFL deal.
“Rights are pretty well dynamic. Even though you’re in a five-year term, there’s variations that can happen, which has already happened with some of our content,” he said.

“We introduced a 17th team, for example, which increased our media rights from some of the broadcasters. So even though it’s a five-year term, there’s things that will happen in that five-year term that will also affect the media rights.
“So basically, we’re never out of negotiations. You’re negotiating at all times and we’re negotiating many things now. This thing about the AFL and all their media rights from ’27 isn’t quite accurate, because it’s a dynamic situation so no one will know what the difference between us and [the AFL in] ’27 will be because they’re not finalised.”

In October 2021, the NRL announced it would expand its competition with a 17th team, the Brisbane-based Dolphins. The extra team increased the value of the code’s media deal by a reported $100 million. It is this kind of value-adding enhancement that Mr V’landys is focused on pursuing.
Nine Entertainment, the publisher of The Australian Financial Review, signed a $650 million, five-year deal with the NRL in December.
The AFL, Seven, Nine, News Corp and Foxtel would not comment on their deals.

The deal struck by the AFL’s departing CEO, Gillon McLachlan, between the game, Foxtel, Telstra and Channel Seven last month continues to be the centre of attention in sporting and media circles.
Mr McLachlan and the AFL were able to get a significant increase in payments from the media companies by having multiple bidders in a dramatic final auction for the rights.
AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan negotiated a record deal for the league’s media rights. Justin McManus
That AFL deal – the biggest in Australian sporting history – has heaped pressure on the NRL. It has raised questions about the decision from Mr V’landys to extend its broadcast partnerships with Channel Nine and Foxtel during the COVID pandemic without putting them out to a competitive tender process.

Tries vs goals​

The deals between the two codes and their respective media partners are difficult to compare.

In December, the NRL reported inking a record-breaking five-year media rights deal, from 2023 to 2027, with Nine, Fox Sports and Sky TV New Zealand that would be worth $2 billion, or $400 million a year.
Last month, the AFL responded by revealing its own record-breaking deal. The AFL said the seven-year deal, from 2025-2031, with Seven, Foxtel and Telstra was worth $4.5 billion, or $643 million a year.
e7cab956b9c51108fcc8d6611ee8849e0ce4a76a

NRL officials are convinced the AFL deal includes a large amount of contra, or non-cash benefits, such as free TV advertising. The Herald has also reported that the new AFL deal includes money from Telstra for the AFL-owned Marvel Stadium.
The NRL typically does not share as many details about its deals, but a senior insider said its announcements typically focused on the cash components of the deal.
Mr V’landys said the “figures are hard to reconcile because there’s a lot of contra. So we don’t know what the cash element is [in the AFL deal] so it’s hard to compare.”

The chairman said he was taking a long-term view of the rights negotiation and clearly believed that the noise around the AFL deal would quieten down once the NRL began negotiation for its 2028 and onwards media rights.
“What I’m basically saying now is we’ve got these things coming up that will change the landscape. But at the moment, unfortunately, we can’t say or do anything and just have to cop the promotion of how much the AFL have got,” Mr V’landys said.
“And in saying that, look, I congratulate the AFL in getting what they got, but we’re not finalised. So they can’t compare us at the moment until we actually finalise [our next deal].
“You’ve got to remember also, [the AFL deal goes] to 2031. So there’s also that period, with some people telling us that we will get more than the AFL when we’re in that [future] period.”

Mr V’landys is also keenly aware of the need to make a deal that provides value to the league and its media partners.
“Our mantra is everyone has to be viable, and we want to make the broadcasters viable,” he said.
“So the one thing that nobody’s understanding here is the AFL is saying all these amounts, but what if something happens, and they don’t get them? Like if the businesses become unviable?
“So what our mantra is, yes, we want to maximise our rights fees and get more than what the AFL have got. But at the same time, we want to make sure that the business model is sustainable. Otherwise, all sports will suffer.”
Edmund Tadros owns shares in Nine Entertainment and News Corp.
Edmund Tadros reports about the media and marketing sector. He previously led our coverage of the professional services sector. He is based in our Sydney newsroom. Connect with Edmund on Twitter. Email Edmund at edmundtadros@afr.com.au
Mark Di Stefano is the media and tech correspondent at The Australian Financial Review. Connect with Mark on Twitter. Email Mark at mark.distefano@afr.com

https://www.afr.com/companies/media...approach-to-media-deal-making-20220929-p5bm2s


The very last line by V'Landys “So what our mantra is, yes, we want to maximise our rights fees and get more than what the AFL have got. But at the same time, we want to make sure that the business model is sustainable. Otherwise, all sports will suffer.” is what concerns me. I have a horrible feeling that he is concerned that the other sport(s) he is worried about is Racing NSW. If V'Landys is afraid to either do a great deal for the next rights deal or even leave Fox because it may impact on Racing NSW then he has a conflict of interest and must be removed before any future negotiations are done on the next deal.

It also makes me wonder if this concern for Racing NSW was why V'Landys thought it was a good idea to negotiate the last deal during the pandemic and without an open tender process like the AFL just did? Again a conflict of interest and grounds for immediate removal from the ARLC if true. At the minimum the clubs and states should be giving V'Landys an ultimatum. It's full time or nothing with the ARLC and he steps down from Racing NSW as the last deal disaster shows that a part time chairman just isn't working and also removes the suspicion of a conflict of interest.
 

Colk

First Grade
Messages
6,338

‘We’re always negotiating’: The NRL approach to media deal-making​

Edmund Tadros and Mark Di Stefano
Oct 2, 2022 – 3.51pm

The NRL will be forced to offer an enhanced product if it wants more money from pay-TV broadcast partner Foxtel, with National Rugby League chairman Peter V’landys confirming that the record-breaking AFL deal would not translate to any upward revision to the current rugby league deal.
Senior sources at News Corp and Foxtel have confirmed that no additional payments will be made to the NRL under the existing contract, which is set to run until 2027. The AFL’s new deal runs from 2025 to 2031.
Mr V’landys said the NRL was working to make the league’s product more valuable to rights holders. He is confident the code will be able to take advantage of the new financial benchmarks set by the AFL’s media deal when the next formal round of NRL rights negotiations begins.
Mr V’landys also denied the NRL sought tens of millions in extra payments from broadcast partner Foxtel to bring its existing rights deal closer in value to the one recently inked by the AFL.
Panthers’ Nathan Cleary attends the 2022 NRL grand final media conference. Cameron Spencer/Getty Images
“That’s a misunderstanding because we never asked for a retrospective payment. As I said, we have other things [we are developing] that I cannot discuss,” Mr V’landys said before Sunday’s NRL grand final between the Paramatta Eels and the Penrith Panthers.



Peter V’landys thinks the NRL will be well placed when the next formal round of media rights negotiations begins. Kate Geraghty
A report in the Sydney Morning Herald from mid-September claimed that some NRL clubs were under the impression the code would seek “tens of millions of dollars in compensation” from Foxtel after details of the new higher-value AFL deal were announced.
Estimates from multiple media reports about the difference in the cash value of the deal, that is income that can be distributed to clubs, begin at $100 million a year and go upwards. The rights deals between the codes only cross over between 2025 and 2027.
Mr V’landys said that media rights deals were always being varied, but confirmed the NRL would not seek specific compensation because of the AFL deal.
“Rights are pretty well dynamic. Even though you’re in a five-year term, there’s variations that can happen, which has already happened with some of our content,” he said.

“We introduced a 17th team, for example, which increased our media rights from some of the broadcasters. So even though it’s a five-year term, there’s things that will happen in that five-year term that will also affect the media rights.
“So basically, we’re never out of negotiations. You’re negotiating at all times and we’re negotiating many things now. This thing about the AFL and all their media rights from ’27 isn’t quite accurate, because it’s a dynamic situation so no one will know what the difference between us and [the AFL in] ’27 will be because they’re not finalised.”

In October 2021, the NRL announced it would expand its competition with a 17th team, the Brisbane-based Dolphins. The extra team increased the value of the code’s media deal by a reported $100 million. It is this kind of value-adding enhancement that Mr V’landys is focused on pursuing.
Nine Entertainment, the publisher of The Australian Financial Review, signed a $650 million, five-year deal with the NRL in December.
The AFL, Seven, Nine, News Corp and Foxtel would not comment on their deals.

The deal struck by the AFL’s departing CEO, Gillon McLachlan, between the game, Foxtel, Telstra and Channel Seven last month continues to be the centre of attention in sporting and media circles.
Mr McLachlan and the AFL were able to get a significant increase in payments from the media companies by having multiple bidders in a dramatic final auction for the rights.
AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan negotiated a record deal for the league’s media rights. Justin McManus
That AFL deal – the biggest in Australian sporting history – has heaped pressure on the NRL. It has raised questions about the decision from Mr V’landys to extend its broadcast partnerships with Channel Nine and Foxtel during the COVID pandemic without putting them out to a competitive tender process.

Tries vs goals​

The deals between the two codes and their respective media partners are difficult to compare.

In December, the NRL reported inking a record-breaking five-year media rights deal, from 2023 to 2027, with Nine, Fox Sports and Sky TV New Zealand that would be worth $2 billion, or $400 million a year.
Last month, the AFL responded by revealing its own record-breaking deal. The AFL said the seven-year deal, from 2025-2031, with Seven, Foxtel and Telstra was worth $4.5 billion, or $643 million a year.
e7cab956b9c51108fcc8d6611ee8849e0ce4a76a

NRL officials are convinced the AFL deal includes a large amount of contra, or non-cash benefits, such as free TV advertising. The Herald has also reported that the new AFL deal includes money from Telstra for the AFL-owned Marvel Stadium.
The NRL typically does not share as many details about its deals, but a senior insider said its announcements typically focused on the cash components of the deal.
Mr V’landys said the “figures are hard to reconcile because there’s a lot of contra. So we don’t know what the cash element is [in the AFL deal] so it’s hard to compare.”

The chairman said he was taking a long-term view of the rights negotiation and clearly believed that the noise around the AFL deal would quieten down once the NRL began negotiation for its 2028 and onwards media rights.
“What I’m basically saying now is we’ve got these things coming up that will change the landscape. But at the moment, unfortunately, we can’t say or do anything and just have to cop the promotion of how much the AFL have got,” Mr V’landys said.
“And in saying that, look, I congratulate the AFL in getting what they got, but we’re not finalised. So they can’t compare us at the moment until we actually finalise [our next deal].
“You’ve got to remember also, [the AFL deal goes] to 2031. So there’s also that period, with some people telling us that we will get more than the AFL when we’re in that [future] period.”

Mr V’landys is also keenly aware of the need to make a deal that provides value to the league and its media partners.
“Our mantra is everyone has to be viable, and we want to make the broadcasters viable,” he said.
“So the one thing that nobody’s understanding here is the AFL is saying all these amounts, but what if something happens, and they don’t get them? Like if the businesses become unviable?
“So what our mantra is, yes, we want to maximise our rights fees and get more than what the AFL have got. But at the same time, we want to make sure that the business model is sustainable. Otherwise, all sports will suffer.”
Edmund Tadros owns shares in Nine Entertainment and News Corp.
Edmund Tadros reports about the media and marketing sector. He previously led our coverage of the professional services sector. He is based in our Sydney newsroom. Connect with Edmund on Twitter. Email Edmund at edmundtadros@afr.com.au
Mark Di Stefano is the media and tech correspondent at The Australian Financial Review. Connect with Mark on Twitter. Email Mark at mark.distefano@afr.com

https://www.afr.com/companies/media...approach-to-media-deal-making-20220929-p5bm2s


The very last line by V'Landys “So what our mantra is, yes, we want to maximise our rights fees and get more than what the AFL have got. But at the same time, we want to make sure that the business model is sustainable. Otherwise, all sports will suffer.” is what concerns me. I have a horrible feeling that he is concerned that the other sport(s) he is worried about is Racing NSW. If V'Landys is afraid to either do a great deal for the next rights deal or even leave Fox because it may impact on Racing NSW then he has a conflict of interest and must be removed before any future negotiations are done on the next deal.

It also makes me wonder if this concern for Racing NSW was why V'Landys thought it was a good idea to negotiate the last deal during the pandemic and without an open tender process like the AFL just did? Again a conflict of interest and grounds for immediate removal from the ARLC if true. At the minimum the clubs and states should be giving V'Landys an ultimatum. It's full time or nothing with the ARLC and he steps down from Racing NSW as the last deal disaster shows that a part time chairman just isn't working and also removes the suspicion of a conflict of interest.

I was just about to post this article.

Seems like there is no ace up his sleeve - what a shock
 

Steel Saints

Juniors
Messages
802

‘We’re always negotiating’: The NRL approach to media deal-making​

Edmund Tadros and Mark Di Stefano
Oct 2, 2022 – 3.51pm

The NRL will be forced to offer an enhanced product if it wants more money from pay-TV broadcast partner Foxtel, with National Rugby League chairman Peter V’landys confirming that the record-breaking AFL deal would not translate to any upward revision to the current rugby league deal.
Senior sources at News Corp and Foxtel have confirmed that no additional payments will be made to the NRL under the existing contract, which is set to run until 2027. The AFL’s new deal runs from 2025 to 2031.
Mr V’landys said the NRL was working to make the league’s product more valuable to rights holders. He is confident the code will be able to take advantage of the new financial benchmarks set by the AFL’s media deal when the next formal round of NRL rights negotiations begins.
Mr V’landys also denied the NRL sought tens of millions in extra payments from broadcast partner Foxtel to bring its existing rights deal closer in value to the one recently inked by the AFL.
Panthers’ Nathan Cleary attends the 2022 NRL grand final media conference. Cameron Spencer/Getty Images
“That’s a misunderstanding because we never asked for a retrospective payment. As I said, we have other things [we are developing] that I cannot discuss,” Mr V’landys said before Sunday’s NRL grand final between the Paramatta Eels and the Penrith Panthers.



Peter V’landys thinks the NRL will be well placed when the next formal round of media rights negotiations begins. Kate Geraghty
A report in the Sydney Morning Herald from mid-September claimed that some NRL clubs were under the impression the code would seek “tens of millions of dollars in compensation” from Foxtel after details of the new higher-value AFL deal were announced.
Estimates from multiple media reports about the difference in the cash value of the deal, that is income that can be distributed to clubs, begin at $100 million a year and go upwards. The rights deals between the codes only cross over between 2025 and 2027.
Mr V’landys said that media rights deals were always being varied, but confirmed the NRL would not seek specific compensation because of the AFL deal.
“Rights are pretty well dynamic. Even though you’re in a five-year term, there’s variations that can happen, which has already happened with some of our content,” he said.

“We introduced a 17th team, for example, which increased our media rights from some of the broadcasters. So even though it’s a five-year term, there’s things that will happen in that five-year term that will also affect the media rights.
“So basically, we’re never out of negotiations. You’re negotiating at all times and we’re negotiating many things now. This thing about the AFL and all their media rights from ’27 isn’t quite accurate, because it’s a dynamic situation so no one will know what the difference between us and [the AFL in] ’27 will be because they’re not finalised.”

In October 2021, the NRL announced it would expand its competition with a 17th team, the Brisbane-based Dolphins. The extra team increased the value of the code’s media deal by a reported $100 million. It is this kind of value-adding enhancement that Mr V’landys is focused on pursuing.
Nine Entertainment, the publisher of The Australian Financial Review, signed a $650 million, five-year deal with the NRL in December.
The AFL, Seven, Nine, News Corp and Foxtel would not comment on their deals.

The deal struck by the AFL’s departing CEO, Gillon McLachlan, between the game, Foxtel, Telstra and Channel Seven last month continues to be the centre of attention in sporting and media circles.
Mr McLachlan and the AFL were able to get a significant increase in payments from the media companies by having multiple bidders in a dramatic final auction for the rights.
AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan negotiated a record deal for the league’s media rights. Justin McManus
That AFL deal – the biggest in Australian sporting history – has heaped pressure on the NRL. It has raised questions about the decision from Mr V’landys to extend its broadcast partnerships with Channel Nine and Foxtel during the COVID pandemic without putting them out to a competitive tender process.

Tries vs goals​

The deals between the two codes and their respective media partners are difficult to compare.

In December, the NRL reported inking a record-breaking five-year media rights deal, from 2023 to 2027, with Nine, Fox Sports and Sky TV New Zealand that would be worth $2 billion, or $400 million a year.
Last month, the AFL responded by revealing its own record-breaking deal. The AFL said the seven-year deal, from 2025-2031, with Seven, Foxtel and Telstra was worth $4.5 billion, or $643 million a year.
e7cab956b9c51108fcc8d6611ee8849e0ce4a76a

NRL officials are convinced the AFL deal includes a large amount of contra, or non-cash benefits, such as free TV advertising. The Herald has also reported that the new AFL deal includes money from Telstra for the AFL-owned Marvel Stadium.
The NRL typically does not share as many details about its deals, but a senior insider said its announcements typically focused on the cash components of the deal.
Mr V’landys said the “figures are hard to reconcile because there’s a lot of contra. So we don’t know what the cash element is [in the AFL deal] so it’s hard to compare.”

The chairman said he was taking a long-term view of the rights negotiation and clearly believed that the noise around the AFL deal would quieten down once the NRL began negotiation for its 2028 and onwards media rights.
“What I’m basically saying now is we’ve got these things coming up that will change the landscape. But at the moment, unfortunately, we can’t say or do anything and just have to cop the promotion of how much the AFL have got,” Mr V’landys said.
“And in saying that, look, I congratulate the AFL in getting what they got, but we’re not finalised. So they can’t compare us at the moment until we actually finalise [our next deal].
“You’ve got to remember also, [the AFL deal goes] to 2031. So there’s also that period, with some people telling us that we will get more than the AFL when we’re in that [future] period.”

Mr V’landys is also keenly aware of the need to make a deal that provides value to the league and its media partners.
“Our mantra is everyone has to be viable, and we want to make the broadcasters viable,” he said.
“So the one thing that nobody’s understanding here is the AFL is saying all these amounts, but what if something happens, and they don’t get them? Like if the businesses become unviable?
“So what our mantra is, yes, we want to maximise our rights fees and get more than what the AFL have got. But at the same time, we want to make sure that the business model is sustainable. Otherwise, all sports will suffer.”
Edmund Tadros owns shares in Nine Entertainment and News Corp.
Edmund Tadros reports about the media and marketing sector. He previously led our coverage of the professional services sector. He is based in our Sydney newsroom. Connect with Edmund on Twitter. Email Edmund at edmundtadros@afr.com.au
Mark Di Stefano is the media and tech correspondent at The Australian Financial Review. Connect with Mark on Twitter. Email Mark at mark.distefano@afr.com

https://www.afr.com/companies/media...approach-to-media-deal-making-20220929-p5bm2s

"Senior sources at News Corp and Foxtel have confirmed that no additional payments will be made to the NRL under the existing contract, which is set to run until 2027"

Could the NRL get additional payments from Telstra along with the naming rights? As you can see in the graphics from the article, the NRL is getting media rights revenue from Fox, Nine, nothing from Telstra.. Meanwhile AFL is receiving money from Fox, Seven and Telstra

Have the NRL missed a trick with Telstra, or is Telstra the ace up PVL's sleeve?
 

Colk

First Grade
Messages
6,338
"Senior sources at News Corp and Foxtel have confirmed that no additional payments will be made to the NRL under the existing contract, which is set to run until 2027"

Could the NRL get additional payments from Telstra along with the naming rights? As you can see in the graphics from the article, the NRL is getting media rights revenue from Fox, Nine, nothing from Telstra.. Meanwhile AFL is receiving money from Fox, Seven and Telstra

Have the NRL missed a trick with Telstra, or is Telstra the ace up PVL's sleeve?

He doesn’t have an ace up his sleeve. He is buying himself time
 

Colk

First Grade
Messages
6,338

‘We’re always negotiating’: The NRL approach to media deal-making​

Edmund Tadros and Mark Di Stefano
Oct 2, 2022 – 3.51pm

The NRL will be forced to offer an enhanced product if it wants more money from pay-TV broadcast partner Foxtel, with National Rugby League chairman Peter V’landys confirming that the record-breaking AFL deal would not translate to any upward revision to the current rugby league deal.
Senior sources at News Corp and Foxtel have confirmed that no additional payments will be made to the NRL under the existing contract, which is set to run until 2027. The AFL’s new deal runs from 2025 to 2031.
Mr V’landys said the NRL was working to make the league’s product more valuable to rights holders. He is confident the code will be able to take advantage of the new financial benchmarks set by the AFL’s media deal when the next formal round of NRL rights negotiations begins.
Mr V’landys also denied the NRL sought tens of millions in extra payments from broadcast partner Foxtel to bring its existing rights deal closer in value to the one recently inked by the AFL.
Panthers’ Nathan Cleary attends the 2022 NRL grand final media conference. Cameron Spencer/Getty Images
“That’s a misunderstanding because we never asked for a retrospective payment. As I said, we have other things [we are developing] that I cannot discuss,” Mr V’landys said before Sunday’s NRL grand final between the Paramatta Eels and the Penrith Panthers.



Peter V’landys thinks the NRL will be well placed when the next formal round of media rights negotiations begins. Kate Geraghty
A report in the Sydney Morning Herald from mid-September claimed that some NRL clubs were under the impression the code would seek “tens of millions of dollars in compensation” from Foxtel after details of the new higher-value AFL deal were announced.
Estimates from multiple media reports about the difference in the cash value of the deal, that is income that can be distributed to clubs, begin at $100 million a year and go upwards. The rights deals between the codes only cross over between 2025 and 2027.
Mr V’landys said that media rights deals were always being varied, but confirmed the NRL would not seek specific compensation because of the AFL deal.
“Rights are pretty well dynamic. Even though you’re in a five-year term, there’s variations that can happen, which has already happened with some of our content,” he said.

“We introduced a 17th team, for example, which increased our media rights from some of the broadcasters. So even though it’s a five-year term, there’s things that will happen in that five-year term that will also affect the media rights.
“So basically, we’re never out of negotiations. You’re negotiating at all times and we’re negotiating many things now. This thing about the AFL and all their media rights from ’27 isn’t quite accurate, because it’s a dynamic situation so no one will know what the difference between us and [the AFL in] ’27 will be because they’re not finalised.”

In October 2021, the NRL announced it would expand its competition with a 17th team, the Brisbane-based Dolphins. The extra team increased the value of the code’s media deal by a reported $100 million. It is this kind of value-adding enhancement that Mr V’landys is focused on pursuing.
Nine Entertainment, the publisher of The Australian Financial Review, signed a $650 million, five-year deal with the NRL in December.
The AFL, Seven, Nine, News Corp and Foxtel would not comment on their deals.

The deal struck by the AFL’s departing CEO, Gillon McLachlan, between the game, Foxtel, Telstra and Channel Seven last month continues to be the centre of attention in sporting and media circles.
Mr McLachlan and the AFL were able to get a significant increase in payments from the media companies by having multiple bidders in a dramatic final auction for the rights.
AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan negotiated a record deal for the league’s media rights. Justin McManus
That AFL deal – the biggest in Australian sporting history – has heaped pressure on the NRL. It has raised questions about the decision from Mr V’landys to extend its broadcast partnerships with Channel Nine and Foxtel during the COVID pandemic without putting them out to a competitive tender process.

Tries vs goals​

The deals between the two codes and their respective media partners are difficult to compare.

In December, the NRL reported inking a record-breaking five-year media rights deal, from 2023 to 2027, with Nine, Fox Sports and Sky TV New Zealand that would be worth $2 billion, or $400 million a year.
Last month, the AFL responded by revealing its own record-breaking deal. The AFL said the seven-year deal, from 2025-2031, with Seven, Foxtel and Telstra was worth $4.5 billion, or $643 million a year.
e7cab956b9c51108fcc8d6611ee8849e0ce4a76a

NRL officials are convinced the AFL deal includes a large amount of contra, or non-cash benefits, such as free TV advertising. The Herald has also reported that the new AFL deal includes money from Telstra for the AFL-owned Marvel Stadium.
The NRL typically does not share as many details about its deals, but a senior insider said its announcements typically focused on the cash components of the deal.
Mr V’landys said the “figures are hard to reconcile because there’s a lot of contra. So we don’t know what the cash element is [in the AFL deal] so it’s hard to compare.”

The chairman said he was taking a long-term view of the rights negotiation and clearly believed that the noise around the AFL deal would quieten down once the NRL began negotiation for its 2028 and onwards media rights.
“What I’m basically saying now is we’ve got these things coming up that will change the landscape. But at the moment, unfortunately, we can’t say or do anything and just have to cop the promotion of how much the AFL have got,” Mr V’landys said.
“And in saying that, look, I congratulate the AFL in getting what they got, but we’re not finalised. So they can’t compare us at the moment until we actually finalise [our next deal].
“You’ve got to remember also, [the AFL deal goes] to 2031. So there’s also that period, with some people telling us that we will get more than the AFL when we’re in that [future] period.”

Mr V’landys is also keenly aware of the need to make a deal that provides value to the league and its media partners.
“Our mantra is everyone has to be viable, and we want to make the broadcasters viable,” he said.
“So the one thing that nobody’s understanding here is the AFL is saying all these amounts, but what if something happens, and they don’t get them? Like if the businesses become unviable?
“So what our mantra is, yes, we want to maximise our rights fees and get more than what the AFL have got. But at the same time, we want to make sure that the business model is sustainable. Otherwise, all sports will suffer.”
Edmund Tadros owns shares in Nine Entertainment and News Corp.
Edmund Tadros reports about the media and marketing sector. He previously led our coverage of the professional services sector. He is based in our Sydney newsroom. Connect with Edmund on Twitter. Email Edmund at edmundtadros@afr.com.au
Mark Di Stefano is the media and tech correspondent at The Australian Financial Review. Connect with Mark on Twitter. Email Mark at mark.distefano@afr.com

https://www.afr.com/companies/media...approach-to-media-deal-making-20220929-p5bm2s


The very last line by V'Landys “So what our mantra is, yes, we want to maximise our rights fees and get more than what the AFL have got. But at the same time, we want to make sure that the business model is sustainable. Otherwise, all sports will suffer.” mantra is, yes, we want to maximise our rights fees and get more than what the AFL have got. But at the same time, we want to make sure that the business model is sustainable. Otherwise, all sports will suffer.” is what concerns me.
Maybe he is a fumbleball plant.

He seems happy that they got a good deal and he was congratulating himself for his role in getting them a good deal
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
65,420
ok so a glimmer of hope. There is a rumour in the West that in June next year there will be an announcement of an 18th club in Perth to enter a couple of years later. This will see an increase in the current deal from 2026 and allow the NRL to negotiate for 2028 with an 18 team comp, along with an 18 team womens comp. Might be BS but thats the rumour on this side of the country.
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
65,420
Maybe he is a fumbleball plant.

He seems happy that they got a good deal and he was congratulating himself for his role in getting them a good deal
He seems happy Fox got a good deal, he seems happy AFL got a good deal, he doesnt seem unhappy at our sht deal. Its hard to know what is going on in his head lol
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
65,420
"Senior sources at News Corp and Foxtel have confirmed that no additional payments will be made to the NRL under the existing contract, which is set to run until 2027"

Could the NRL get additional payments from Telstra along with the naming rights? As you can see in the graphics from the article, the NRL is getting media rights revenue from Fox, Nine, nothing from Telstra.. Meanwhile AFL is receiving money from Fox, Seven and Telstra

Have the NRL missed a trick with Telstra, or is Telstra the ace up PVL's sleeve?
He has signed a deal with Telstra which includes naming rights. The deal is worth $60mill cash $30mill in kind support over 5 years or a total of $18mill a year.

Again you have to ask why we've accepted $12mill for our naming rights when AFL sold theirs to NAB/Toyota for $21million??

 

The_Wookie

Bench
Messages
2,714
"Senior sources at News Corp and Foxtel have confirmed that no additional payments will be made to the NRL under the existing contract, which is set to run until 2027"

Could the NRL get additional payments from Telstra along with the naming rights? As you can see in the graphics from the article, the NRL is getting media rights revenue from Fox, Nine, nothing from Telstra.. Meanwhile AFL is receiving money from Fox, Seven and Telstra

Have the NRL missed a trick with Telstra, or is Telstra the ace up PVL's sleeve?

Theres no rights to sell Telstra unless the NRL is prepared to give up its website and network, which they took off Telstra in 2018.
 

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