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Next TV rights deal

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Yeah perhaps they could just put a team wherever and pump 20 million a year into it with a plan for success in 50 years.
And still no guarantee of success and in the meantime it would bust the NRL.
Yes i think Perth should have a NRL team and yes i think it would be a success given time.
 

Perth Red

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69,878
Yeah perhaps they could just put a team wherever and pump 20 million a year into it with a plan for success in 50 years.

Or perhaps they can continue to do sweet fa and in 50 years time the game will still be its small insular self as now.
 

Tigers1986

Juniors
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1,324
Keep those thieves at beIN far away from NRL. They've already monopolised European football (save for the EPL) and charge ridiculous prices for average quality telecasts.
 

insert.pause

First Grade
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6,462
Keep those thieves at beIN far away from NRL. They've already monopolised European football (save for the EPL) and charge ridiculous prices for average quality telecasts.

It's not about giving them the rights, it's getting them to bid against fox sports to keep them honest. Anyway, a day after NRL announced deal with Nine, Bein Sport Aus tweeted saying "At this stage they would not be bidding for NRL paytv rights", that was before news came out saying they were interested, so maybe things changed.
 

CC_Roosters

First Grade
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5,221
What Australia really needs is a BT sport (UK) type domestic payTV competitor to keep fox honest. BT have beaten sky to several EPL packages, champions league and other key sports in recent years resulting in bidding wars
 

insert.pause

First Grade
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6,462
What Australia really needs is a BT sport (UK) type domestic payTV competitor to keep fox honest. BT have beaten sky to several EPL packages, champions league and other key sports in recent years resulting in bidding wars

Pity Telstra own half of Foxtel, has basically the same roots as BT.
 

insert.pause

First Grade
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6,462
He lists his teams as Liverpool, Ireland & Waratahs - don't see an NRL team there.
You don't have to be an NRL fan to see value in the rights, he has been retweeting stories about the NRL rights negotiations with fox, doubt it means anything other than industry interest though.

Would be huge if the NRL could generate some genuine bidding tension.
 

undertaker

Coach
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10,998
Regarding the UK component of the NRL tv rights deal (selling rights to broadcasters in the UK), it's interesting to note that BT Sports have broken Sky Sports monopoly on their exclusive cricket coverage (which they've held in the UK since 2006), and will be broadcasting the 2017/18 Ashes series in Australia, all Australian international fixtures from next year (2016/17), and will be a serious contender for the cricket rights in UK when the current contract expires in 2019:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cr...-series-in-Australia-in-huge-blow-to-Sky.html

Isn't Premier Sports the current rightholders of the NRL in UK (and they also had the PayTV rights component of the 2013 RLWC)? Will be interesting to see how much BT Sports are willing to chip in for the NRL.
 

whall15

Coach
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15,871
NRL tells clubs Fox Sports can be replaced by ‘new players’
THE AUSTRALIANSEPTEMBER 2, 2015 12:00AM
Stuart Honeysett

NRL chief executive Dave Smith. Picture: Britta Campion
The NRL’s battle with Fox Sports over the next broadcast rights deal could intensify after club chief executives were told yesterday the code could go with a non-traditional partner for its digital media rights in a worst-case scenario.

Most of the game’s chief executives were at Rugby League Central in Sydney yesterday for a two-day conference to discuss a range of issues confronting the code, including digital media rights and third-party agreements.

“The gist of it was that if you control the content then you have the product that drives everything,’’ one source told The Australian.

“No one’s saying that they’re going to do it, but the presentation showed that in a few years time there will be these new players coming into the market, and they’re other platforms that you can sell viewing information, interviews, everything.

“They were just saying you’re well placed if they (Fox Sports) don’t come up with the money. There will be other options.’’

The NRL recently signed a $925 million deal with free-to-air broadcaster Channel Nine for the next broadcast rights deal starting in 2018.

But it is still to negotiate with Fox Sports and naming sponsor Telstra over the remaining content and digital rights.

It was later reported that NRL chief executive Dave Smith could have put his $1.7 billion target in jeopardy with Fox Sports and Telstra both reportedly unhappy at being left out of the loop in the negotiations with Nine.

Smith however has remained confident with the way he has handled talks and believes Fox Sports will have little choice but to remain loyal as it needs content — especially with more providers to emerge before the next deal ends in 2017.

The fractured relationship between the NRL and its broadcast partners was highlighted when News Corp executive chairman Rupert Murdoch appeared at the AFL’s $2.5 billion broadcast rights deal to declare it the premium code in the country.

Nine has secured four free-to-air NRL games in the coveted time slots from Thursday to Sunday plus non-exclusive streaming rights while Fox has lost its two best time slots for the week — Saturday night and Monday night.

The NRL is still banking on Fox Sports to pay $750m to $850m for four exclusive games and the right to simulcast Nine’s matches but negotiations have stalled with reports the pay-TV operator believes the games it is expected to bid for have been severely devalued.

The NRL organised yesterday for former officials from the AFL and Cricket Australia to make a presentation which showed that the game had a number of options to sell its digital media rights.

These included selling the whole package or half of it to existing partners, or forming a joint venture with different providers.

The same two officials also addressed the club chairmen on the issue at a meeting that was held in Melbourne after the second State of Origin game in June.

The presentation also included examples from US sports including Major League Baseball, the National Football League and even professional wrestling and how they have handled their digital media rights and where the growth areas have been.

It is believed while the officials told club bosses they were in a strong position to grow the value of their digital media rights, they needed to work hard now if they wanted to achieve maximum value for them with a non-traditional partner.

The value of the broadcast deal is important to all clubs, who are sweating on a sizeable increase in club grants when the new deal kicks in for 2018. It is believed clubs will receive a share in a $50 million advance from Nine next year.

The focus at the conference today will switch to players’ third-party agreements which have become a bone of contention and a source of confusion in the NRL.

http://theaustralian.com.au/sport/n...508347942?sv=780d953067860c0f5243d0d10d327664
 

Perth Red

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69,878
Why does the nrl need a $50mill advance? Surely with all the money in the last deal it doesn't need to be spending the next deals money already?
 

Hello, I'm The Doctor

First Grade
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9,124
Why does the nrl need a $50mill advance? Surely with all the money in the last deal it doesn't need to be spending the next deals money already?

Good god, you bitch about everything dont you....

Money devalues over time (lost opportunity to invest), so for the ARLC to successfully negotiate a contract that frontloads the payments is a good thing.
 

RoosTah

Juniors
Messages
2,257
A deal will be finalised soon & will be close to what people expected all along.

To be honest I'd hope the NRL bides its time a little more really... they shouldn't be aiming for "close," they should be after better.
 

docbrown

Coach
Messages
11,842
Wrote a longer message but lost it when computer played up. Don't have time to rewrite it all now.

The gist is Telstra are trying to bring all the parties together to get it sorted as NRL won't sell streaming rights unless its done simultaneously with pay TV rights.
 
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