AFL wants quick decisionBy James Chessell and Lisa Murray
December 30, 2005
Sydney Morning Herald
THE AFL has rejected a request by the Seven and Ten Networks for extra time to work through a last-ditch counter-offer for the AFL broadcast rights from 2007 until 2011.
It is understood the consortium asked the AFL for more time yesterday but was told it must either match Kerry Packer's spectacular $780 million pre-Christmas bid to keep AFL football on Channel Nine by the original January 6 deadline or bow out of the race.
Sources close to Seven and Ten played down the significance of the decision, saying the consortium was merely seeking a "clarification" of its position. But with Seven boss David Leckie on holiday overseas until Tuesday, the consortium wanted more time. It must now reach a decision in the second half of next week.
AFL chiefs announced last Friday that they would accept the bid by Nine parent PBL, regarded as Mr Packer's final corporate manoeuvre, in the absence of a superior offer from Seven and Ten within 14 days. PBL's offer is the largest in Australian sporting history and underlines the importance of the AFL rights, with Nine and Seven locked in a fierce ratings battle.
While television insiders say Seven could manage without the AFL rights, it is generally considered that Ten needs to bolster its content.
Sources close to Seven said the network was seeking "clarification" about "the difference between the first offer we put to the AFL and a [Nine] offer that does not contain one single guarantee of live coverage in the northern markets"; and the sub-licensing agreements.
Under the offer nutted out by Mr Packer and Nine chief Sam Chisholm, up to four games a week would be broadcast on pay network Foxtel, which is 25 per cent owned by PBL. Yesterday's setback has raised doubts about Seven's commitment to matching the lucrative Nine bid - there is no doubt about Ten chief Grant Blackley's enthusiasm - with the odds slightly strengthening that Nine may retain AFL rights.
Nevertheless, the consortium said it would continue to crunch the numbers on a rival bid, despite the threat of slim profit margins and apparent ill-feelings between the league and both Seven and Ten.
According to Nine insiders, the strength of its bid is not so much in the price - about $280 million higher than the AFL's current deal - but in the scheduling requirements.
Nine is in partnership with Foxtel which allows it to commit to a gruelling schedule. It is expected that Seven and Ten, both being free-to-air TV stations, will find that difficult to match as they will be forced to commit to too many games at difficult times.
"If we win, it costs us a bit of money but it is very good for Foxtel and it cements Channel Nine's No.1 ratings position," the insider said. "If we lose, the schedule will be murder for Seven and Ten."
A Seven spokesman said yesterday there was "no rush to respond" to Nine's bid. "We'll make a decision that's in the best interests of our shareholders, our advertising partners and our viewers," he said. We look forward to the next time we speak to the AFL.
"Seven is No.1 in news and public affairs, is surging in prime time and is well-placed to continue this momentum. We're delivering without the AFL and there's no doubt we'd be even more competitive with television rights to every match played in the AFL. We'll let our heads, not our hearts, make the decision."
While the Nine deal works out to $156 million a year, it has been reported that up to $100 million of the offer is in contra for advertising and promotion. This would make the cash component $680 million, or $136 million a year.
In a note to clients earlier this week Citigroup analysts said the AFL rights were "beginning to take on poison chalice status".
"It is beginning to look ugly indeed for the 'winner' of these rights."
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