Industry wonders who will challenge ESPN
By JOHN OURAND
Staff writer
Published November 09, 2009 : Page 22
Much of the talk in the sports media world last fall centered on whether an effective competitor would step up to compete with ESPN.
ESPN had just outbid Fox by $100 million to secure the rights to college football’s Bowl Championship Series through 2014, thanks mainly to its dual revenue stream that has cable and satellite operators making a monthly payment of more than $4 per subscriber for the channel.
At the time, some sports league executives were fearful that ESPN would become a de facto monopoly that eventually would wind up driving the cost of sports rights down.
If a competitor were to emerge, it would have to do so between 2011 and 2014, when the TV deals for the NFL, MLB, NASCAR, NHL and MLS expire.
Yet a full year after ESPN scored the BCS rights, that national sports competitor still has not developed, and most network and league executives contacted by SportsBusiness Journal are skeptical that anyone will come forward to compete head-to-head with ESPN.
Network and league executives are skeptical if anyone will come forward to compete head-to-
head with ESPN.
“But I see lots of competition around the fringes for ESPN,” said one league executive.
That means ESPN should expect to see lots of competition from various entities, including the broadcasters, national cable networks, regional sports networks and league-owned networks.
Broadcasters have a multi-pronged approach for competing with ESPN for sports rights, starting with using retransmission consent rules to charge cable operators as much as $1 per month to carry their local stations (see story, page 1). Networks plan to use some of that money to compete with ESPN on sports rights.
But ESPN could see competition from some national cable networks. Some of these networks, like FX and Versus, have a surcharge clause in some of their contracts with small- to midsized cable operators (ones not named Comcast or Time Warner Cable). The surcharge gives the channels the right to charge an additional fee if they pick up rights to high-profile sports programming such as the NFL or the Olympics.
By JOHN OURAND
Staff writer
Published November 09, 2009 : Page 22
Much of the talk in the sports media world last fall centered on whether an effective competitor would step up to compete with ESPN.
ESPN had just outbid Fox by $100 million to secure the rights to college football’s Bowl Championship Series through 2014, thanks mainly to its dual revenue stream that has cable and satellite operators making a monthly payment of more than $4 per subscriber for the channel.
At the time, some sports league executives were fearful that ESPN would become a de facto monopoly that eventually would wind up driving the cost of sports rights down.
If a competitor were to emerge, it would have to do so between 2011 and 2014, when the TV deals for the NFL, MLB, NASCAR, NHL and MLS expire.
Yet a full year after ESPN scored the BCS rights, that national sports competitor still has not developed, and most network and league executives contacted by SportsBusiness Journal are skeptical that anyone will come forward to compete head-to-head with ESPN.
Network and league executives are skeptical if anyone will come forward to compete head-to-
head with ESPN.
“But I see lots of competition around the fringes for ESPN,” said one league executive.
That means ESPN should expect to see lots of competition from various entities, including the broadcasters, national cable networks, regional sports networks and league-owned networks.
Broadcasters have a multi-pronged approach for competing with ESPN for sports rights, starting with using retransmission consent rules to charge cable operators as much as $1 per month to carry their local stations (see story, page 1). Networks plan to use some of that money to compete with ESPN on sports rights.
But ESPN could see competition from some national cable networks. Some of these networks, like FX and Versus, have a surcharge clause in some of their contracts with small- to midsized cable operators (ones not named Comcast or Time Warner Cable). The surcharge gives the channels the right to charge an additional fee if they pick up rights to high-profile sports programming such as the NFL or the Olympics.