Football TV offer nears $700m
By Caroline Wilson
Chief Football Writer
The Age
November 15, 2005
A SIX-YEAR free-to-air offer worth more than $400 million could prove the knock-out punch for Channel Seven and Channel Ten in the battle for the AFL broadcast rights.
AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriou is believed to have told his commission over the past two days of the Seven and Ten offer, which the league has admitted privately contains the added attraction of vastly improved coverage into trouble spots NSW and Queensland.
The final figure should approach $700 million once the contribution of pay-TV provider Foxtel is factored in.
While the AFL Commission yesterday concluded two days of talks at a Mornington Peninsula golf resort, the Seven Network dropped part of its legal action against Ten and agreed to attempt to resolve its potential billion-dollar legal action against the AFL out of court.
And in another strong indication that the AFL could be on the verge of a new broadcasting deal beyond 2006, Foxtel is believed to have accepted unofficially the Seven and Ten team as potential media partners and could in return receive exclusive Sunday twilight games between 2007 and 2012.
The Seven and Ten deal, which was presented to the AFL last week, includes:
■ An average annual free-to-air rights cash amount averaging $70 million a year over six years. (Next season Channels Nine and Ten will pay $57 million.)
■ Five free-to-air games each weekend of the home-and-away season with Ten televising two back-to-back Saturday games as under the current deal and Seven televising Friday night football and two Sunday games.
■ Both networks sharing the finals and splitting grand finals and Brownlow Medal counts, alternating on an annual basis.
■ Friday night football broadcast into Sydney from 10.30pm on Seven, about an hour earlier than it is now.
■ Improved regional coverage of Friday night football into NSW and Queensland, with Seven affiliate Prime televising matches from between 8.30 and 9.30pm into Canberra, western NSW and the Gold Coast.
■ Channel Ten to continue to televise prime-time football on Saturday nights into Brisbane and Sydney.
The AFL Commission, which spent Sunday and Monday at Moonah Links at Fingal, near Rye, deliberating the game's biggest issues, including TV rights, tribunal reforms, priority picks and game development, is now expected to take the Seven-Ten offer to Channel Nine, which plans to make its bid alongside Foxtel.
Foxtel paid $30 million a year over five years for the last pay-TV rights and while a Seven-Ten deal would mean its weekly allotment of three games and no finals does not change, the exclusive Sunday early evening timeslot would prove a major boost to the pay network, which has proved its commitment with its off-field programming.
Foxtel now receives what are regarded as the least interesting three games of the round. That is also expected to change.
The next stage in the rights bidding process will be to give Nine an opportunity to outbid the Seven and Ten consortium, with the latter then given an opportunity to match any bid by Nine under the first-and-last bid agreement.
The AFL clubs will meet the commission and its executive on Thursday to learn the latest in the broadcast negotiations, a process that began in March when Ten angered the AFL by switching camps and joining forces with Seven.
The Kerry Stokes-owned network was the AFL rights holder for most of the previous four decades until it lost the rights to the News Limited consortium of Nine, Ten and Foxtel — a combination that Seven claimed led to the destruction of its pay-TV network C7, which is the subject of the legal action.
While the next round of AFL rights was expected to last for five years, Seven and Ten are pushing for a six-year deal, so they can evenly split finals.
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