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DIEHARD
23-03-10, 07:30 PM
Channel Ten tackles Channel Nine for NRL television rights

CHANNEL 10 has entered a $1 billion bidding war with rival television networks Nine and Seven to broadcast rugby league from 2013.

A high-powered executive from the Ten network recently met NRL boss David Gallop to privately launch the station's bid for the highest-rating sport on Australian television.

Gallop last night confirmed a meeting had taken place but insisted on his discussions remaining confidential.

Legally, Ten can offer only an expression of interest because Channel 9's current contract forbids the NRL to accept or negotiate deals before 2011.

Ten's sports boss David White would not comment when approached last night about the talks with Gallop. But he confirmed the network's interest by saying: "I'm not going to have our negotiations played out in the newspaper."

However, sources have revealed Ten, which last broadcast rugby league in the early 1990s, is preparing to challenge both Nine and Fox Sports for the rights.

Senior executives are believed to be working on a proposal to use the regular free-to-air channel and One HD to broadcast the NRL.

It would obviously force them to give up AFL, which it currently shares with Seven.

Channel 7, which launches Matthew Johns' new show on Thursday night, is the third player in negotiations that will see the rights fees double from the current $100 million-a-season that is divided up by Nine, Fox Sports and Sky TV in New Zealand.

As part of their current contract, Nine and Fox Sports both retain first and last rights for an extra five years.

A Nine source said: "Hell will freeze over before Channel 9 loses rugby league.

"They said we couldn't get the Olympics and we did. They said we wouldn't get the rugby union World Cup and we did.

"The only way we'll lose rugby league is if we don't want it and that won't be the case."

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/

DIEHARD
23-03-10, 07:31 PM
All eyes focused on Canberra as TV shake-up looms
ROY MASTERS

NRL fans will be guaranteed live free-to-air TV coverage of three league games a week, all finals matches and State of Origin and Kangaroos fixtures should expected changes to the anti-siphoning legislation be passed. The amendments will outlaw a media conglomerate using an internet provider to buy all screening rights and split them between pay TV and online coverage.

Channel Nine shows three games a week, but under the existing legislation Telstra could make a single bid for all rights and share them with its Foxtel partners. This could mean Foxtel, half owned by News Ltd and James Packer's CMH, would show pay TV games and Telstra BigPond would stream games online. Kerry Stokes's Seven network could televise Origin matches, but fans who do not have Foxtel or Big Pond would be denied free-to-air coverage of weekly matches in the NRL's Telstra premiership.

However, the federal government, concerned at the prospect of this monopoly bidding for sports rights, is expected to include the internet in its anti-siphoning legislation, categorising it with pay TV, preventing hoarding of matches whereby subscribers would pay for games streamed online.

''It would be bizarre not to include the internet in the legislation,'' one source said, suggesting free-to-air coverage of three NRL games a week, together with all finals and State of Origin and Kangaroo matches, will be enshrined in the legislation to be announced within the next month.

News, which holds the management rights to Foxtel and Fox Sports, has indicated it does not want an increase on the five NRL games it now screens a week.

While the Communications Minister, Stephen Conroy, could override this, listing, say, six games a week for free-to-air TV, he recognises it would lower the return in rights fees to the sport. However, News' long-term first-and-last option over NRL and rugby union Super 14 screening rights is seen as a frustration to the federal government's anti-siphoning ambitions, particularly in an environment of constant technological change.

News, which owns half of Fox Sports and a quarter of Foxtel, holds NRL first-and-last TV rights until 2022 and is understood to have negotiated an extension until 2027 as a condition of its exit from the game. Nor has News paid for these rights, as Channel Seven did with AFL rights.

''It seems rugby league is all wrapped up,'' one government source said, appalled that the ARL would concede long-term rights to a powerful media entity whose control over first-and-last rights basically frightens away less wealthy competitors, lowering the bid and the fee received by the sport.

Furthermore, long-term ownership of the most popular product on pay TV - NRL games dominate the top 100 programs each year - is a powerful disincentive to another pay TV operator to enter the industry. This is why Canberra is closely monitoring the arrival of Fetch TV, a subscription TV service delivered via a broadcast signal over broadband, rather than from a satellite or streamed from the internet.

Backed by a Malaysian billionaire with widespread TV interests in Asia, it has the potential to challenge Foxtel and the regional service, Austar. Subscribers could potentially buy only NRL games, rather than be committed to a package of Foxtel programs they rarely watch.

It's possible fans of a particular rugby league team, such as the Dragons, could subscribe to Fetch's program of NRL matches involving only St George Illawarra.

Sensing this, some NRL clubs have become pro-active with their websites, with the Titans being the first sports club in Australia to stream an in-house produced show for a weekly half hour on Brisbane's Channel Nine, while the Dragons are hoarding exclusive internet content.

With NRL rights expiring in 2012, Fetch could entice Channel Ten to ditch AFL for NRL, given Ten's dissatisfaction with its current share of AFL programming. Its Saturday night coverage in Sydney is regularly out-rated.

Channel Nine joined with Foxtel to deliver the Vancouver Winter Olympics and will share coverage of the 2012 London Summer Olympics, but Stokes' investment in Foxtel and Fox Sports, via shares in Packer's CMH, threatens this relationship. Seven has made it clear it will have no business association with Fetch TV. It is negotiating with Foxtel for AFL rights. Seven boss David Leckie is a rugby league fan but government sources suspect he is interested only in State of Origin football.

Nine's Melbourne boss, Jeff Browne, said: ''We are interested in being there every week for the rugby league fan, not just the three nights of State of Origin football.''

Source: http://www.smh.com.au

titansrawesome
23-03-10, 07:56 PM
i hope this means more money for league and to keep stars in our game.

DIEHARD
23-03-10, 08:09 PM
Sure does. Having the three big Free To Air networks bidding for Rugby League rights will really help us get a higher price which can flow through the game, to increasing the salary cap, club grants, advertising, junior development and saving money for the future.

titansrawesome
23-03-10, 10:13 PM
Sure does. Having the three big Free To Air networks bidding for Rugby League rights will really help us get a higher price which can flow through the game, to increasing the salary cap, club grants, advertising, junior development and saving money for the future.

looks like we are finally pulling it all together, enjoy yourselves while you can afl.

Sydney Titans Fanatic
23-03-10, 10:27 PM
hopefully more air time for the southern legion

DIEHARD
23-03-10, 10:28 PM
looks like we are finally pulling it all together, enjoy yourselves while you can afl.

That's it mate, we are gunning for AFL. Hopefully we can continue to boost club Members as well and crowds.

titansrawesome
23-03-10, 10:42 PM
That's it mate, we are gunning for AFL. Hopefully we can continue to boost club Members as well and crowds.

thats the way, hopefully we can shut kevin sheedy and co's mouth sooner rather then later.

DIEHARD
23-03-10, 10:50 PM
thats the way, hopefully we can shut kevin sheedy and co's mouth sooner rather then later.

Sheedy is a dribbler, even AFL fans think he is. I dont think he is the right person to spear head this GWS. He is so ignorant about Sydney adn Rugby League.

Didn't even know who Hindy was!

titansrawesome
23-03-10, 10:54 PM
Sheedy is a dribbler, even AFL fans think he is. I dont think he is the right person to spear head this GWS. He is so ignorant about Sydney adn Rugby League.

Didn't even know who Hindy was!

lol your telling me, anyways i dont know how people have been hypnotized to think afl is way better than rugby league and every sport, to me its like aerial ping pong, like rugby union without tackles or strategy.

AmericanTitan
24-03-10, 02:36 AM
speaking of television rights, last season a channel here in the States (Spike TV) showed an NRL "Game of the Week" each week for about the last third of the season.

I wish they'd do that again, it was great being able to watch NRL on my TV!


but more on subject, anything to put more money in the game is a good thing. Hopefully it all works out and NRL gets a big boost!