Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Could 'Monday Night Football' Return To ABC?

COMMENTARY

Could 'Monday Night Football' Return To ABC?

Soon the NFL will start high-profile -- and to some -- tense negotiations for a new round of multi-year TV-media network deals. And there could be some major changes.

The NFL will no doubt seek another significant increase -- especially as its TV ratings per game has risen 5% each of the last two years. By way of comparison, just a handful of legacy TV network shows can tout any positive gains.
But legacy TV networks will want more, as well.
Walt Disney’s ESPN, which is in the midst of what some would call an expensive $1.9 billion per year “Monday Night Football” deal, will look to retain the big revenue producing package.
Disney may seek changes -- perhaps sharing/shifting the games -- to Disney’s broadcast network, ABC -- which initially had the famed NFL prime-time franchise between 1975 and 2001.
ABC has been at a disadvantage versus other competing broadcast networks -- NBC, Fox, or CBS -- which have either a prime-time and/or a Sunday afternoon package of games.
Reports suggest ESPN also wants flexibility around its “MNF” schedule -- to get better competitive games, especially late into the season. Additionally, it may want the flexibility to opt out of late-season games where losing-record teams have little to no chance of making the playoffs.
NBC has this arrangement for “Sunday Night Football” — the league can make team changes 12 days before kickoff.
Even without sharply increasing viewing -- or perhaps slight declines -- NFL’s 16.5 million per-game viewing average can boost a network’s promotion for its entertainment programs, especially when it come to major TV partners that share airing the biggest annual TV telecast of the year, the Super Bowl. (ESPN doesn’t get to air the Super Bowl.)
Little mystery now about the value of live sports, especially the NFL, for TV prime time. It’s of huge importance to a TV network’s overall viewership and advertising fortunes.
Though competition has been increasing in recent years, from big digital media players -- Amazon, Google and Facebook -- viewing has been small for those digital players airing regular season games.
Amazon has had the streaming rights to “Thursday Night Football” for three years; last season posting around 500,000 per game. Amazon shares “TNF” with Fox/The NFL Network, which have the traditional TV airings.
For the NFL, there continues to be an obvious supply-and-demand situation, which is why league is looking to push to a 17-game schedule up from the current 16-game schedule.
But there are risks.
Kannan Venkateshwar, media analyst of Barclays Capital, says: “While the NFL always has the option of licensing to new entrants at the expense of legacy broadcasters (like it did in the 1990s bringing in Fox), this strategy is not without risk, given that broadcast still has the largest simultaneous reach.”
He adds: “Media rights only account for roughly half of the NFL’s total revenues and therefore, maintaining the popularity and reach of these games is likely to be as important as the incremental dollars from the next round of negotiations.”
Who wants to play ball?

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