Ninth game worth $100m Jon Ralph and Michael Warner
Herald Sun
June 24, 2010 TELEVISION network chiefs are refusing to give up on Monday night football - declaring the timeslot could make the AFL $100 million richer.
Rivals Channel 9 and Foxtel are pushing hard for a regular Monday night fixture as the TV rights war hots up.
Do you think Andrew Demetriou is doing a good job? Have your say in the Footy Fans Survey and you could win Grand Final tickets.
A senior station executive told the Herald Sun the timeslot could add another $100 million to the next five-year deal from 2012-16 - to edge the AFL tantalisingly closer to its desired $1 billion pay day.
And at a business lunch last week, Nine chief Jeff Browne admitted it was ultimately "the size of the cheque that counts".
He said that with the network's investment in rugby league, a foray back into AFL "needs to make sense" financially.
AFL chief operating officer Gillon McLachlan appeared to rule out regular Monday night football during an interview early this year.
But the right offer could change the league's mind.
Full-blown negotiations remain stalled because of a delay in the release of a crucial Rudd Government report detailing changes to Australia's strict anti-siphoning laws.
The laws determine which sports are protected for free-to-air stations.
The AFL and Foxtel have been lobbying for new legislation to allow pay-TV stations to bid directly for at least four home-and-away matches a round.
There are fears the Government will hold off the anti-siphoning announcement until after the federal election - due towards the end of the year - but AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou is keen to kick-start negotiations.
Demetriou this month visited the networks without his key lieutenants, an indication he wants the ball rolling.
In previous TV rights negotiations the AFL has given successful bidders at least a full season to prepare for the contract, but the delay in Canberra may alter the timeframe.
Tensions surrounding the high-stakes bid were on display at this month's AFL Hall of Fame dinner at Crown, where a top league administrator clashed publicly with a leading TV executive on the issue.
As the fight for footy rights heats up, the Herald Sun can reveal:
MONDAY night remains the preferred option for at least two networks for footy's ninth game.
THE league is keener on a 4pm Saturday twilight game.
LIVE football will almost certainly be enshrined as a condition for the broadcasting of many games, allowing gambling firms such as Tabcorp and Betfair to promote in-play odds.
CURRENT rights holders Seven and Ten will again bid together, so a TV deal that excludes both networks is extremely unlikely.
NINE is unlikely to make a play for full control of the deal, but is confident of winning some games for the creation of its own "clean space".
MATCHES could be auctioned individually, with the key Friday night football slot to attract the highest bid.
VIRTUAL crowds have been all but eliminated as a possibility, with an AFL rule banning them and virtual advertising.
TELSTRA is considered the favourite to take control of the league's internet rights.
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