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Having a look around on different news lines and found this one.
NZRU faces financial disaster
30 May 2004
By CHRIS MIRAMS
Sanzar is staring at a crippling 50 per cent hit in broadcasting revenue because of rugby's failure to generate pay TV subscriptions in Australia.
The three-nation collective - South Africa, Australia, New Zealand - is expected to announce this week its approach to negotiations with News Corporation.
It will also confirm Sydney-based Ian Frykberg as its negotiator. Frykberg was a key player for News Corp in the original contract and now represents the Australian Rugby Union.
Broadcasting fees produce nearly 60 per cent of the NZRU's revenue. So the big hit looming will be a disaster for New Zealand rugby. It will impact significantly on player retention and development programmes and on all levels of the game.
Many had expected Sanzar to receive about 20 per cent less than the $555m it got from News Corp in 1995 for the original 10-year-deal. But dark clouds now loom for Sanzar with authoritative Australian sources telling the Star-Times the coalition can expect about only half the old deal.
Australian broadcasting expert Barry O'Brien said New Zealand and South Africa had performed well but the Australian market had been a disaster. Anti-siphoning laws make test matches free-to-air there and compound the problem.
"(News Corp) needed to get it in 1995 to launch their platforms (in the Sanzar countries). But the value of the product now is totally different," said O'Brien, chief executive of leading media agency Total Advertising and Communication.
The situation may also cause friction within Sanzar over how the contract will be split. Currently South Africa gets the largest slice, then New Zealand with Australia last.
From a population five times that of New Zealand, Murdoch's Australian pay TV service Foxtel has generated only 700,000 subscribers compared to the 550,000 SKY TV has here. This is despite Foxtel being the dominant player in the market.
It's also anticipated England and France will provide increased revenues to Murdoch. If they exceed what Australia delivers, they will further erode Sanzar's value to News Corp.
"We have to wait and see what any broadcaster is prepared to pay," New Zealand Rugby Union chief executive Chris Moller said.
"But there is an issue within Sanzar of splitting that revenue. If there was a dramatic change then one issue that may well be on the table is whether the revenue share as currently negotiated should be amended."
In 1995 rugby league imploded with the ARL-Super League war that pitched Foxtel in a cut-throat battle with Optus to rule Australian pay TV.
Foxtel then banked on Super 12 delivering a weekly audience to fill the hole left by the Super League. But it didn't.
Now rugby league has recaptured its audience, Australian Rules is so popular it has a dedicated channel. Without being able to leverage test matches, the value of rugby to Australian pay TV has diminished greatly.
And with Optus gone there is no alternative cash-rich broadcaster for Sanzar to turn to in Australia.
The NZRU is also trying to clarify its position with its broadcasting adviser - London based Octagon CSI. It has recently restructured amid marketplace speculation of financial instability.
The company was forced to withdraw its bid to secure the English premier league's broadcast rights in the Middle East when its parent company, Interpublic Group, refused to honour a guarantee. Octagon's motorsport division has lost millions of dollars and Octagon's value was written down by more than $US200 million ($320m) late last year. Chief executive Karl Bistany has been replaced in a major shake-up after 15 years with the company.
Bistany oversaw the NZRU account and was in New Zealand just a fortnight ago.
Moller confirmed the NZRU had sought clarification of what had happened at Octagon CSI and how it might be affected. The previous NZRU administration signed a multi-year deal with the company.
Moller confirmed that, with Bistany gone, it was reviewing the contract and if there might be an opportunity to exit.
"It's not clear-cut one way or the other, and furthermore we have to contemplate whether we want to do that," Moller said.
"We are in a mode of trying to find out what the situation is, what the impact on us is and what actions as a consequence we can take. That will dictate whether the current arrangement stays in place or something changes."
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,2924089a10295,00.html
NZRU faces financial disaster
30 May 2004
By CHRIS MIRAMS
Sanzar is staring at a crippling 50 per cent hit in broadcasting revenue because of rugby's failure to generate pay TV subscriptions in Australia.
The three-nation collective - South Africa, Australia, New Zealand - is expected to announce this week its approach to negotiations with News Corporation.
It will also confirm Sydney-based Ian Frykberg as its negotiator. Frykberg was a key player for News Corp in the original contract and now represents the Australian Rugby Union.
Broadcasting fees produce nearly 60 per cent of the NZRU's revenue. So the big hit looming will be a disaster for New Zealand rugby. It will impact significantly on player retention and development programmes and on all levels of the game.
Many had expected Sanzar to receive about 20 per cent less than the $555m it got from News Corp in 1995 for the original 10-year-deal. But dark clouds now loom for Sanzar with authoritative Australian sources telling the Star-Times the coalition can expect about only half the old deal.
Australian broadcasting expert Barry O'Brien said New Zealand and South Africa had performed well but the Australian market had been a disaster. Anti-siphoning laws make test matches free-to-air there and compound the problem.
"(News Corp) needed to get it in 1995 to launch their platforms (in the Sanzar countries). But the value of the product now is totally different," said O'Brien, chief executive of leading media agency Total Advertising and Communication.
The situation may also cause friction within Sanzar over how the contract will be split. Currently South Africa gets the largest slice, then New Zealand with Australia last.
From a population five times that of New Zealand, Murdoch's Australian pay TV service Foxtel has generated only 700,000 subscribers compared to the 550,000 SKY TV has here. This is despite Foxtel being the dominant player in the market.
It's also anticipated England and France will provide increased revenues to Murdoch. If they exceed what Australia delivers, they will further erode Sanzar's value to News Corp.
"We have to wait and see what any broadcaster is prepared to pay," New Zealand Rugby Union chief executive Chris Moller said.
"But there is an issue within Sanzar of splitting that revenue. If there was a dramatic change then one issue that may well be on the table is whether the revenue share as currently negotiated should be amended."
In 1995 rugby league imploded with the ARL-Super League war that pitched Foxtel in a cut-throat battle with Optus to rule Australian pay TV.
Foxtel then banked on Super 12 delivering a weekly audience to fill the hole left by the Super League. But it didn't.
Now rugby league has recaptured its audience, Australian Rules is so popular it has a dedicated channel. Without being able to leverage test matches, the value of rugby to Australian pay TV has diminished greatly.
And with Optus gone there is no alternative cash-rich broadcaster for Sanzar to turn to in Australia.
The NZRU is also trying to clarify its position with its broadcasting adviser - London based Octagon CSI. It has recently restructured amid marketplace speculation of financial instability.
The company was forced to withdraw its bid to secure the English premier league's broadcast rights in the Middle East when its parent company, Interpublic Group, refused to honour a guarantee. Octagon's motorsport division has lost millions of dollars and Octagon's value was written down by more than $US200 million ($320m) late last year. Chief executive Karl Bistany has been replaced in a major shake-up after 15 years with the company.
Bistany oversaw the NZRU account and was in New Zealand just a fortnight ago.
Moller confirmed the NZRU had sought clarification of what had happened at Octagon CSI and how it might be affected. The previous NZRU administration signed a multi-year deal with the company.
Moller confirmed that, with Bistany gone, it was reviewing the contract and if there might be an opportunity to exit.
"It's not clear-cut one way or the other, and furthermore we have to contemplate whether we want to do that," Moller said.
"We are in a mode of trying to find out what the situation is, what the impact on us is and what actions as a consequence we can take. That will dictate whether the current arrangement stays in place or something changes."
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,2924089a10295,00.html