
Daily Cannon
·5. Dezember 2023
Key points from the Premier League’s new TV deal

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Yahoo sportsDaily Cannon
·5. Dezember 2023
On Monday, the Premier League announced their new domestic rights deal for the four seasons from 2025/26 to 2028/29.
Sky Sports will be the main broadcaster for the live matches, airing a minimum of 215 games per season, at least four per week. That includes three midweek match rounds and all 10 games on the final day of each season.
TNT Sports will also continue to broadcast games, taking 52 matches including the Saturday 12:30pm slot and two midweek match rounds.
However, it seems Amazon have dropped out of the race, choosing not to pick up any games in this cycle. The timing of that decision is rather amusing, with Prime Video set to air the current round of midweek fixtures, including Arsenal’s trip to Luton Town.
The BBC will continue to have highlight rights for Match of the Day.
The new deal is worth £6.7billion over the four years, which the Premier League frame as “inclusive of a four per cent increase in live rights value”.
But some are more sceptical. Football writer Grace Robertson points out that the per-game cost of the new deal is £6.2m, whilst the old deal had a per-game cost of £8.5m. That’s before factoring in inflation.
Yet the BBC’s Simon Stone writes that the Premier League will be privately satisfied, believing additional growth in TV revenues will come from the overseas market. Remember, this deal is only for the domestic rights.
The good news for fans is that they’ll need one fewer subscription to watch all the games, and that there will be more games on TV, including all of the Sunday 2pm games involving teams playing in the Europa League or Europa Conference League that Thursday.
On the other hand, the Saturday 3pm blackout remains for four more years, so fans of top clubs like Arsenal will continue to struggle to watch every game, given the demand for match tickets.
In all, the changes aren’t hugely significant. A few more games on TV, the same primary broadcasters as before, and a deal for relatively similar money.
Anyone hoping for a major shake-up will have been left disappointed.