The seven Catholic universities had privately voiced concerns that the Big East was changing to chase football cash; aware of the discontent, Fox last fall made clear its desire to talk to the group. The universities also knew that the terms of what essentially acted as a prenuptial agreement would let them leave the Big East as a unit, without paying exit fees, and make their own TV deal.
Fox won them over with a 12-year deal worth about $500 million, according to reports. But the contract could spike to $600 million if the conference grows to a dozen teams, according to two people briefed on the contract but not authorized to speak publicly about its terms. A number of universities are said to be candidates to join the new Big East, including Xavier, an Atlantic 10 member, and Creighton, of the Missouri Valley Conference.
Fox Sports has laid off between 50 and 100 employees, according to a person familiar with the matter, part of a bid to realign the Fox Corp. unit after it shed its regional-sports networks as part of the company’s massive asset sale to Walt Disney Co. in 2019.
Fox Sports employs approximately 1,000 staffers. Fox previously owned a large passel of regional-sports operations that served local sports broadcasts to fans in the northeast, southwest and many other parts of the U.S. Those network were sold to Walt Disney as part of a transaction that also included many of Fox’s entertainment networks and production studios for $71.3 billion. Disney in turn sold 21 of those networks to a consortium of companies that were led by Sinclair Broadcast Group for around $10.6 billion. The YES Network, which broadcasts New York Yankees baseball, was sold to a group that included the team, Sinclair and Amazon. Disney, which also owns ESPN, was required to sell the regional outlets as a condition of its Fox asset purchase.
Like other sports-media companies, Fox Sports has had to contend with months without live-sports broadcasts. Many of Fox Sports’ on-air anchors and analysts agreed in April to take a temporary pay cut, largely in tandem with compensation decreases among top executives at parent company Fox Corporation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Fox Corp. on Tuesday reported total sales of $2.42 billion last quarter, in line with expectations, down slightly (4%) from a year ago but off $1 billion from the previous three months as COVID-19 hit advertising. The company that owns Fox News, Fox Sports, Fox Entertainment and the Fox Television Stations had warned a major squeeze was coming with stations expected to be down 50%.
Cable Network Programming reported quarterly segment revenues of $1.27 billion, a decrease of $28 million or 2% from the amount reported in the prior year quarter, as lower advertising and other revenues were partially offset by higher affiliate revenues. Advertising revenues decreased $22 million or 8%, primarily due to the postponement of live events at FS1 as a result of COVID-19, partially offset by higher advertising revenues at Fox News Media. Other revenues decreased $15 million or 31%, primarily due to lower revenues at Fox Sports as a result of COVID-19.
adoraz wrote:
Fox pretty much has to give the Big East something more these next 5 years if they want to keep us.
ESPN signed a 10-year media rights deal with the Ivy League, with plans to carry every football and men’s and women’s basketball game starting in the fall. Most of the games will be on ESPN’s soon-to-launch OTT platform, ESPN+. One of ESPN’s linear TV channels will carry at least 24 games per year, including six football games (including the Harvard-Yale game), six regular season men’s basketball games, the men’s and women’s basketball tournaments and the men’s lacrosse tournament semifinals and finals. Eight other conference postseason events also will be carried on linear TV. The deal is structured in a similar way to ESPN’s recent Sun Belt conference deal, which essentially was an ESPN+ deal with some linear elements. These deals underscore ESPN’s strategy of moving its rights deals with non-Power Five conferences to its OTT platform.
• ACC: 1979–2036[1]
• Big Ten: 1979–2023
• Big 12: 1997–2025
• Pac-12: 2012–2023
• SEC: ?–2023
adoraz wrote:
It's silly to think they [ESPN} won't at least be interested.
gtmoBlue wrote:
It is likely the BE will double the per game values we currently receive.
gtmoBlue wrote:Nice post Adoraz. FF is probably under a bit of Covid-related stress, or he was baiting/looking for an argument.
agree with the majority of your lists, except for these:
- Increasing average salary of BE coaches to remain competitive with the top-half of the P5 in men's basketball
Coaches are making enough already. Time for the players (if congress passes new legislation) to make a couple of bucks.
- Continue building the #BetheChange and #Coaches4Action campaigns
Who is "Bethechange"?
- Getting more alumni teams into TBT that model and challenge the Golden Eagles
Seems like Warrior/GE folks are the only ones who care about the TBT. I will say they did a great "bubble job" last summer. The TBT is an example
of how the NCAA and college basketball can emulate & hopefully repeat their successes.
gtmoBlue wrote:Nice post Adoraz. FF is probably under a bit of Covid-related stress, or he was baiting/looking for an argument.
adoraz wrote:
Fox pretty much has to give the Big East something more these next 5 years if they want to keep us.
On August 12, 2020 Xudash wrote:
I have him on block, but …
On September 9, 2020 Xudash wrote:
I have him blocked, but noticed his recent quoted post.
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