• Join ccmfans.net

    ccmfans.net is the Central Coast Mariners fan community, and was formed in 2004, so basically the beginning of time for the Mariners. Things have changed a lot over the years, but one thing has remained constant and that is our love of the Mariners. People come and go, some like to post a lot and others just like to read. It's up to you how you participate in the community!

    If you want to get rid of this message, simply click on Join Now or head over to https://www.ccmfans.net/community/register/ to join the community! It only takes a few minutes, and joining will let you post your thoughts and opinions on all things Mariners, Football, and whatever else pops into your mind. If posting is not your thing, you can interact in other ways, including voting on polls, and unlock options only available to community members.

    ccmfans.net is not only for Mariners fans either. Most of us are bonded by our support for the Mariners, but if you are a fan of another club (except the Scum, come on, we need some standards), feel free to join and get into some banter.

New Media Deal

midfielder

Well-Known Member
Could not find a thread just for media deals... if there is please move this post to it..

With all the talk of the new 80 million dollars etc and FTA ...

Channel 7 is reported in the smh today to be interested ... is it time to bury the hatchet ... hhhmmmmm I remember the email .... do we do so without iron clad guarantees ..

Any-ways from the SHM...


Channel Seven confirms interest in broadcasting A-League and Socceroos

http://www.smh.com.au/sport/soccer/...ng-aleague-and-socceroos-20150318-1m21ak.html

Channel Seven have indicated their interest in purchasing the TV rights for Australian soccerwith the Socceroos' games highlighted by their managing director as a major drawcard.

Lewis Martin, managing director of Channel Seven in Melbourne, gave a major hint that the network will negotiation with Football Federation Australia to purchase the rights of the league and international games and highlighted the growth of the game and the popularity of the Socceroos.

The current TV deal shared between Fox Sports and SBS is set to expire in 2017 and Football Federation Australia is understood to be in the early stages of negotiations with other parties over a new broadcast deal.

The FFA is eager to get the A-League and international fixtures on a major network as part of the next TV deal to further soccer'spush into the mainstream of Australian sport consumption. It is hoped the next deal will come close to doubling the current one which could land the governing body up to $80 million each year, providing clubs with an annual cheque of approximately $5 million each season.

Similar to the current package, the A-League is set to be bundled to a yet-to-be determined extent with Socceroos' international fixtures in the FFA's pitch to potential broadcast partners. Speaking at the Money In Sport conference in Melbourne, Martin praised the Socceroos' brand and popularity and confirmed the network's interest in televising Socceroos' fixtures.

"We're going to be there when the business case supports it but I have to tell you that nothing captivates a nation like the green and gold jersey of the Socceroos," Martin said.

Seven has dipped into the soccer market recently having broadcast the A-League All Stars' events as well as Melbourne Victory's friendly match against Liverpool at the MCG in 2013, which drew a crowd of 95,000. The network previously held the rights to the top tier of Australian domestic soccer when they broadcast the National Soccer League from 1998 until 2002. Their past with the NSL is often a sore point for fans as games were televised on delay late at night, if at all, and mostly on their ill-fated Pay TV station C7 Sport.

However, it appears the network is eager to explore purchasing the rights for the game once again given the enormous rise in popularity since the birth of the A-League in 2005.

"For us it comes down to the discipline of the rights being required and the return we can get, " Martin said. "We all know about the growth of football in this country and the participation rates."
 

VicMariner

Well-Known Member
Makes me nervous.
Will they telecast ad free?
What commentary team will they have?
Will games be live or punted to late night?

And the big question...will viewer numbers increase?
 

midfielder

Well-Known Member
Seems 10 are interested as well..

http://www.smh.com.au/sport/soccer/...-aleague-socceroos-games-20150319-1m32pm.html

Ten's head of sport David Barham says the network is interested in securing the broadcast rights for the A-League - as long as they come at the right price.

The declaration comes in the wake of a Fairfax Media report that soccer's spiritual broadcasting home, SBS, was planning to cut ties with the sport after a celebrated 35-year association.

SBS are believed to be willing to sell off the final two years of their A-League commitments and Football Federation Australia are understood to favour a partnership between Ten and Fox Sports for the 2015-16 and 2016-17 seasons.

Barham said Ten's interest in soccer went beyond the A-League and that they were also keen to win the rights to the FIFA World Cup - which SBS is reportedly also willing to on-sell, UEFA Champions League - which will be up for grabs in two months - and Socceroos matches.

"We'd definitely be able to make a bid for them, no problem," Barham said.

"But ... you've got to see the deal for what it's for and it all comes down to money and all those sort of things."

The acquisition of the Big Bash League rights has been a resounding success for both Ten and cricket in the last few years and FFA would undoubtedly hope a similar union would help boost the A-League's national profile.

"It's got to be value for money, that's all," Barham said.

"We've got to make sure that the value works for our company, that's all."

Barham insisted soccer would forever be a "sport with potential" if it could not find a free-to-air television partner that made it a priority.

With the BBL only going for six weeks during the summer, Barham said the A-League would give his network a steadier stream of sport content during that time of the year.

And Barham didn't stop there, boldly declaring that his network was interested in all sporting rights if they stacked up financially.

Already boasting a sport war chest that includes the BBL, Formula One, netball, V8s and Wallabies Tests, Barham said Ten wanted another major football code to complement it.

"Where it comes down to is which is better value – A-League, AFL or NRL," he said.
 

midfielder

Well-Known Member
Do SBS have the shits re FFA choosing ABC for the Asian Cup ... but if this article is correct SBS want out of Football all together..

http://www.smh.com.au/sport/soccer/...ock-programming-upheaval-20150318-1m28og.html

Copied in part ...

Sebastian Hassett
Published: March 18, 2015 - 11:00PM

The spiritual home of football on Australian television, SBS, is in advanced plans to cut ties with the sport as part of a dramatic programming overhaul.

While the decision has not been finalised, Fairfax Media understand the network's content division recently concluded that SBS's 35-year relationship with football – among Australian television's most iconic – should be scaled back dramatically.

The government broadcaster has the rights to show the FIFA World Cup, the UEFA Champions League and one A-League match on free-to-air television each Friday night.

Tentative discussions have been held with other free-to-air broadcasters about offloading their A-League commitments for the next two seasons. SBS and Fox Sports signed a four-year, $160 million agreement to share the rights until 2017. On Wednesday Channel 7 indicated they would be interested in televising Socceroos matches when the current agreement with SBS and Fox Sports runs out in 2017.
 

midfielder

Well-Known Member
What a last few weeks its been... FFA were saying we have the ability to break the SBS contract because they have not delivered the TV ratings,,, then FFA say 9 & 7 are interested ... then give the rights to the Asian Cup to the ABC ... then 7 says we would look at buying rights..

In the background SBS ratings are falling and and and and and Trustfull Jones [i.e. Tony] cuts funding to SBS...

SBS go OK take and walk away...

Since Les Murry left SBS a fair bit gas changed..
 

dibo

Well-Known Member
The new government slashing budgets is probably a big chunk of SBS's motivation.
 

nearlyyellow

Well-Known Member
Middy, mate, you read (subscribe?) to AdNews? In another life of mine it was one of those "periodicals" that was on the distribution list, you had to initial the distribution list as having read it (hard copy of course in those days). Questions would be asked on content at the next Management Meeting. heh heh ;)
 

dibo

Well-Known Member
In the case of someone like Hyundai, try to draw additional spots (and money) into the bargain.
 

midfielder

Well-Known Member
Wonders aloud who I would prefer 7 or 9 ...

http://www.news.com.au/sport/footba...a-league-matches/story-fnk9a3dc-1227364095992

CHANNEL Nine wants to screen Saturday night A-League games and go head-to-head with the AFL on Seven.

Nine is favourite to take over SBS’s A-League rights as Seven’s interest is complicated by its AFL contract, with negotiations for the next deal already kicking off within a fortnight _ the current AFL deal expires at the end of 2016.

Despite an appetite for more live sports and a view that the A-League provides a cheap entry point, sources have indicated that Seven has been warned against putting live A-League games up against its Friday or Saturday night AFL coverage by the AFL.

Nine’s NRL broadcasts are restricted to Friday nights and Sunday afternoons, leaving a gap on Saturday nights.

But the kingmaker remains Fox Sports chief executive Patrick Delany, who effectively has to rubberstamp any movement on A-League rights.

Fox Sports pay 75 per cent of the current $40m-a-year deal _ which was due to expire in 2017 but has come back on the table with SBS’s desire to offload the A-League _ plus the Saturday night slot is the match of the round, and includes the Melbourne and Sydney derbys.

Fox have co-production deals with Seven and Nine for the AFL and NRL.

It’s believed that talks have centred around spreading the games between the FTA’s main and secondary channels.




David Carney calls for Newcastle Jets to change coach
external




Channel 10, which showed strongest interest when the latest deal was signed, may not be in a position to bid unless Foxtel’s mooted $85m injection occurs by the end of June.

Delay and FTA network heavyweights were guests at last Sunday’s A-League grand final at AAMI Park, and Bruce McWilliam (Seven, commercial director), Ian Paterson (GTV, managing director) and David Barham (Ten, head of sport) were all acknowledged by FFA chief executive David Gallop at a pre-game function.

Seven “maintained a polite silence on TV rights as always” when contacted by the Herald Sun, while Nine said it was “premature” to make any comment.

Seven is broadcasting the upcoming visits of English giants Chelsea and Tottenham, while Nine will show July’s International Champions Cup (ICC) featuring Real Madrid, Manchester City and Roma plus the Liverpool games.

Speaking before the A-League grand final, Gallop admitted that a deal was some way off despite clear interest.

“We’re in the second year of a four-year deal so if there was to be any change it would require everyone to agree,’’ Gallop said.

“We do have significant interest from commercial networks. We have seen a couple dip their toe in the water successfully with some of the overseas club visits, so all of that augurs well for the future.

“At this stage it’s encouraging to have that interest, but there’s nothing concrete in place.’’

The grand final drew a record FTA audience for an A-League game on SBS, with an average audience of 442,000 watching on a one-hour delay, while a further 264,000 watched it live on Fox Sports, the fourth-highest A-League audience.
 

dibo

Well-Known Member
Wonders aloud

You're not "wondering aloud". You're writing, and implicitly writing in the third person, which is just a bit odd.

Wonders aloud who I would prefer 7 or 9 ...

http://www.news.com.au/sport/footba...a-league-matches/story-fnk9a3dc-1227364095992

CHANNEL Nine wants to screen Saturday night A-League games and go head-to-head with the AFL on Seven.

Nine is favourite to take over SBS’s A-League rights as Seven’s interest is complicated by its AFL contract, with negotiations for the next deal already kicking off within a fortnight _ the current AFL deal expires at the end of 2016.

Despite an appetite for more live sports and a view that the A-League provides a cheap entry point, sources have indicated that Seven has been warned against putting live A-League games up against its Friday or Saturday night AFL coverage by the AFL.

Nine’s NRL broadcasts are restricted to Friday nights and Sunday afternoons, leaving a gap on Saturday nights.

But the kingmaker remains Fox Sports chief executive Patrick Delany, who effectively has to rubberstamp any movement on A-League rights.

Fox Sports pay 75 per cent of the current $40m-a-year deal _ which was due to expire in 2017 but has come back on the table with SBS’s desire to offload the A-League _ plus the Saturday night slot is the match of the round, and includes the Melbourne and Sydney derbys.

Fox have co-production deals with Seven and Nine for the AFL and NRL.

It’s believed that talks have centred around spreading the games between the FTA’s main and secondary channels.

David Carney calls for Newcastle Jets to change coach
external


Channel 10, which showed strongest interest when the latest deal was signed, may not be in a position to bid unless Foxtel’s mooted $85m injection occurs by the end of June.

Delay and FTA network heavyweights were guests at last Sunday’s A-League grand final at AAMI Park, and Bruce McWilliam (Seven, commercial director), Ian Paterson (GTV, managing director) and David Barham (Ten, head of sport) were all acknowledged by FFA chief executive David Gallop at a pre-game function.

Seven “maintained a polite silence on TV rights as always” when contacted by the Herald Sun, while Nine said it was “premature” to make any comment.

Seven is broadcasting the upcoming visits of English giants Chelsea and Tottenham, while Nine will show July’s International Champions Cup (ICC) featuring Real Madrid, Manchester City and Roma plus the Liverpool games.

Speaking before the A-League grand final, Gallop admitted that a deal was some way off despite clear interest.

“We’re in the second year of a four-year deal so if there was to be any change it would require everyone to agree,’’ Gallop said.

“We do have significant interest from commercial networks. We have seen a couple dip their toe in the water successfully with some of the overseas club visits, so all of that augurs well for the future.

“At this stage it’s encouraging to have that interest, but there’s nothing concrete in place.’’

The grand final drew a record FTA audience for an A-League game on SBS, with an average audience of 442,000 watching on a one-hour delay, while a further 264,000 watched it live on Fox Sports, the fourth-highest A-League audience.

Nine is the channel with programming room - Saturdays are clear in winter between Friday night and Sunday arvo NRL broadcasts and in summer either after test cricket or between ODIs on Friday and Sunday (they don't do Saturday/Sunday ODI double headers anymore).

They're also the most watched channel, and they have a desire to have a product that competes with Saturday night AFL broadcasts in winter and tennis in summer.

What's more, if they want the Saturday games (which generally means the blockbusters and derbies that are typically scheduled for that Saturday prime-time slot) they're going to have to pony up some serious dosh to Fox, and of the commercial broadcasters it's likely only they have both the programming and financial capacity to take this on.

What would be pretty awesome would be if Ten got their capital injection from Fox and said they want a slice too, and cut a deal for the Friday night games...
 

midfielder

Well-Known Member
My choice would be in this order 10 / 9 / 7 ...

On ten we are the main sport whereas on 7 its AFL and 9 its NRL... also the NRL has indicated about two weeks back it wanted to move its Monday night game to Saturday night and be on FTA on Saturday night...

10 IMO has the age demographic with its generally younger audience and shows like the Project to come off are more suited to the A-League than ACA ...

Having said that the 9 news is always over a million and on say Saturday night the 9 news finished and the Football show started ... it would be a huge lead in...

As for 7 and the AFL ... when I read the following in the article it screamed AFL...

an appetite for more live sports and a view that the A-League provides a cheap entry point, sources have indicated that Seven has been warned against putting live A-League games up against its Friday or Saturday night AFL coverage by the AFL.

Feel like saying to all those doom and gloom folk in Hals early years ..... go sit on it ... or maybe something stronger...
 

Big Al

Well-Known Member
Don't forget the big bash on 10 over summer. Has been very successful and they wont put the a league ahead of it.
The big bash would be up against the Christmas period where we go a couple games mid week.
Ten could put it on channel one but is that any better than sbs
 

midfielder

Well-Known Member
Watched TWG yesterday ... gave me the impression SBS were about to loose the broadcast rights ... lots of negative things said about the A-League and FFA ... not totally but similar to Hal 1 ...

Hope I am wrong about SBS and if they loose the broadcast rights they don't do the big sulk again...
 

midfielder

Well-Known Member
From the Financial review today... this should keep SBS happy as well...

Meanwhile, FFA is understood to be attempting to engineer a deal with Nine Entertainment Co for a portion of the A-League broadcast rights from the 2015-16 season onwards.

The deal, which could involve Nine gaining first and last rights for the next A-League broadcast contract, would see Nine taking over the SBS portion of the current four-year $160 million contact.

Nine would simulcast a Saturday night game, instead of the Friday night game SBS has been showing, with Fox Sports Australia, though SBS would continue to show Socceroos matches on delay. SBS had rights to the next two World Cups, the 2018 event in Russia and 2022 in Qatar.

The deal is predicated on Fox Sports allowing the switch, given it is paying the bulk of the current rights deal that is halfway through its four-year contract. Fox may be reluctant to give up rights until the current deal expires in two seasons.

http://www.afr.com/business/sport/n...stralia-revenue-boost-20150524-gh6w8c?stb=twt
 

dibo

Well-Known Member
Watched TWG yesterday ... gave me the impression SBS were about to loose the broadcast rights ... lots of negative things said about the A-League and FFA ... not totally but similar to Hal 1 ...

Hope I am wrong about SBS and if they loose the broadcast rights they don't do the big sulk again...
The bitters are back.
 

Online statistics

Members online
38
Guests online
469
Total visitors
507

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
6,731
Messages
381,019
Members
2,716
Latest member
ForzaFred
Top