ESPN signs SEC deal...

dawgstudent

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Apr 15, 2003
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</a><a href="http://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/article/59824">http://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/article/59824

<h1 style="font-size: 18px; font-weight: bold; line-height: 20px; padding-top: 14px;"></h1>
<h1 style="font-size: 18px; font-weight: bold; line-height: 20px; padding-top: 14px;">ESPN pays $2.25B for SEC rights</h1> <div style="position: relative; top: 12px; left: 480px; width: 120px;"></div>By MICHAEL SMITH and JOHN OURAND
Staff writers
<div style="font-size: 9px;"> Published August 25, 2008 : Page 01 </div>

ESPN will pay the Southeastern Conference a staggering $2.25 billion over the next 15 years - about $150 million a year - for the conference's TV rights, giving the network all of the SEC's content that was not taken by CBS, industry sources confirm.</p>

The deal effectively ends any conversation of a conference network, and it knocks Raycom Sports (formerly Lincoln Financial and Jefferson Pilot) out of the SEC's distribution business for the first time since 1986, when JP Sports began distributing SEC basketball.</p>

Combined with the 15-year, $55 million a year that the SEC will receive from CBS for the over-the-air package of games (SportsBusiness Journal, Aug. 18-24), the conference will bring in an average of $205 million annually in media rights beginning in 2009-10 and running through fiscal 2025.</p>

That's nearly three times what the SEC had been receiving in TV revenue as part of its current deal, which runs out next spring. That amounted to around $70 million per year.</p>

SEC athletic directors met in Orlando last week to finalize the deal, which is expected to be announced later this week.</p>

What won't be announced next week, though, is a forthcoming agreement between ESPN and Comcast that will initially put ESPNU in about 7 million Comcast homes. That deal could be finalized in the coming weeks and could potentially give ESPNU full digital basic distribution of around 14 million homes on the country's biggest cable operator. ESPNU, which is in 25 million homes, previously had failed to gain carriage on Comcast, but this deal eventually could push it to reach about 40 million homes, a critical threshold for advertising, industry sources say.</p>

ESPN's syndication arm, ESPN Regional Television, will handle syndication to local broadcasters throughout the Southeast. It also will make regional cable packages available to cable channels, such as Comcast/Charter Sports Southeast and Fox RSNs.</p> <div style="padding-bottom: 5px; padding-top: 5px; padding-left: 5px; float: right;"> <div style="border: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204);">
<div class="ImageCaption" style="padding-bottom: 5px;"> ESPN's strategy is to secure high-quality
programming for its networks
and broadband platforms. </div> </div> </div>

"These extraordinary numbers reflect the continuing increase in value for major college sports," said Neal Pilson, a TV consultant and former CBS Sports president. "We're seeing significant increases in value at the conference level and we're also going to see it for the BCS in the near future. As we're seeing with the Olympics, sports have a built-in, not recession-proof, but recession-resistant quality. There's a resiliency in terms of audience and ratings."</p>

ESPN's aggressive bid is part of a strategy to secure high-quality programming for its networks and broadband platforms, while keeping the SEC from launching its own cable channel that eventually could compete with ESPN.</p>

And Raycom, which had been in talks with the SEC to the end, likely lost out because it was not able to match the size of ESPN's bid or the number of platforms it can use.</p>

The SEC's total payout to its schools in 2007-08 was $63.6 million after the conference's cut. TV revenue is distributed among the 12 universities and the league; each school received about $5.3 million this past fiscal year. Under the new deal, that annual number could leap to as much as $15 million per school, which is just shy of the projected average revenue Big Ten schools get from their TV deals each year.</p>

It is difficult to make an apples-to-apples comparison between the two conferences because of the incongruity of the length of the deals and their escalating values. But the Big Ten Network could annually pay its schools an average up to $10.2 million each over the 25-year term of its deal with the Big Ten. The deal started this past year with a payment of $6 million to each school and the number could escalate each year, depending on the network's revenue.</p>

The Big Ten Conference's 10-year deals with CBS and ESPN will produce an average of $9.3 million for each school.</p>

"By not going with a channel, the SEC gave more value to its broadcast and cable partners," Pilson said. "You don't have the dilution of audience. And 15 years out, it's hard to know what the marketplace will look like, but the SEC will be taking another bite of the apple" at that time.</p>

ESPN's package of games will include the SEC basketball tournament finals, which previously were televised by CBS. ESPN also is expected to offer an expanded package of regular-season basketball games across its networks.</p>
 

dawgstudent

Well-known member
Apr 15, 2003
37,379
12,426
113
</a><a href="http://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/article/59824">http://www.sportsbusinessjournal.com/article/59824

<h1 style="font-size: 18px; font-weight: bold; line-height: 20px; padding-top: 14px;"></h1>
<h1 style="font-size: 18px; font-weight: bold; line-height: 20px; padding-top: 14px;">ESPN pays $2.25B for SEC rights</h1> <div style="position: relative; top: 12px; left: 480px; width: 120px;"></div>By MICHAEL SMITH and JOHN OURAND
Staff writers
<div style="font-size: 9px;"> Published August 25, 2008 : Page 01 </div>

ESPN will pay the Southeastern Conference a staggering $2.25 billion over the next 15 years - about $150 million a year - for the conference's TV rights, giving the network all of the SEC's content that was not taken by CBS, industry sources confirm.</p>

The deal effectively ends any conversation of a conference network, and it knocks Raycom Sports (formerly Lincoln Financial and Jefferson Pilot) out of the SEC's distribution business for the first time since 1986, when JP Sports began distributing SEC basketball.</p>

Combined with the 15-year, $55 million a year that the SEC will receive from CBS for the over-the-air package of games (SportsBusiness Journal, Aug. 18-24), the conference will bring in an average of $205 million annually in media rights beginning in 2009-10 and running through fiscal 2025.</p>

That's nearly three times what the SEC had been receiving in TV revenue as part of its current deal, which runs out next spring. That amounted to around $70 million per year.</p>

SEC athletic directors met in Orlando last week to finalize the deal, which is expected to be announced later this week.</p>

What won't be announced next week, though, is a forthcoming agreement between ESPN and Comcast that will initially put ESPNU in about 7 million Comcast homes. That deal could be finalized in the coming weeks and could potentially give ESPNU full digital basic distribution of around 14 million homes on the country's biggest cable operator. ESPNU, which is in 25 million homes, previously had failed to gain carriage on Comcast, but this deal eventually could push it to reach about 40 million homes, a critical threshold for advertising, industry sources say.</p>

ESPN's syndication arm, ESPN Regional Television, will handle syndication to local broadcasters throughout the Southeast. It also will make regional cable packages available to cable channels, such as Comcast/Charter Sports Southeast and Fox RSNs.</p> <div style="padding-bottom: 5px; padding-top: 5px; padding-left: 5px; float: right;"> <div style="border: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204);">
<div class="ImageCaption" style="padding-bottom: 5px;"> ESPN's strategy is to secure high-quality
programming for its networks
and broadband platforms. </div> </div> </div>

"These extraordinary numbers reflect the continuing increase in value for major college sports," said Neal Pilson, a TV consultant and former CBS Sports president. "We're seeing significant increases in value at the conference level and we're also going to see it for the BCS in the near future. As we're seeing with the Olympics, sports have a built-in, not recession-proof, but recession-resistant quality. There's a resiliency in terms of audience and ratings."</p>

ESPN's aggressive bid is part of a strategy to secure high-quality programming for its networks and broadband platforms, while keeping the SEC from launching its own cable channel that eventually could compete with ESPN.</p>

And Raycom, which had been in talks with the SEC to the end, likely lost out because it was not able to match the size of ESPN's bid or the number of platforms it can use.</p>

The SEC's total payout to its schools in 2007-08 was $63.6 million after the conference's cut. TV revenue is distributed among the 12 universities and the league; each school received about $5.3 million this past fiscal year. Under the new deal, that annual number could leap to as much as $15 million per school, which is just shy of the projected average revenue Big Ten schools get from their TV deals each year.</p>

It is difficult to make an apples-to-apples comparison between the two conferences because of the incongruity of the length of the deals and their escalating values. But the Big Ten Network could annually pay its schools an average up to $10.2 million each over the 25-year term of its deal with the Big Ten. The deal started this past year with a payment of $6 million to each school and the number could escalate each year, depending on the network's revenue.</p>

The Big Ten Conference's 10-year deals with CBS and ESPN will produce an average of $9.3 million for each school.</p>

"By not going with a channel, the SEC gave more value to its broadcast and cable partners," Pilson said. "You don't have the dilution of audience. And 15 years out, it's hard to know what the marketplace will look like, but the SEC will be taking another bite of the apple" at that time.</p>

ESPN's package of games will include the SEC basketball tournament finals, which previously were televised by CBS. ESPN also is expected to offer an expanded package of regular-season basketball games across its networks.</p>
 

Coach34

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between CBS and ESPN, we will get a share of about 14 million a year just from TV. And it also rids us of JP, Lincoln, or any other doorknob local network...it will also help the SEC in the rankings as they will talk about the SEC more now.....
 

TR.sixpack

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ESPN's syndication arm, ESPN Regional Television, will handle syndication to local broadcasters throughout the Southeast.
You'll still have SEC broadcasts on local stations, it just won't be in broadcast in Crapovision. That's good news to those of us who refuse to pay for commercial television.
 
Apr 17, 2008
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They always had the absolute worst big 11 games in their morning slot.

Does this allow College game day to visit more SEC sites instead of only visiting wherever the ABC game is that week?
 
Jul 8, 2007
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ESPN can and will sell the rights to SEC games that it doesn't broadcast

</p>
ESPN's syndication arm, ESPN Regional Television, will handle syndication to local broadcasters throughout the Southeast. It also will make regional cable packages available to cable channels, such as Comcast/Charter Sports Southeast and Fox RSNs.</p>
 

jakldawg

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May 1, 2006
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the possibility of the much-maligned Pam Ward in the booth (assuming we don't keep a few Dave's around).
 

Agentdog

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Why do I get the feeling that this will cost me money. As in, I will have to upgrade the satelite to get the channels that will carry these extra SEC games on ESPNplus. Because, ESPN already carries at least one prime time SEC game. I doubt every game that the ABE would have covered, will be on ESPN2 at prime time. Also, I am sure there is some agreement with CBS to not broadcast games from 2:30-5:30. Also, the Big10 already is shown at 11am on ESPN. So, where do we go? ESPN2?

So, there will still be 11am kickoffs. It will just be on the Duece, U, or Plus instead of a local channel. U or Plus for the MS teams I am sure with a ***** play by play and Todd Christianson on color. </p>
 

Sarc Dawg

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what stipulations there are regarding minimum appearances. I see UK, Vandy, MSU, and UM Football getting shafted in this. You know Bama, AU, UGA, UF, UT, and LSU will be on ESPN, ESPN2, or CBS every week. Wthout raycom to pick up the "scraps" I can see the lesser known teams being left out or broadcasted on some obscure ESPN channel that no one gets. I pay comcast nearly 100 a month and I get ESPN ESPN2 and ESPN News. I think I also get ESPN classic.

As far as basketball- Raycom's been good to MSU basketball. I hope we get similar coverage from ESPN... or they sub it out some.

Oh- how much do you think this deal influenced some of moves Byrne has made recently. (adding an extra 10 million to MSU's budget in revenue is huge)
 

TilloDawg

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May 26, 2006
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all other conferences still have their spots, so we won't be getting any of their's. Also, we all make fun of the Pam Wards & whoever of the ESPN stable, but this means they will be going even further down into the talent pool.

Here in Tupelo, CSS always has 1 of ESPN's 11:00 Big 10 games on that you wouldn't normally get to see...so that might be another possibility.</p>
 

dawgatUSM

Member
Apr 6, 2008
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I'm sure they'll figure something out to get these games on actual cable. I do hope that we don't get the shaft on this, but I trust that the companies involved are smarter than me. So... We'll see...
 

Croomp

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this is the last year of Raycom. I would love for this to help our exposure and that money could go towards the expansion of our stadium or rennovation.
 

dawgman42

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Jul 24, 2007
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Here in Texas, at least I can watch the Raycom broadcast through Yahoo! sports. With the ESPN regional network, I'm sure there won't be anything over the 'net anymore. I'll be shelling out money for both Gameplan and Full Court now (since the SEC blacks out men's basketball outside of the SEC region, including Fox Sports South which I subscribed to last year, thinking I'd get our Fox b'ball games).
 

Bulldog Backer

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The two deals, one with CBS and the other with ESPN (ABC owned) means about $16Million per year in the coffers of each SEC Member School. That is absolutely huge, especially for the "have-nots" in the SEC. Further, with a huge ESPN contract, maybe there won't be as much Big Ten and Pac 10 homerism among the announcers. They are always building up USC, Ohio State, Notre Dame, and Michigan. This also means a LOT more TV exposure to our kids (Rule something or other).
 

Todd4State

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Bulldog Backer said:
The two deals, one with CBS and the other with ESPN (ABC owned) means about $16Million per year in the coffers of each SEC Member School. That is absolutely
huge, especially for the "have-nots" in the SEC. Further, with a huge ESPN contract, maybe there won't be as much Big Ten and Pac 10 homerism
among the announcers. They are always building up USC, Ohio State, Notre Dame, and Michigan. This also means a LOT more TV exposure to our kids.

Does this mean that there will be an increased likelihood that an SEC game will be broadcast on ABC AND CBS?
 

Coach34

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of re-wording my post from 2 hours earlier....

"awesome...between CBS and ESPN, we will get a share of about 14 million a year just from TV. And it also rids us of JP, Lincoln, or any other doorknob local network...it will also help the SEC in the rankings as they will talk about the SEC more now..... "
 
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