NYT: CBS, In “Alliance” With TBS, Involved in MLB TV Talks

TMC1982

SatelliteGuys Pro
Original poster
Jun 26, 2008
206
2
http://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2012/08/nyt-cbs-in-alliance-with-tbs-involved-in-mlb-tv-talks/

The New York Times reported Wednesday that Major League Baseball is in discussions with Fox Sports Media Group, NBC Sports Group, and a “TBS-CBS alliance” on a new television contract.
FOX, NBC and TBS have always been described as the primary suitors for MLB rights — along with ESPN, which agreed to a new eight-year TV deal on Tuesday. This is perhaps the first time, however, that CBS has been mentioned as a definitive bidder.

In June, Sports Business Journal reported that CBS was not interested in baseball rights. A month later, The New York Times first broached the possibility that Turner Sports would “link up” with CBS for a joint bid.
CBS and Turner Sports are far from unlikely bedfellows. The entities’ parent companies, CBS Corporation and Time Warner, share joint-ownership of The CW broadcast network.

In the sports realm, CBS and Turner won rights to the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament in 2010, as their joint bid topped ESPN’s by some $40 million per year. Going back further, they shared television rights for the Winter Olympics during the 1990s.

According to the Times report, CBS “would most likely want only the All-Star Game and World Series,” an arrangement similar to the one NBC had with Major League Baseball in the late 1990s.
 
Doesn't really matter who gets it, their ratings will still suck. Almost all baseball fans watch the games on their regional networks. They don't care about "national" games, unless their team is playing in it, otherwise their turning to their regional network.
 
Doesn't really matter who gets it, their ratings will still suck. Almost all baseball fans watch the games on their regional networks. They don't care about "national" games, unless their team is playing in it, otherwise their turning to their regional network.

CBS only gets the WS and ASG ...Those games you can't watch on your RSN.
 
http://www.sportsmediawatch.com/201...will-win-baseballs-version-of-musical-chairs/


While ESPN has already locked up a piece of baseball TV rights for eight additional years, the most intriguing negotiations are yet to come.


Rights to the Major League Baseball Division Series, League Championship Series, and World Series — to say nothing of the MLB All-Star Game and the Saturday “Game of the Week” — remain up for grabs, with some combination of Fox Sports, NBC Sports, or Turner Sports/CBS expected to bid.


Currently, rights to those marquee events are divvied up between Fox Sports and Turner Sports. FOX, paying $257 million/year through the end of next season, holds the rights to the the World Series, one half of the League Championship Series, the regular season “Game of the Week,” and the MLB All-Star Game.


Turner Sports, paying $149 million/year, holds the rights to the entire Division Series and the other half of the League Championship Series.


According to a report in Sports Business Journal Monday, the Fox and Turner Sports deals could be combined into one massive television package. Both FOX and CBS/Turner Sports have reportedly proposed deals that would have them acquire the consolidated package.


Presented is an overview of the networks involved in MLB rights negotiations:
 
The CBS angle surprises me.

CBS is the #1 network. Shuting down primetime for seven days in late October makes no sense.

However, could this be, we can only hope, the end of McCarver? CBS isn't going to build up its own crew, just for the WS and ASG. TBS already has a full staff. Their "A" set would do those games.

McCarver free baseball.
 
Here's an intriguing proposition that somebody on Awful Announcing wrote in response to CBS apparently only wanting to cover just the marquee events (and not the regular season) in a potential future baseball TV contract:
*Let NBC take over the PGA Tour package on Saturdays (which in essence they have done already by extension with the Golf Channel) so that CBS could air MLB games on Saturday afternoons.
**In theory, all of these golf tournaments that would potentially run over on Sundays (and cut into CBS' prime time schedule on the East Coast) wouldn't really hurt if NBC was allowed to get the golf tournaments instead.


*If CBS and Turner Sports were sharing resources for Saturday games, then it could potentially mean less travel expense since you would be having the same broadcast team(s) call games on both days. More to the point, CBS and Turner could use TBS, TNT, and TruTV (similar to their NCCA basketball tournament coverage) to air three separate games, regionally on Sundays. These would be the same three series games that CBS would broadcast regionally on Saturday.
 

Fantasy Football

Art Modell Dead: Former Ravens Owner Dies At 87

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 0, Members: 0, Guests: 0)

Who Read This Thread (Total Members: 1)