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Next TV deal discussion 2028 -

colly

Juniors
Messages
1,304
There’s a snippet in Websters column claiming rival networks are wary of ten & paramount who are believed to be a genuine chance at securing games. Paramount Global boss Kevin Maclennan will be in Australia later this month, after attending Vegas games earlier this year.
Well done 'insert', Kevin Maclennan should be sold on the Super/league NRL combo , since he is the head of International Head streaming/ since he heads the UK dept also. It makes Kevin in for a big dig to have NRL, Rugby League as the next best thing for viewership and ratings and streaming revenue
 

insert.pause

First Grade
Messages
7,012
Well done 'insert', Kevin Maclennan should be sold on the Super/league NRL combo , since he is the head of International Head streaming/ since he heads the UK dept also. It makes Kevin in for a big dig to have NRL, Rugby League as the next best thing for viewership and ratings and streaming revenue
Why do you always sound like chat gpt took a shit?
 

insert.pause

First Grade
Messages
7,012

Nine warned huge NRL rights deal could become a ‘financial albatross’​

Nine Entertainment faces a potential financial disaster if it overpays for NRL rights.
JAMES MADDEN

Nine must be wary of overpaying for the NRL broadcast rights, lest the long-term contract becomes a financial albatross around the struggling company’s neck, a leading media analyst has warned.

“There is no arguing that the NRL is a marquee winter live sports franchise for Nine. However, we encourage management to pay heed to the fact that its current depressed market value and agitated shareholder base cannot tolerate an exorbitant jump in rights costs,” Morningstar’s director of equity research Brian Han wrote in an analyst’s note.

The NRL’s current broadcast deal set to expire at the end of the 2027 season, and Australian Rugby League Commission chair Peter V’landys has publicly stated his ambition to secure the biggest media deal in the history of Australian sport – which, if realised, would exceed the seven-year, $4.5bn agreement the AFL signed with Foxtel and Seven in 2022.
In his analyst’s note, Mr Han observed Nine’s share price had fallen 5 per cent in the 10 weeks since it announced it had acquired outdoor advertising company QMS for $850m, leaving its market capitalisation “at just $1.6bn”.
In December 2021, when Nine renegotiated an agreement to extend its NRL broadcast rights until the end of the 2027 season, its market cap was $4.96bn.

“The risk is that basically the NRL deal could be like an albatross around Nine’s neck for many years to come, especially when you’re facing a future where there is – no matter what they say – an uncertainty about linear TV going forward,” Mr Han said. “You’re talking about a company whose market cap is dwindling and it really doesn’t have the financial resources to pay what Mr V’landys wants.”

At close of business on Friday, Nine shares were trading at $1.02, a year-on-year drop of almost 25 per cent. Nine CEO Matt Stanton has previously said the looming NRL contract will be assessed “on a commercial basis … and it has to stack up on its own”.

That said, if Nine fails to secure the NRL rights, it would be left without a top-tier live sport in Australia, with Seven and Foxtel locked in to cover both AFL and cricket well into the next decade.

Nine does have the broadcast rights to the Australian Open tennis, which runs for two weeks in January, and the Summer and Winter Olympics until 2032, but the AFL and NRL are by far the biggest revenue drivers for television networks in this country.

However, Mr Han said Nine did have some factors in its favour at the negotiating table.

“Nine’s two free-to-air TV competitors (Seven and Network Ten) are even less able to afford the rights; the anti-siphoning rules are there to be leveraged against the NRL; and the days of (sporting bodies) justifying big increases in rights costs on tenuous concepts such as “promotional platforms” … are over – certainly in this age of on-demand streaming and bite-sized consumption of entertainment,” he said.

It’s understood Nine will be looking to showcase some games on its subscription streaming platform Stan if it wins the rights, but also feature some live games – most probably Friday Night Football – on its free-to-air channel.

The Australian has previously reported that the Seven Network is interested in making a play for Monday Night Football, should the NRL move to revive the early-week timeslot as part of the sport’s next broadcast deal.

Despite some claims that Seven might also be interested in State of Origin matches, it’s unlikely the recently merged media company would have the resources at its disposal to succeed in a bidding war for the lucrative tri-series showpiece.

“Seven just doesn’t have the money to be a major player in NRL, so a tilt at Monday Night Football would be the extent of it,” one network insider said.
Paramount, the US owner of Network 10, is cashed up and expected to table an offer for the NRL broadcast rights, or part thereof, but the entity’s push for the AFL was famously overlooked in 2022, despite its bid exceeding that of Seven at the time.

It’s understood the AFL was jittery about selling the rights to a network with limited experience in delivering a top-tier sport.
It remains to be seen if the NRL holds a similar view, or whether Mr V’landys will simply use Paramount’s interest to drive up the price for rival contenders.

Foxtel chief executive Patrick Delany has repeatedly said he does not speculate about sports rights, but the company’s new owner DAZN is expected to make a serious pitch for the NRL deal.

Nine broadcast and streaming boss, Amanda Laing, told The Australian on the weekend Nine intended to “continue (its) successful partnership with the NRL and the fans long into the future.”

It’s expected the NRL broadcast deal will be finalised by July. Mr V’landys did not respond to questions from The Australian.

 

insert.pause

First Grade
Messages
7,012

Nine warned huge NRL rights deal could become a ‘financial albatross’​

Nine Entertainment faces a potential financial disaster if it overpays for NRL rights.
JAMES MADDEN

Nine must be wary of overpaying for the NRL broadcast rights, lest the long-term contract becomes a financial albatross around the struggling company’s neck, a leading media analyst has warned.

“There is no arguing that the NRL is a marquee winter live sports franchise for Nine. However, we encourage management to pay heed to the fact that its current depressed market value and agitated shareholder base cannot tolerate an exorbitant jump in rights costs,” Morningstar’s director of equity research Brian Han wrote in an analyst’s note.

The NRL’s current broadcast deal set to expire at the end of the 2027 season, and Australian Rugby League Commission chair Peter V’landys has publicly stated his ambition to secure the biggest media deal in the history of Australian sport – which, if realised, would exceed the seven-year, $4.5bn agreement the AFL signed with Foxtel and Seven in 2022.
In his analyst’s note, Mr Han observed Nine’s share price had fallen 5 per cent in the 10 weeks since it announced it had acquired outdoor advertising company QMS for $850m, leaving its market capitalisation “at just $1.6bn”.
In December 2021, when Nine renegotiated an agreement to extend its NRL broadcast rights until the end of the 2027 season, its market cap was $4.96bn.

“The risk is that basically the NRL deal could be like an albatross around Nine’s neck for many years to come, especially when you’re facing a future where there is – no matter what they say – an uncertainty about linear TV going forward,” Mr Han said. “You’re talking about a company whose market cap is dwindling and it really doesn’t have the financial resources to pay what Mr V’landys wants.”

At close of business on Friday, Nine shares were trading at $1.02, a year-on-year drop of almost 25 per cent. Nine CEO Matt Stanton has previously said the looming NRL contract will be assessed “on a commercial basis … and it has to stack up on its own”.

That said, if Nine fails to secure the NRL rights, it would be left without a top-tier live sport in Australia, with Seven and Foxtel locked in to cover both AFL and cricket well into the next decade.

Nine does have the broadcast rights to the Australian Open tennis, which runs for two weeks in January, and the Summer and Winter Olympics until 2032, but the AFL and NRL are by far the biggest revenue drivers for television networks in this country.

However, Mr Han said Nine did have some factors in its favour at the negotiating table.

“Nine’s two free-to-air TV competitors (Seven and Network Ten) are even less able to afford the rights; the anti-siphoning rules are there to be leveraged against the NRL; and the days of (sporting bodies) justifying big increases in rights costs on tenuous concepts such as “promotional platforms” … are over – certainly in this age of on-demand streaming and bite-sized consumption of entertainment,” he said.

It’s understood Nine will be looking to showcase some games on its subscription streaming platform Stan if it wins the rights, but also feature some live games – most probably Friday Night Football – on its free-to-air channel.

The Australian has previously reported that the Seven Network is interested in making a play for Monday Night Football, should the NRL move to revive the early-week timeslot as part of the sport’s next broadcast deal.

Despite some claims that Seven might also be interested in State of Origin matches, it’s unlikely the recently merged media company would have the resources at its disposal to succeed in a bidding war for the lucrative tri-series showpiece.

“Seven just doesn’t have the money to be a major player in NRL, so a tilt at Monday Night Football would be the extent of it,” one network insider said.
Paramount, the US owner of Network 10, is cashed up and expected to table an offer for the NRL broadcast rights, or part thereof, but the entity’s push for the AFL was famously overlooked in 2022, despite its bid exceeding that of Seven at the time.

It’s understood the AFL was jittery about selling the rights to a network with limited experience in delivering a top-tier sport.
It remains to be seen if the NRL holds a similar view, or whether Mr V’landys will simply use Paramount’s interest to drive up the price for rival contenders.

Foxtel chief executive Patrick Delany has repeatedly said he does not speculate about sports rights, but the company’s new owner DAZN is expected to make a serious pitch for the NRL deal.

Nine broadcast and streaming boss, Amanda Laing, told The Australian on the weekend Nine intended to “continue (its) successful partnership with the NRL and the fans long into the future.”

It’s expected the NRL broadcast deal will be finalised by July. Mr V’landys did not respond to questions from The Australian.

I wonder what Mr Han thinks the share price will be after losing the nrl rights & having no major winter sport for at least the next 5 years?
 
Messages
3,615
Some would be Perth bears home games but yeh that idea is good they should already doing it with that dud Friday 6 pm a slot outside warriors games
Don’t think you understood the article. It’s not implying bears would play Mondays. It’s playing game 9 in general could be on Mondays.

Bears can’t be on Mondays. Think about it. How on you gonna organise a Perth game 2 hours behind to be telecast to east coast at 7pm. They would kick off at 5pm on working week day… makes no sense, it’s commercial suicide

as bear said that Sunday 6pm east coast time is bears predominant time slot. It’s 4pm Sunday arvo. It’s Sunday arvo footy for west Aussies. It’s a trialled time slot on Fox and i believe it rates pretty well when it’s played. Monday night might happen game 10 when 20th team enters but right now it’s not gonna happen.
 
Messages
565

Nine warned huge NRL rights deal could become a ‘financial albatross’​

Nine Entertainment faces a potential financial disaster if it overpays for NRL rights.
JAMES MADDEN

Nine must be wary of overpaying for the NRL broadcast rights, lest the long-term contract becomes a financial albatross around the struggling company’s neck, a leading media analyst has warned.

“There is no arguing that the NRL is a marquee winter live sports franchise for Nine. However, we encourage management to pay heed to the fact that its current depressed market value and agitated shareholder base cannot tolerate an exorbitant jump in rights costs,” Morningstar’s director of equity research Brian Han wrote in an analyst’s note.

The NRL’s current broadcast deal set to expire at the end of the 2027 season, and Australian Rugby League Commission chair Peter V’landys has publicly stated his ambition to secure the biggest media deal in the history of Australian sport – which, if realised, would exceed the seven-year, $4.5bn agreement the AFL signed with Foxtel and Seven in 2022.
In his analyst’s note, Mr Han observed Nine’s share price had fallen 5 per cent in the 10 weeks since it announced it had acquired outdoor advertising company QMS for $850m, leaving its market capitalisation “at just $1.6bn”.
In December 2021, when Nine renegotiated an agreement to extend its NRL broadcast rights until the end of the 2027 season, its market cap was $4.96bn.

“The risk is that basically the NRL deal could be like an albatross around Nine’s neck for many years to come, especially when you’re facing a future where there is – no matter what they say – an uncertainty about linear TV going forward,” Mr Han said. “You’re talking about a company whose market cap is dwindling and it really doesn’t have the financial resources to pay what Mr V’landys wants.”

At close of business on Friday, Nine shares were trading at $1.02, a year-on-year drop of almost 25 per cent. Nine CEO Matt Stanton has previously said the looming NRL contract will be assessed “on a commercial basis … and it has to stack up on its own”.

That said, if Nine fails to secure the NRL rights, it would be left without a top-tier live sport in Australia, with Seven and Foxtel locked in to cover both AFL and cricket well into the next decade.

Nine does have the broadcast rights to the Australian Open tennis, which runs for two weeks in January, and the Summer and Winter Olympics until 2032, but the AFL and NRL are by far the biggest revenue drivers for television networks in this country.

However, Mr Han said Nine did have some factors in its favour at the negotiating table.

“Nine’s two free-to-air TV competitors (Seven and Network Ten) are even less able to afford the rights; the anti-siphoning rules are there to be leveraged against the NRL; and the days of (sporting bodies) justifying big increases in rights costs on tenuous concepts such as “promotional platforms” … are over – certainly in this age of on-demand streaming and bite-sized consumption of entertainment,” he said.

It’s understood Nine will be looking to showcase some games on its subscription streaming platform Stan if it wins the rights, but also feature some live games – most probably Friday Night Football – on its free-to-air channel.

The Australian has previously reported that the Seven Network is interested in making a play for Monday Night Football, should the NRL move to revive the early-week timeslot as part of the sport’s next broadcast deal.

Despite some claims that Seven might also be interested in State of Origin matches, it’s unlikely the recently merged media company would have the resources at its disposal to succeed in a bidding war for the lucrative tri-series showpiece.

“Seven just doesn’t have the money to be a major player in NRL, so a tilt at Monday Night Football would be the extent of it,” one network insider said.
Paramount, the US owner of Network 10, is cashed up and expected to table an offer for the NRL broadcast rights, or part thereof, but the entity’s push for the AFL was famously overlooked in 2022, despite its bid exceeding that of Seven at the time.

It’s understood the AFL was jittery about selling the rights to a network with limited experience in delivering a top-tier sport.
It remains to be seen if the NRL holds a similar view, or whether Mr V’landys will simply use Paramount’s interest to drive up the price for rival contenders.

Foxtel chief executive Patrick Delany has repeatedly said he does not speculate about sports rights, but the company’s new owner DAZN is expected to make a serious pitch for the NRL deal.

Nine broadcast and streaming boss, Amanda Laing, told The Australian on the weekend Nine intended to “continue (its) successful partnership with the NRL and the fans long into the future.”

It’s expected the NRL broadcast deal will be finalised by July. Mr V’landys did not respond to questions from The Australian.

Nine did sell its stake in the radio business and domain too. Presumably they have distributed these sale proceeds to shareholders thus the reduction in share price and market cap is understood and not linked to anything in particular. Poor article only highlighting the acquisition of QMS and not mentioning their divestments since 2021
 

storm1999

Juniors
Messages
346
I wonder what Mr Han thinks the share price will be after losing the nrl rights & having no major winter sport for at least the next 5 years?
Deep down Nine know the NRL need them as much as they need NRL.

What are the alternatives for FTA coverage?

Seven are committed to AFL and couldn't afford NRL even if they wanted to.
Moving to 10 would be a huge risk for the NRL. The network rates 3rd or 4th most nights and has been a dead zone outside of a few reality franchises. A-League coverage flopped and was relegated to secondary channels after one season.
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
48,857
Don’t think you understood the article. It’s not implying bears would play Mondays. It’s playing game 9 in general could be on Mondays.

Bears can’t be on Mondays. Think about it. How on you gonna organise a Perth game 2 hours behind to be telecast to east coast at 7pm. They would kick off at 5pm on working week day… makes no sense, it’s commercial suicide

as bear said that Sunday 6pm east coast time is bears predominant time slot. It’s 4pm Sunday arvo. It’s Sunday arvo footy for west Aussies. It’s a trialled time slot on Fox and i believe it rates pretty well when it’s played. Monday night might happen game 10 when 20th team enters but right now it’s not gonna happen.
8 pm ko

But yeh it’s an issue for them
 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
48,857
I would be surprised if Nine miss out completely… likely to still keep a game or two minimum … I wouldn’t miss them though … their main NRL “personalities” are stale
If they lose origin and seven gets Monday nights they might not be too interested in the rest

ten night be bidding for all games like they did afl

nine facing competition is good

just like stan and paramount bidding against fox is good
 

BuffaloRules

Coach
Messages
18,218
If they lose origin and seven gets Monday nights they might not be too interested in the rest

ten night be bidding for all games like they did afl

nine facing competition is good

just like stan and paramount bidding against fox is good

Nine gotta broadcast something … they paid through the nose for the tennis and Olympics which only run a few weeks over 8 years… Thats not going to win them too many ratings periods…

Bit more gossip in this article about Paramount … something seems to have got PVL and Abdo buzzed up enough to start considering throwing money at the Super League …either them or DAZN surely …. Get some money up front before you start handing it over to the Poms though 👍
 
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Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
48,857
Nine gotta broadcast something … they paid through the nose for the tennis and Olympics which only run a few weeks over 8 years… Thats not going to win them too many ratings periods…

Bit more gossip in this article about Paramount … something seems to have got PVL and Abdo buzzed up enough to start considering throwing money at the Super League …either them or DAZN surely …. Get some money up front before you start handing it over to the Poms though 👍
Ten and paramount outbid nine / stan and seven / Fox last time for the afl

afl decided to turn down the bigger offer apparently cause thei paramount ap was bad

the Ellisons have way more firepower than nine if they did want league they would outbid nine but maybe not the Ukranian owner of Dazn who was Saudii oil money behind

if seven and ten do bid then it’s happy days for us even if we end up with nine and Fox remaining

maybe those figures of 800 million a season aren’t bs

and yeh I wish we’d hurry up and do the real England isn’t important now
 
Messages
565
Ten and paramount outbid nine / stan and seven / Fox last time for the afl

afl decided to turn down the bigger offer apparently cause thei paramount ap was bad

the Ellisons have way more firepower than nine if they did want league they would outbid nine but maybe not the Ukranian owner of Dazn who was Saudii oil money behind

if seven and ten do bid then it’s happy days for us even if we end up with nine and Fox remaining

maybe those figures of 800 million a season aren’t bs

and yeh I wish we’d hurry up and do the real England isn’t important now
Ellisons also have saudi (and qatari) money behind them too
 
Messages
3,615

already posted by insert. search button is good'un

Nine warned huge NRL rights deal could become a ‘financial albatross’​

Nine Entertainment faces a potential financial disaster if it overpays for NRL rights.
JAMES MADDEN

Nine must be wary of overpaying for the NRL broadcast rights, lest the long-term contract becomes a financial albatross around the struggling company’s neck, a leading media analyst has warned.

“There is no arguing that the NRL is a marquee winter live sports franchise for Nine. However, we encourage management to pay heed to the fact that its current depressed market value and agitated shareholder base cannot tolerate an exorbitant jump in rights costs,” Morningstar’s director of equity research Brian Han wrote in an analyst’s note.

The NRL’s current broadcast deal set to expire at the end of the 2027 season, and Australian Rugby League Commission chair Peter V’landys has publicly stated his ambition to secure the biggest media deal in the history of Australian sport – which, if realised, would exceed the seven-year, $4.5bn agreement the AFL signed with Foxtel and Seven in 2022.
In his analyst’s note, Mr Han observed Nine’s share price had fallen 5 per cent in the 10 weeks since it announced it had acquired outdoor advertising company QMS for $850m, leaving its market capitalisation “at just $1.6bn”.
In December 2021, when Nine renegotiated an agreement to extend its NRL broadcast rights until the end of the 2027 season, its market cap was $4.96bn.

“The risk is that basically the NRL deal could be like an albatross around Nine’s neck for many years to come, especially when you’re facing a future where there is – no matter what they say – an uncertainty about linear TV going forward,” Mr Han said. “You’re talking about a company whose market cap is dwindling and it really doesn’t have the financial resources to pay what Mr V’landys wants.”

At close of business on Friday, Nine shares were trading at $1.02, a year-on-year drop of almost 25 per cent. Nine CEO Matt Stanton has previously said the looming NRL contract will be assessed “on a commercial basis … and it has to stack up on its own”.

That said, if Nine fails to secure the NRL rights, it would be left without a top-tier live sport in Australia, with Seven and Foxtel locked in to cover both AFL and cricket well into the next decade.

Nine does have the broadcast rights to the Australian Open tennis, which runs for two weeks in January, and the Summer and Winter Olympics until 2032, but the AFL and NRL are by far the biggest revenue drivers for television networks in this country.

However, Mr Han said Nine did have some factors in its favour at the negotiating table.

“Nine’s two free-to-air TV competitors (Seven and Network Ten) are even less able to afford the rights; the anti-siphoning rules are there to be leveraged against the NRL; and the days of (sporting bodies) justifying big increases in rights costs on tenuous concepts such as “promotional platforms” … are over – certainly in this age of on-demand streaming and bite-sized consumption of entertainment,” he said.

It’s understood Nine will be looking to showcase some games on its subscription streaming platform Stan if it wins the rights, but also feature some live games – most probably Friday Night Football – on its free-to-air channel.

The Australian has previously reported that the Seven Network is interested in making a play for Monday Night Football, should the NRL move to revive the early-week timeslot as part of the sport’s next broadcast deal.

Despite some claims that Seven might also be interested in State of Origin matches, it’s unlikely the recently merged media company would have the resources at its disposal to succeed in a bidding war for the lucrative tri-series showpiece.

“Seven just doesn’t have the money to be a major player in NRL, so a tilt at Monday Night Football would be the extent of it,” one network insider said.
Paramount, the US owner of Network 10, is cashed up and expected to table an offer for the NRL broadcast rights, or part thereof, but the entity’s push for the AFL was famously overlooked in 2022, despite its bid exceeding that of Seven at the time.

It’s understood the AFL was jittery about selling the rights to a network with limited experience in delivering a top-tier sport.
It remains to be seen if the NRL holds a similar view, or whether Mr V’landys will simply use Paramount’s interest to drive up the price for rival contenders.

Foxtel chief executive Patrick Delany has repeatedly said he does not speculate about sports rights, but the company’s new owner DAZN is expected to make a serious pitch for the NRL deal.

Nine broadcast and streaming boss, Amanda Laing, told The Australian on the weekend Nine intended to “continue (its) successful partnership with the NRL and the fans long into the future.”

It’s expected the NRL broadcast deal will be finalised by July. Mr V’landys did not respond to questions from The Australian.

 

Wb1234

Immortal
Messages
48,857
It’s funny you never get these types of articles when afl is doing its deals

and if there’s any sport that is going to get a big tv deal it’s the one which is the most watched in Australia

looks like nine are going to have to pay if they want to keep it

Any time you get people like the afr or finance journos talking about our deal it’s always negative.
 

Barney Stubble

Juniors
Messages
807

Nine warned huge NRL rights deal could become a ‘financial albatross’​

Nine Entertainment faces a potential financial disaster if it overpays for NRL rights.
JAMES MADDEN

Nine must be wary of overpaying for the NRL broadcast rights, lest the long-term contract becomes a financial albatross around the struggling company’s neck, a leading media analyst has warned.

“There is no arguing that the NRL is a marquee winter live sports franchise for Nine. However, we encourage management to pay heed to the fact that its current depressed market value and agitated shareholder base cannot tolerate an exorbitant jump in rights costs,” Morningstar’s director of equity research Brian Han wrote in an analyst’s note.

The NRL’s current broadcast deal set to expire at the end of the 2027 season, and Australian Rugby League Commission chair Peter V’landys has publicly stated his ambition to secure the biggest media deal in the history of Australian sport – which, if realised, would exceed the seven-year, $4.5bn agreement the AFL signed with Foxtel and Seven in 2022.
In his analyst’s note, Mr Han observed Nine’s share price had fallen 5 per cent in the 10 weeks since it announced it had acquired outdoor advertising company QMS for $850m, leaving its market capitalisation “at just $1.6bn”.
In December 2021, when Nine renegotiated an agreement to extend its NRL broadcast rights until the end of the 2027 season, its market cap was $4.96bn.

“The risk is that basically the NRL deal could be like an albatross around Nine’s neck for many years to come, especially when you’re facing a future where there is – no matter what they say – an uncertainty about linear TV going forward,” Mr Han said. “You’re talking about a company whose market cap is dwindling and it really doesn’t have the financial resources to pay what Mr V’landys wants.”

At close of business on Friday, Nine shares were trading at $1.02, a year-on-year drop of almost 25 per cent. Nine CEO Matt Stanton has previously said the looming NRL contract will be assessed “on a commercial basis … and it has to stack up on its own”.

That said, if Nine fails to secure the NRL rights, it would be left without a top-tier live sport in Australia, with Seven and Foxtel locked in to cover both AFL and cricket well into the next decade.

Nine does have the broadcast rights to the Australian Open tennis, which runs for two weeks in January, and the Summer and Winter Olympics until 2032, but the AFL and NRL are by far the biggest revenue drivers for television networks in this country.

However, Mr Han said Nine did have some factors in its favour at the negotiating table.

“Nine’s two free-to-air TV competitors (Seven and Network Ten) are even less able to afford the rights; the anti-siphoning rules are there to be leveraged against the NRL; and the days of (sporting bodies) justifying big increases in rights costs on tenuous concepts such as “promotional platforms” … are over – certainly in this age of on-demand streaming and bite-sized consumption of entertainment,” he said.

It’s understood Nine will be looking to showcase some games on its subscription streaming platform Stan if it wins the rights, but also feature some live games – most probably Friday Night Football – on its free-to-air channel.

The Australian has previously reported that the Seven Network is interested in making a play for Monday Night Football, should the NRL move to revive the early-week timeslot as part of the sport’s next broadcast deal.

Despite some claims that Seven might also be interested in State of Origin matches, it’s unlikely the recently merged media company would have the resources at its disposal to succeed in a bidding war for the lucrative tri-series showpiece.

“Seven just doesn’t have the money to be a major player in NRL, so a tilt at Monday Night Football would be the extent of it,” one network insider said.
Paramount, the US owner of Network 10, is cashed up and expected to table an offer for the NRL broadcast rights, or part thereof, but the entity’s push for the AFL was famously overlooked in 2022, despite its bid exceeding that of Seven at the time.

It’s understood the AFL was jittery about selling the rights to a network with limited experience in delivering a top-tier sport.
It remains to be seen if the NRL holds a similar view, or whether Mr V’landys will simply use Paramount’s interest to drive up the price for rival contenders.

Foxtel chief executive Patrick Delany has repeatedly said he does not speculate about sports rights, but the company’s new owner DAZN is expected to make a serious pitch for the NRL deal.

Nine broadcast and streaming boss, Amanda Laing, told The Australian on the weekend Nine intended to “continue (its) successful partnership with the NRL and the fans long into the future.”

It’s expected the NRL broadcast deal will be finalised by July. Mr V’landys did not respond to questions from The Australian.

Same clap trap was trotted out by 7 for the fumblers rights 3 years ago

" We will NOT over pay " !!
they went from 140 mill pa to 180 mill pa , & got less in their new deal

overpaying is a very objective thing
 

BuffaloRules

Coach
Messages
18,218
It’s funny you never get these types of articles when afl is doing its deals

and if there’s any sport that is going to get a big tv deal it’s the one which is the most watched in Australia

looks like nine are going to have to pay if they want to keep it

Any time you get people like the afr or finance journos talking about our deal it’s always negative.

The story is just based on opinions of some “media analyst “ … who knows what his agenda is …

Nine have paid the same price for 10 years for the NRL rights and Origin …. Been a sweet deal for them I would imagine
 
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