Below is a boring spreadsheet illustration of what we would get or at least how the numbers work.
The cameraman is the only fixed cost I can think of and I pulled the value of £500
for illustration purposes only. This figure might include a contribution towards technicians in the background to make sure things are working.
I am sure Sky or BT who provides the broadband services will effectively be charging an approximate fee per GB download and again the £1 per fan is pulled out of the air.
View attachment 41837
^where it says Net Profit, this could easily say Net Revenue
What I am trying to show is that the more fans who pay for the service, the club will receive a higher percentage of the £10.
On face value the EFL is taking 30% profit, BUT on the basis of the blurb saying we will get
at least 70% then possibly the EFL is capping itself as to how much profit it will take. So for example
if the EFL capped their profit at £5000 per club, then at 3000 fans we would get £21500 / 26500 which works out an average of around 81% net revenue.
I doubt the EFL will reveal the finer points of how they will calculate what we get. What is clear is that we probably aren't going to be getting the £7 per subscription that an average fan who don't understand the difference between gross and net will think we'll get.