The other big thing that has to be popping soon is the expected reset of the Fox media agreement. Imagine if the rumors of $7 million per school are real; imagine if that becomes reality.
gtmoBlue wrote:hmmm. Xudash.
Don't know where you "heard" those rumors you refer to, but that figure is a "lowball" number.The other big thing that has to be popping soon is the expected reset of the Fox media agreement. Imagine if the rumors of $7 million per school are real; imagine if that becomes reality.
kayako wrote:The contract is already in place for another 5 years. What does Fox gain by tearing it up and double the payout?
kayako wrote:The contract is already in place for another 5 years. What does Fox gain by tearing it up and double the payout?
gtmoBlue wrote:
Our current contract has each school earning approx $4.1 Million/year. Total contract was $500M/12 years ($41,666,666/10 schools).
In several previous looks at the financing, it was determined that those figures worked out to be approx $150K per game. $150K was a lowball
figure even back in the 2013-14 season, when the contract started.
Oh and we have upgraded potential content with the addition of the UConn Huskies into the mix.
gtmoBlue wrote:
It is likely the BE will double the per game values we currently receive.
kayako wrote:
The contract is already in place for another 5 years. What does Fox gain by tearing it up and double the payout?
Xudash wrote:
Was the contract “locked in place” for the original ten once the dust settled in 2013?
Xudash wrote:
Does it provide for a true-up in the event #11 and/or #12 are added?
The seven Catholic universities had privately voiced concerns that the Big East was changing to chase football cash; aware of the discontent, Fox last fall made clear its desire to talk to the group. The universities also knew that the terms of what essentially acted as a prenuptial agreement would let them leave the Big East as a unit, without paying exit fees, and make their own TV deal.
Fox won them over with a 12-year deal worth about $500 million, according to reports. But the contract could spike to $600 million if the conference grows to a dozen teams, according to two people briefed on the contract but not authorized to speak publicly about its terms. A number of universities are said to be candidates to join the new Big East, including Xavier, an Atlantic 10 member, and Creighton, of the Missouri Valley Conference.
The new Big East yesterday formally inked a 12-year, $500M contract with Fox Sports, a “sum that will rise" to $600M if, "as expected, the league expands to 12 members,” according to Richard Sandomir of the N.Y. TIMES. The Big East “will provide a lot of basketball for Fox Sports 1, with its regular season and tournament games.” Fox “probably got a bargain.” It “locked up the long-term rights to a new conference, with its storied name and some of its stalwart basketball colleges” for between $40-50M per year, “far less than the huge deals received by the Pac-12 and ACC” (N.Y. TIMES, 3/21).
In Providence, Kevin McNamara notes the deal would provide “roughly” $40M per year for the 10 schools. In N.Y., Anthony Sulla-Heffinger writes despite “rumors that the Big East would also look to add Dayton and St. Louis to its ranks, the conference will remain 10 teams through the 2013-14 season at the very least” (N.Y. POST, 3/21).
gtmoBlue wrote:
It is likely the BE will double the per game values we currently receive.
Ad revenue will plunge, and cable subscribers may balk at paying for nothing.
If students aren’t even able to walk across a quad to class, “how can you have a football game, a baseball game, a tennis match, whatever it happens to be? That’s a very difficult question.”
It’s one echoing throughout the ESPN operation these days. No major media company has bet more on college sports than ESPN. The company airs college games on 10 different channels, including the ABC broadcast network and its ESPN+ streaming service. It runs specific networks for the Southeastern and Atlantic Coast conferences and for the University of Texas. Last season more than half of all college football viewers tuned in to one of ESPN’s outlets.
ESPN, which declined to make any of its executives available for this article, said the games canceled so far have mostly involved those on its online channels, or those coming from conferences shared with other broadcasters such as Fox Corp., so the lost games on ESPN could be fewer than it seems, it said.
College football accounted for about $793 million in advertising at ESPN, ABC, and their related networks, estimates Standard Media Index, which tracks advertising spending. That’s almost four times as much as their closest rival, Fox.
ESPN’s cable networks could see ad revenue fall this year by 12%, or $320 million, says Scott Robson, an analyst for S&P Global Market Intelligence. Much of that could come from college sports. “We’re going to see similar declines at the rest of the programmers in this quarter and the current quarter,” he says. “It’s a big deal.”
Throughout the pandemic, cable TV companies have continued to collect monthly bills from customers and remit programming fees to the sports networks, even though live sports have been off the air. If ESPN and its sister channels can’t deliver the contracted hours of live sports, cable operators could ask for some of that money back.
Worse, cable customers, fed up with high monthly fees, may downsize to lower-priced TV packages or cancel service entirely. Those pay-TV subscriber fees are a big number for Disney: almost $10 billion from ESPN-related channels alone last year, or three times what its networks bring in from advertising. A recent UBS Securities survey found 14% of cable subscribers would likely cancel the service if college football didn’t happen.
“This could accelerate cord-cutting,” says Doug Perlman, who consults with leagues over media deals at his company, Sports Media Advisors LLC. “There will be more people who say, ‘There’s no college football. It’s time for me to move on.’ ”
Fox Corp. on Tuesday reported total sales of $2.42 billion last quarter, in line with expectations, down slightly (4%) from a year ago but off $1 billion from the previous three months as COVID-19 hit advertising. The company that owns Fox News, Fox Sports, Fox Entertainment and the Fox Television Stations had warned a major squeeze was coming with stations expected to be down 50%.
Cable Network Programming reported quarterly segment revenues of $1.27 billion, a decrease of $28 million or 2% from the amount reported in the prior year quarter, as lower advertising and other revenues were partially offset by higher affiliate revenues. Advertising revenues decreased $22 million or 8%, primarily due to the postponement of live events at FS1 as a result of COVID-19, partially offset by higher advertising revenues at Fox News Media. Other revenues decreased $15 million or 31%, primarily due to lower revenues at Fox Sports as a result of COVID-19.
adoraz wrote:
Fox pretty much has to give the Big East something more these next 5 years if they want to keep us.
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