Premier League Television Rights Bid Complete | Vital Football

Premier League Television Rights Bid Complete

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Premier League TV rights: Five of seven live packages sold for £4.464bn
1 hour ago From the sectionPremier League 228
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The number of live matches televised in the Premier League will rise from 168 to 200
The number of live televised Premier League matches will rise from 168 to 200 from the 2019-2020 season
The rights to show Premier League games from 2019-2022 have been sold for £4.464bn - with two live packages still to be sold.

Sky Sports have won the rights to four tranches - 128 live matches - while BT Sport have one, comprising 32 games.

The Premier League's last deal, agreed in 2015 and running until 2019, was worth £5.14bn.

"To have achieved this investment with two packages remaining to sell is testament to the excellent football competition delivered by the clubs," executive chairman Richard Scudamore said.

Sky will have first choice of every weekend match and will also show Saturday night fixtures (19:45) for the first time.

BT will show Saturday lunchtime fixtures from August 2019 and have said they will pay £295m per season - £9.22m per match, up from £7.6m - across the three years.

That means Sky have committed to £3.579bn - or £9.3m per game, down from £10.8m in the current deal.

In 2015, Sky handed over £4.176bn for 126 fixtures each season - including the first Friday evening games and both Sunday packages - and BT paid a total of £960m for 42 matches.

Who has won what?
The Premier League's bid process this time around comprised 200 live matches a season, an increase from the 168 for which broadcasters bid in 2015.

The broadcasters bid on seven packages of fixtures - five of which contain 32 matches a season and two 20 matches.

What are the packages?
Package A - won by BT 32 matches on Saturdays at 12:30
Package B - won by Sky Sports 32 matches on Saturdays at 17:30
Package C - won by Sky Sports 24 matches on Sundays at 14:00 and eight matches on Saturdays at 19:45
Package D - won by Sky Sports 32 matches on Sundays at 16:30
Package E - won by Sky Sports 24 matches on Mondays at 20:00 or Fridays at 19:30/20:00 and eight matches on Sundays at 14:00
Package F - to be decided 20 matches from one Bank Holiday and one midweek fixture programme
Package G - to be decided 20 matches from two midweek fixture programmes
Other changes for the 2019-2022 deal include eight individual games shown live in a 'prime-time' Saturday night slot, three complete rounds of 10 midweek matches all shown live, and one set of bank holiday games.

The new UK deal, however, does not include revenue for selling rights overseas. That deal is not completed on one set day and is instead finalised region by region, with the revenue from that expected to rise from around the £3bn it delivered last time around.

What about the other two packages?
Scudamore added in a statement on Tuesday that the Premier League would continue the sales process "to deliver the best possible outcome for the remaining packages of rights".

BT have said they "will continue to engage" with the Premier League over the final two packages of midweek and bank holiday matches, but there is no indication about Sky's interest.

However, given any broadcaster is limited to a total of 148 matches, they can only win one of the two packages.

There has been speculation that Amazon, Facebook, Netflix or Twitter would bid for the first time and break the Sky-BT duopoly.

Manchester United executive vice-chairman Ed Woodward was among those predicting one of the American tech giants would enter the market.

Amazon was seen as a notable threat as it has already made an impact by purchasing UK rights to the US Open tennis tournament, while also securing ATP Tour tennis rights.

Facebook has also made inroads into sporting markets in broadcasting the ICC's Champions Trophy cricket final in June and working with Fox Sports to stream a number of Uefa Champions League games.

Biggest TV deals
Competition Annual cost Total cost Duration
NFL (American football) $4.95bn (£3.24bn) $39.6bn (£25.95bn) 8 years (2014-22)
NBA (basketball) $2.6bn (£1.7bn) $24bn (£15.73bn) 9 years (2016-25)
MLB (baseball) $1.55bn (£1.02bn) $12.4bn (£8.13bn) 8 years (2014-21)
Premier League £1.7bn £5.14bn 3 years (2016-19)
Analysis
BBC sports editor Dan Roan

For now, the boom years appear to be over when it comes to the Premier League's domestic TV rights.

As predicted, the threat of a tech giant providing competition for the main packages of rights did not materialise, and the recent content-sharing agreement between Sky and BT seems to have dampened a fierce rivalry that drove the remarkable 70% increases in the past two deals.

Both broadcasters are set to pay significantly less than they did for the current £5.1bn deal. And even though Amazon may still be sniffing around, it seems the two remaining packages are unsold because the reserve prices have not been reached. If so, the overall value of the rights looks set to fall.

The blow will be softened by overseas rights, which look set to rise sharply in value and which will continue to drive the richest league in the world's phenomenal commercial success. But it may mean the bigger clubs renew their efforts to claim more of the spoils.

What is certain is that after another record transfer window in which Alexis Sanchez secured a reported £600,000-a-week move to Manchester United, these rights will still renew debate about the influence of TV money, whether enough of it is reaching the grassroots of the game, and whether too much is ending up in the pockets of agents.

http://www.bbc.com/sport/football/43002985
 
The fact that the fees paid have levelled off would appear to indicate sanity is beginning to return........

 
80deg16minW - 13/2/2018 22:50

The fact that the fees paid have levelled off would appear to indicate sanity is beginning to return........

No Apple, No Amazon, No Netflix et al - just as I said it wouldn't be....

The fees had to level off once BT made it clear they couldn't or wouldn't afford more...

Clubs knew it and are already adjusting - except one or two like the red bin dippers where I think their American owners have lost their marbles.
 
There are still the international distribution rights. Might be a better testing ground for the streamers. Although I can’t see NBC giving up anything.

Perhaps the PL is afraid of the streamers and what they will do to the structure. Finger in the dyke.
 
80deg16minW - 14/2/2018 12:55

There are still the international distribution rights. Might be a better testing ground for the streamers. Although I can’t see NBC giving up anything.

Perhaps the PL is afraid of the streamers and what they will do to the structure. Finger in the dyke.

As an aside, what do you reckon of the 'Amazon' stadium or even the Amazon Prime stadium....? :10:
 
Spursex - 14/2/2018 13:08

80deg16minW - 14/2/2018 12:55

There are still the international distribution rights. Might be a better testing ground for the streamers. Although I can’t see NBC giving up anything.

Perhaps the PL is afraid of the streamers and what they will do to the structure. Finger in the dyke.

As an aside, what do you reckon of the 'Amazon' stadium or even the Amazon Prime stadium....? :10:

Given the tech involved in the stadium it wouldn’t surprise me at all. Beer delivered by drone with a short skirt?