Sports Media Biz: NFL reportedly seeking to double broadcast rights fees - 100% increase UPDATE: $113 B DEAL! YOUTUBE GETS SUNDAY TICKET!

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NFL reportedly seeking to double broadcast rights fees
Posted by Mike Florio on February 20, 2021, 7:02 PM EST


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The NFL continues to gather eyeballs like no televised product. As the audience continues to splinter, the NFL’s ability to bring millions to one place at the same time has more and more value.

And the NFL knows it.

Alex Sherman of CNBC recently reported that the league hopes to double the broadcast rights fees from its network partners. Per the report, CBS, FOX, and NBC are “likely to accept increases closer to 100% than Disney.”

Disney (which owns ESPN and ABC) reportedly has rejected a 100-percent bump, citing the high price already paid for Monday Night Football.

It will be interesting to see whether Disney’s reluctance puts Monday Night Football. Disney could be hinging its position on the likelihood that no one else would pay as much or more than Disney is willing to pay. With the current MNF deal running through 2021 while all other deals last until 2022, the clock is ticking more loudly for Disney and the NFL than it is for the NFL and its other partners.

Peter King of NBC Sports suggested recently that the new deals would cover 10 years. That would give the NFL a decade of certainty along with historic revenue. There’s a chance, frankly, that the fees could eventually become a bargain if the proliferation of legalized sports betting increases interest in the sport.
And that would set the stage for the NFL to seek 10 years from now another doubling of the fees.
 
NBC May Have to Pay Through the Nose to Keep ‘Sunday Night Football’
  • NBC wants to retain TV’s No. 1 prime-time show for 10 years running.
  • Media analyst Rich Greenfield predicts it will require NBC more than doubling its $950 million yearly fee.
CREDIT: CHARLES LECLAIRE-USA TODAY SPORTS
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NBC Sports pays the least and gets the most under the NFL’s current TV deals.

As the league’s media rights negotiations reach the two-minute warning, NBC may have to fork over the biggest rights increase if it wants to retain “Sunday Night Football,” sources tell Front Office Sports.

Under current rights deals signed nearly a decade ago, NBC pays $950 million a year for SNF. That’s less than half of the $2 billion ESPN shells out for “Monday Night Football” annually.

It’s also less than the $1.1 billion and $1 billion that Fox Sports and CBS Sports pay for their respective Sunday afternoon game packages. It’s not that far off from the $650 million a year that Fox pays for non-exclusive rights to “Thursday Night Football,” which it shares with NFL Network and Amazon Prime/Twitch.

But NBC is going to have to reach deep into its pockets if it wants to keep SNF, warns media analyst Rich Greenfield at LightShed Partners. He projects the league will want a 100%-plus increase in rights fees that could reach well over $2 billion per year.

“I’m highly confident the largest increase that will be borne will be NBC. Over 100%,” Greenfield predicted. “It is the most absurdly underpriced package that the NFL has. Highest ratings. Low-cost.”

The Peacock’s sweet deal with the NFL over the last decade has long been the envy of its network rivals.

As the rights holder for the NFL’s flagship prime-time game, NBC is the only TV partner with “flexible scheduling.” That allows it to swap out inferior games for better matchups during Weeks 5-17. To rub salt in the wound, NBC is allowed to pluck those games from Fox and CBS’s Sunday game schedules, although both rivals pay more for NFL rights.

Just ask Fox and CBS executives, who’ve had to simmer in silence while NBC picked off some of their best games. Or ESPN executives, who are stuck with lackluster late-season games on MNF while SNF gets the best matchups.
https://frontofficesports.com/nfl-seeking-big-bumps-to-tv-rights-payments/
NFL Seeking Big Bumps to TV Rights Payments
BY ERNEST BAKER / FEBRUARY 22, 2021
To its credit, NBC has delivered big-time for the NFL. The network’s SNF franchise has ranked as the No. 1 TV show in prime time for a record 10 years in a row. The pregame “Football Night in America” has reigned as the most-watched studio show for 15 straight years.

NBC’s SNF broadcast crew of Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth, and Michele Tafoya are arguably the best in the business. NBC’s 2015 telecast of Super Bowl XLIX was the most-watched show in U.S. TV history, averaging 114.4 million viewers.

The NFL and NBC both declined to comment on rights negotiations. But during a press call in January, NBC Sports Chairman Pete Bevacqua made clear he wants to keep SNF.

“We’ve been fortunate enough to have the No. 1 show on prime-time television now for hopefully 10 years in a row. We all know what a great property the NFL is,” Bevacqua said. “So it is an absolute priority for us to retain our partnership with the NFL, 100%.”

After two straight seasons of 5% increases, the NFL’s average game audiences dropped 8% during the 2020 season. This month’s Super Bowl drew its lowest TV-only audience in 15 years.

But the NFL still dwarfs other sports leagues when it comes to viewers and advertiser value.

The NFL is poised for a windfall in the current negotiations. The league wants its new broadcast deals in place by the beginning of its new year on March 17. Among other predictions by Greenfield:

— Sliding Scale: The league won’t ask all its TV partners for the same level of rights increases, said Greenfield. The networks with the most-watched Sunday packages — NBC, Fox, and CBS — will pay the most. But ESPN and Fox will likely get away with lower increases for MNF and TNF, which don’t draw the same audiences.

“I think you should think about increases on Sunday packages being over 100%. I think you should think about all the others being substantially less than that.”

— Whither TNF?: Fox has made it clear it wants out of TNF. NBC, CBS, and ESPN are not interested, either. So Greenfield’s sticking by his prediction that Amazon ends up with TNF, even if the tech giant has to share it with the league’s own NFL Network as well as local broadcasters.

Said Greenfield: “I feel increasingly confident that Amazon is going to try to play. Look, if I’m the NFL, I need to get digital bidders. The future of sports broadcasting is not going to be linear TV. You need to get the digital players involved. So I think this is a relatively obvious path for the NFL to bring in new linear TV bidders.”

— Time’s up for Sunday Ticket. Similar to Fox and TNF, AT&T’s DirecTV probably won’t renew its deal for “Sunday Ticket,” which cost subscribers between $295 and $395 during the 2020 season.

The Walt Disney Co. would ideally like to have both MNF and Sunday Ticket, according to Greenfield. He can see Disney bundling Sunday Ticket together with its ESPN+ and Hulu Live streaming platforms.

“Imagine the scenario where, in order to get Sunday Ticket, you have to be a subscriber to Hulu Live, and you have to take ESPN+. You take a bundle. If you’re a bundled subscriber of ESPN+ and Hulu Live, you can then pay a $300 premium for Sunday Ticket.
“That would be a very strategic and bold move for The Walt Disney Co.,” noted Greenfield. “Or you have to be a Triple-Play Disney bundle: Disney+, ESPN+, and Hulu. And then you can buy Sunday Ticket. I could see there being ways they tie this [in] to reduce churn of their other products.”
ESPN’s current MNF deal expires after the 2021 season, while the others lapse after the 2022 season. But the NFL wants to finalize all of its media rights for the next decade over the next couple of weeks.

Already battered by losses from the COVID-19 pandemic, it will be difficult if not impossible for the NFL’s TV partners to make money on future deals.

But the alternative of an NFL-less schedule is worse. Nobody knows that better than CBS and NBC, which wandered in the media wilderness after losing their NFL TV packages in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

The “entire economic model” of legacy TV networks is premised on offering live NFL games, noted Greenfield.
“It’s going to be worse without the NFL than overpaying for it.”

 
The NFL is looking for a 100% increase for TV rights & Disney is reportedly pushing back over MNF
Disney wants more MNF games and a shot at some Super Bowls.
ABCESPNNFLBy Sean Keeley on 02/20/2021
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All of the NFL’s current rights deals expire after 2022 so negotiations gave been ongoing with all of the current and potential rightsholders for some time now. While it was reported earlier this month that not much was expected to change, aside from some potential changes to the league’s Thursday package, there does now seem to be one sticking point that might be throwing a wrench in the plans.
According to CNBC’s Alex Sherman, the NFL is looking to essentially double the cost for all of its current network partners, but Disney, who owns ABC and ESPN, is pushing back on that. While the NFL is hoping to get all of their deals done by March 17, which is the start of the new NFL league year, The Mouse might be making that a bit harder to do.
















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Per Sherman, all of the league’s other partners (NBC, CBS, Fox) are expected to accept the new rates, but Disney is scoffing at the high rate for Monday Night Football broadcasts. Disney paid $1.9 billion per year for Monday Night Football in 2011, a deal that expires this year. That’s way more than what the other partners pay for their packages ($1.1 billion/year for Fox, $1 billion/year for CBS, $960 million/year for NBC’s Sunday Night Football). Disney has reportedly already rejected a deal that would have had them pay $3.8 billion/year to maintain the MNF rights and Disney CEO Bob Chapek alluded to these ongoing negotiations in their most recent earnings conference call.



“We’re looking at the long-term trends of sports viewership,” said Chapek on Feb. 11. “We’ve had a long relationship with the NFL. If there’s a deal that will be accretive to shareholder value, we will certainly entertain that and look at that. But our first filter will be to say whether it makes sense for shareholder value going forward.”

While it might seem strange for Disney to pay more than the other NFL broadcasters for Monday Night Football, that package does include highlight rights, branding rights, and the ever-important streaming rights as well.

According to Sherman, Disney is making some extra demands that might necessitate larger fees. They’ve reportedly asked the NFL for more double-header games on Monday nights, with one airing on ABC, as well as a chance to be part of the Super Bowl network rotation alongside the other three networks. Disney is said to also want more flexibility in terms of how it can offer streaming rights to consumers, perhaps as part of a Disney+ package.


It’s also worth noting that the league still wants to add another game to the schedule, which would increase the number of offerings available to each network, invariably raising the price.

 
White folks with continue to make most of the money for simply being managers anf agents and the field negras will be happy with the scraps being given because they are the highest paid field negras.

Funny the in entertainment most management/managers only take a 20% cut on a the high end. Most athletes are being raped for 50% or more by rich white folks who add little to the product and are usually a net negative when you take their money away from the situation.

Why you need overseers in a booth to tell you if you have been a bad or good slave, beats me. But as far as that original post, Disney is gonna pay and like it. Just like you are gonna watch no matter how many old rich white owers call you *******.
 
Sports teams get together and black ball players..wonder what would the nfl do if all those networks got together refusing to pay that 2 billion asking price?... if they deny it does nfl bow down and take a lower price? Does a new entity in the shadows come and take that offer? Or does nfl go streaming service style?
 
Sports teams get together and black ball players..wonder what would the nfl do if all those networks got together refusing to pay that 2 billion asking price?... if they deny it does nfl bow down and take a lower price? Does a new entity in the shadows come and take that offer? Or does nfl go streaming service style?
Fuck around and have all the games on Amazon. :smh:
 
Not only non profit but greedy as hell. So what happens when the networks don't comply with the NFL's proposal? Where does this leave the fans?
 
Thursday night football and racism are really diluting the product fucking mnf ain't needed anymore.
 
There is going to be some pushback with this somewhere.


Doubt it (they WILL complain like hell though)

NFL are a damn cartel, conglomerate, monopoly rolled into one.

the NETWORKS NEED THEM

they KNOW this

all the adverting dollars and their schedules are DEPENDENT on the NFL

Sunday Afternoon aint about religion

its about the CHURCH OF FOOTBALL.
 
Fuck around and have all the games on Amazon. :smh:
You know I thought about that

even apple throwing in a bid

Yup, I can see it.

But these networks will FIGHT tooth and NAIL before it happens

remember CBS f*cked around way back and said no to football high price...

what happened?

Almost crippled the entire network

since then?

CBS usually first one with Disney to cut that check.

Thursday night football and racism are really diluting the product fucking mnf ain't needed anymore.

Amazon will probably take that Thursday night

cause NO ONE wants it

NO ONE

so much so they keeping it on NFL network.

I could see Besos and them taking THAT and blowing it out and getting a REAL foothold finally
 
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And the players have 9 years left on that stupid contract they didn't read. Knowing the owners they put in language the players can not ask for more due to this agreement.
 
NFL announces TV deals with ESPN/ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, Amazon

The NFL announced a new set of national television deals Thursday, keeping games on ESPN/ABC, Fox, CBS, NBC, Amazon and NFL Network through the 2033 season.

The agreement keeps Sunday afternoon games on CBS and Fox, Sunday night games on NBC and Monday night games on ESPN, with some games also airing on ABC. For the first time, Amazon will be the exclusive home for Thursday night games, which will also be on over-the-air channels in the competing teams' home markets. NFL Network will also air select games.

ABC picks up two Super Bowls during the deal -- the first in 2026 -- with the other networks airing three each.

ESPN's package adds six games to the network during the season. There will be three Monday night doubleheaders -- with games on ESPN, followed by a game on ABC. There will also be a Saturday doubleheader during the season's final weekend and one Sunday morning game streaming nationally on ESPN+.

ESPN, which has previously aired a wild-card playoff game, will add one game in the divisional round as well.

For the first time, ESPN's Monday Night Football will be able to "flex" games, starting with Week 12 of the season, to ensure better matchups. ESPN's package also includes the ability to include four teams up to two times each.

ESPN will also continue to televise the NFL draft, as it has since 1980, and the Pro Bowl. NFL PrimeTime will also return to ESPN+ on Sunday nights, streaming throughout the week.

"When ESPN and the NFL work best together, the results are transformational for sports fans and the industry," ESPN and sports content chairman Jimmy Pitaro said in a statement. "Some of the most remarkable collaborative examples have occurred in the past 12 months and have demonstrated the extraordinary range of The Walt Disney Company that is fundamental to this agreement. There are so many exciting new components, including Super Bowls and added playoff games, new end-of-season games with playoff implications, exclusive streaming games on ESPN+, scheduling flexibility and enhancements, and much more. It's a wide-ranging agreement unlike any we've reached with the NFL, and we couldn't be more energized about what the future holds."

Said Disney chief executive officer Bob Chapek in a statement: "This landmark agreement guarantees that ESPN's passionate fan base will continue to have access to the best the NFL has to offer. Bringing all the considerable and unique capabilities of The Walt Disney Company and ESPN to the table opens up so many opportunities across our industry-leading direct-to-consumer, broadcast, cable, linear, social and digital outlets. Special thanks to Roger Goodell and the NFL owners for continuing to embrace new ways to appeal to their fans, especially through increasingly important platforms like ESPN+."

ESPN has one more year on its current deal, and it added a bridge agreement for 2022. For the upcoming 2021 season, ESPN will add two Saturday games with playoff implications in the final week of the season. For 2022, those games will continue, and there will be the Sunday morning international game on ESPN+ and one ESPN/ABC Monday Night Football doubleheader.

The ESPN package also includes the ability to stream games on ESPN+, as well as one international series game on an exclusive national basis. NBC, CBS and Fox will also have the ability to stream games they hold the rights to.

NBC's package also includes "flex" games, as it has in the past.

"We're proud to grow our partnerships with the most innovative media companies in the market," NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement. "Along with our recently completed labor agreement with the NFLPA, these distribution agreements bring an unprecedented era of stability to the League and will permit us to continue to grow and improve our game."

Goodell also said the league plans to work with its partners to infuse legalized sports betting into broadcasts.
 
NFL's new TV deal will bring some major changes: Here are 10 things to know, including flex games on Monday
Here are 10 things you need to know about the NFL's monstrous new television deal
https://www.cbssports.com/writers/john-breech/

By John Breech

11 hrs ago4 min read




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The NFL's new television deal won't kick in until 2023, but when that happens, there will be some big changes coming around the league.
If you missed it, the NFL announced a new 11-year deal with its television partners on Thursday. According to the Associated Press, the NFL will earn a total of $113 billion from from the deal, which runs through the 2033 season. Under the new contract, you won't see very many changes from a network standpoint as CBS, NBC, ESPN and Fox will still all be airing games, but there will be plenty of other changes coming. One contract that's still up in the air is the DirecTV deal for Sunday Ticket. That contract currently runs through the end of the 2022 season.
With that in mind, here are 10 things to know from the new deal:
1. Monday night games can be flexed. The new media contract doesn't kick in until 2023, which means we're going to have to wait two years before this happens, but starting with the 2023 season, the NFL will have the option to flex Monday games beginning in Week 12.
2. Monday doubleheaders will be happening more often. The NFL has been holding a Monday doubleheader in Week 1 for years and now it will be adding more to the schedule. Starting in 2023, there will be a total of three Monday night doubleheaders with one game airing on ESPN and one game airing on ABC.

3. Saturday doubleheader during final week of season. The NFL doesn't usually play Saturday games during the final week of the season, but that will be changing starting this year. ESPN's contract now includes two Saturday games with playoff implications during the final week of the season, which means the NFL will likely be flexing games into this spot.
4. Nickelodeon games likely come back: The Nickelodeon game was a hit back in January and there will likely be a few more of those down the road. In the new contract, the NFL has given its network partners a greater ability to innovate around their productions and provide interactive elements. The league is also going to allow its partners to provide an "alternate presentation" of certain games, which opens the door for the networks to get creative like ViacomCBS did with the Nickelodeon game.
The NFL and the networks are going all in on streaming with the new contract. What this means is that there will be nearly 20 games each season that will only be available online.

5. "Thursday Night Football" headed to Amazon. The tech giant will be the exclusive home of "Thursday Night Football' starting in 2023. For the next two seasons, Thursday football will be aired on Fox while also streaming on Amazon. Starting in 2023 though, Fox will be out of the picture and the only way for anyone to watch a Thursday game will be on Amazon (Amazon games will also be available on over-the-air TV in the home markets of the two teams that are playing.)
6. One international game will air exclusively on ESPN+. ESPN's new streaming service ESPN+ will get to exclusively carry one international game per season, which means you'll have to have ESPN+ if you want to watch this game.
7. NBC's Peacock streaming network will get to exclusively air six regular-season games. From 2023 thru 2028, the NFL will be allowing NBC's Peacock service to exclusively stream one game per season.

8. Paramount+ also coming up big. Paramount+ has been granted new and expanded rights for the streaming service, allowing for the flexibility to distribute NFL games on the premium tier at $9.99 and the new $4.99 ad-supported tier that will debut in June. The rights begin with the 2021 season and extend throughout the length of the new deal to 2033.
9. NFL can opt out of the deal after seven years: As noted by NBC, the league has the right to terminate the contract after seven years. One reason the NFL would think about exercising this right would be if something causes the TV rights to increase in value (Gambling is one thing that could help make that happen). If the value of the TV rights shoot up, the league could terminate the contract and go back to the negotiating table by 2030.
10. CBS, Fox and NBC each get three Super Bowls, ABC gets two. CBS will air the first Super Bowl in the new TV contact, which will take place in February 2024. The rotation for Super Bowls will go like this: CBS, Fox, NBC, ABC. When ABC airs the Super Bowl following the 2026 season, it will mark the first time since February 2006 (Super Bowl XL) that the network has gotten to air the NFL's biggest game.

Here's where the Super Bowl will be airing for the next 13 seasons:
2021: NBC
2022: Fox (end of old contract)
2023: CBS (start of new contract)
2024: Fox
2025: NBC
2026: ABC
2027: CBS
2028: Fox
2029: NBC
2030: ABC
2031: CBS
2032: Fox
2033: NBC
 

New $113 Billion NFL Media Rights Deal Gives Fans More Options To Watch Games
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March 19, 20212:59 PM ET
H.J. MAI
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Tom Brady (12) of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers plays during the Super Bowl LV game against the Kansas City Chiefs in February.
Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
The NFL has finalized a new round of broadcast rights agreements, providing the league with a financial windfall and fans with more options to watch the games.
Amazon, CBS, ESPN/ABC, Fox and NBC, which all currently broadcast NFL games, have signed deals with the league through 2033. The new agreements, which were announced on Thursday and will commence with the start of the 2023 season, include television and expanded streaming rights.
"These new media deals will provide our fans even greater access to the games they love. We're proud to grow our partnerships with the most innovative media companies in the market," NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement.
The new media rights packages is also much more valuable than previous deals for North America's most popular sports league. A person familiar with the agreements, who asked not to be identified because the value of the deal has not been publicly released, told NPR the cumulative value of the deals is $113 billion over 11 years. That's an 80% increase.
In a first for the league, Amazon acquired an all-digital rights package that will make it the exclusive home of Thursday Night Football. The tech giant is paying $1.2 billion per year for the rights, according to the source.
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Amazon has aired NFL games on its Prime Video streaming service since 2017 as part of a tri-cast distribution deal. But starting in 2023, fans will need to sign up for a Prime membership if they want to watch the games.
CBS retained its rights to air American Football Conference (AFC) games on Sunday afternoons. All games will be broadcast on CBS and streamed live on the company's digital platform Paramount+.
ESPN held on to its Monday Night Football rights package, while ABC acquired the rights to televise two Super Bowls along with exclusive regular season games.
Streaming service ESPN+ will be able to simulcast all ESPN and ABC games. Subscribers of the service will also be treated to one International Series game each season.
Fox retained its National Football Conference (NFC) rights package of Sunday afternoon games and expanded its digital rights, including for its Tubi streaming platform.
NBC will remain the broadcast home of Sunday Night Football. All SNF games will also be available on steaming service Peacock.
ViacomCBS, Fox and Comcast, the owner of NBC, will pay more than $2 billion annually for their packages, while Disney, which owns ESPN and ABC, is paying about $2.7 billion for its rights, according to CNBC.

CBS, Fox and NBC each will televise three Super Bowls over the upcoming rights period.
In addition, the NFL Network, which is owned by the league, will continue to air a select schedule of exclusive games on a yearly basis, the statement said.
The NFL regularly draws some of the largest TV audiences.
Over the last five years, 24 of the top 25 and 77 of the top 100 most-watched programs on television have been NFL games, according to the league.
However, this year's Super Bowl between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers failed to break 100 million viewers. With 96.4 million viewers, it was the lowest-watched Super Bowl since 2007.
 
The money is about to get crazy. Salary cap at 500M lol

The players look real stupid for signing the CBA til 2030.
It's well-known that the NFL has the weakest Union with the dumbest players. They don't stand together for shit. They gave up all of everything so they can smoke weed? They had an opportunity to get rid of franchise players for good, but they didn't

Franchise players was meant to keep the Barry Sanders and Jerry Rice is of the world from just up and leaving when their contract was done like LeBron did to the Cavs.

Now, they just give some got it want to keep for another gear on a franchise tag with no intention of ever signing him long-term. Meanwhile, if he gets hurt , tears an ACL it's his ass.

What they SHOULD have done was say, "Okay, you can keep your franchise tag...but instead of it being the average of the top 5 player contracts, it's the highest paid PLUS 20%" - this way you franchise Aaron Donald and not Jaguars OT Cam Robinson or someone like that who has never even made a pro bowl

But no. They gave the owners 17 games so they can smoke weed
 
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So the NFL can opt out of a multi billion dollar TV contact but players are selfish for leaving a million dollar contract.

This is why ratings being up or down means nothing. TV stations and the NFL are getting paid regardless.

Players knew these deals were about to go in and they still signed contracts beforehand. They could of all waited and said hold up til this deal went down, tear up the CBA and start new. But these idiots, fuck they are idiots. The power that they have but none of them know how to use it except for selfish gains. Without the players there is no football. These fools can literally go line up and play tag football at half speed, no spinning, diving or jukes for extra yards. Technically they are playing just not risking as much injury so they can still be paid. And until they get a new agreement don't play tackle. Imagine getting ready to watch the first game of the season and these fools are playing 2 hand touch football the announcers, media, owners, coaches would be livid. Here are our terms on a new agreement and we will get back to work.
 
So the NFL can opt out of a multi billion dollar TV contact but players are selfish for leaving a million dollar contract.

This is why ratings being up or down means nothing. TV stations and the NFL are getting paid regardless.

Players knew these deals were about to go in and they still signed contracts beforehand. They could of all waited and said hold up til this deal went down, tear up the CBA and start new. But these idiots, fuck they are idiots. The power that they have but none of them know how to use it except for selfish gains. Without the players there is no football. These fools can literally go line up and play tag football at half speed, no spinning, diving or jukes for extra yards. Technically they are playing just not risking as much injury so they can still be paid. And until they get a new agreement don't play tackle. Imagine getting ready to watch the first game of the season and these fools are playing 2 hand touch football the announcers, media, owners, coaches would be livid. Here are our terms on a new agreement and we will get back to work.
The new CBA includes a media kicker once the schedule goes to 17 games. Players share 48% of all league revenues. And I think it's like .5% more that players get for every 60 or 70% increase in tv deal revenues from the past CBA, but no higher until it goes to 120% of revenues and even then it doesn't even go up by a full 1%. Definitely an area where they could have bargained for more, since the owners used the players long term CBA as leverage for the tv deals. And it paid off. The lower level players got a higher bump but certain types of contracts will pay you less when not active. I forget the types of contracts. The lack of guaranteed contracts is shit but getting better. That has to do with the design of the contracts over time and lack of individual demands. So, they should all present it as a unanimous need and determine what % if not all of the contract money is guaranteed. The CBA did players on disability dirty, and they just recently had to reconsider and delay when the benefits reduction would be implemented until 2024. They agreed to reduce the nfl disability benefits by same amount of social security benefits for the year. Smh.

And the players locked themselves down for TEN FUCKING YEARS :smh:
They're gonna have to sit out a whole season in boycott to reopen and renegotiate money guarantees and higher %s. That shared revenue amt per team can vary based on each team's local revenue.

It was a close vote. Once you give much more than before to the have nots, they'll vote in favor. Regardless of how much more they could've had. That's in fear of what they could lose by not agreeing, while not recognizing of the gains they just made by negotiating.
 
The new CBA includes a media kicker once the schedule goes to 17 games. Players share 48% of all league revenues. And I think it's like .5% more that players get for every 60 or 70% increase in tv deal revenues from the past CBA, but no higher until it goes to 120% of revenues and even then it doesn't even go up by a full 1%. Definitely an area where they could have bargained for more, since the owners used the players long term CBA as leverage for the tv deals. And it paid off. The lower level players got a higher bump but certain types of contracts will pay you less when not active. I forget the types of contracts. The lack of guaranteed contracts is shit but getting better. That has to do with the design of the contracts over time and lack of individual demands. So, they should all present it as a unanimous need and determine what % if not all of the contract money is guaranteed. The CBA did players on disability dirty, and they just recently had to reconsider and delay when the benefits reduction would be implemented until 2024. They agreed to reduce the nfl disability benefits by same amount of social security benefits for the year. Smh.


They're gonna have to sit out a whole season in boycott to reopen and renegotiate money guarantees and higher %s. That shared revenue amt per team can vary based on each team's local revenue.

It was a close vote. Once you give much more than before to the have nots, they'll vote in favor. Regardless of how much more they could've had. That's in fear of what they could lose by not agreeing, while not recognizing of the gains they just made by negotiating.
I don't think these players will sit for a year though.
 
And the players have 9 years left on that stupid contract they didn't read. Knowing the owners they put in language the players can not ask for more due to this agreement.
Which means the players contract was signed on this current deal, while the owners will be getting a double up..... while still be paying the players based on the old deal??
 
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