that would be good negotiating
Can anyone clarify something for me on the simulcasting issue...
There seems a misconception of who controls the simulcasting rights as well. Arent 9 meant to get a preset reduction of $25m per year, the premium payed by Fox instead going to the ARLC.
the media keep saying that it would be thrashed out between 9 and News. And i reading this clause wrong or are they??
the figure I originally came up with months back looks more & more like being very close to the mark.
2177 Billion for 5 years .. everything included
the largest dollar per annum media rights deal in the nation
Mr Smith was/is a genius
its a shame hes been lost to our game ..
The karma of Optus helping putting the screws into news about some delicious.
Also how did he writes the word "light" when he meant to use the word "last"? He's done it twice!
I'm pretty confident we'll get over $2 billion. More even if a ninth game is added.
How so? All I see from all the media outlets is a figure around $1.75-1.9 Billion, for everything.
I think people are underestimating Optus a bit here. They've confirmed interest and have been increasing their content offerings significantly via streaming services over the past few years. This year they posted close to a $1bn in profits, while News Corp posted $149 mill loss.
Over all revenues are another story, but it means Optus have a bit of cash to throw around and will be able to borrow pretty cheaply. Getting the NRL would massively improve their Australian media footprint - if they followed it by grabbing Super Rugby, then Fox would have very little left to offer footy fans.
From a strategic standpoint it would make sense for Optus to be willing to pay overs to get the NRL rights - the churn it would lead to over at Fox would be considerable and the majority would migrate direct to Optus.
Their goal is to be a diversified media & communications platform - phone, internet, entertainment etc. To do that they need big brands. In terms of sport in Australia there's only a couple that fit the bill and at the moment really only one that's in an auction phase.
Remember it was only a few weeks ago that News Corp were saying the NRL would get next to nothing from Fox, $1.3 to $1.4 billion for the deal max.
If the NRL signed a deal where everything (F2A, Pay TV, NZ, Simulcasting, Streaming, Sponsorship etc) came in at the $1.8 billion price and we'd only have 3 F2A games & a crappy 6pm Friday slot -- believe me -- I'll be the first to complain.
But remember - the NRL have had that offer from Fox for 2 weeks now. They could have pushed to get that resolved already. Don't forget - they sorted out & signed the 9 offer in a day.
The NRL are holding out for better terms - they think they can do better than that in terms of price and coverage. Don't be too eager to rule things out.
Edit: I'll add I think those estimates undervalue the NZ price too. I reckon they need to add another $30-50million+ easy.
Obviously they are holding out, but there in lies the problem, they are being significantly low balled and unless something major happens to change that, I think the rights will go up slightly by about $100-200m which would push it at best to $1.9B for everything and the loss of Saturday FTA coverage.
The only way around this is for Optus to really go hard, unlikely, and offer around $1B for just the remaining 4 games. I can't see them or anyone else doing this, can you?
I can.
You have to look at what Optus just did with the EPL and think about their rationale. They paid massive overs - twice what Fox were pitching - because its a market building strategic investment. They didn't have the rights, so they needed to be sure they'd get them and were willing to provide the outlay for their broader plan.
With their profits in such healthy territory, a $1bn offer for a property like the NRL would be a rationale outlay, given it's a property currently owned by another provider. Having it would enable them to become a genuine pay TV player again, and with their profits already strong, it would be worth paying overs to ensure they steal it from Fox, as the long term benefits would be a massive broadening of its consumer base.
Well I certainly hope your right and that I am proven totally wrong, but I am finding it very hard to see it going that way.
Besides, it's RL we are talking about, we have always been f**ked over.
Excellent postThe NRL is a very different beast now to what it was even 10 years ago. Smith has done a heck of a job into turning it into a real corporate powerhouse.
I have a friend who works there who is originally from Melbourne, and she told me that the change in the place has been pretty dramatic over the past few years and that it's really surprised her just how much every structure they have in terms of corporate governance has improved things.
The tweet put out by the NRL's new media account points to this in my view. Their very cool and collected message that they were in no rush and only care about the best interests of the game is frankly not a message we'd have had out of the NRL in the early 00s.