Report: NFL in talks for more than $100B in TV deals

The NFL could reel in more than $100 billion in its upcoming TV dea;s

Every time you think you can wrap your head around how big of a business the NFL is, another item pops that tells you it is far larger than one can imagine.

The New York Post reported Wednesday the league is in negotiations with its TV partners for 10-year deals that collectively would surpass $100 billion in rights money.

One-hundred billion dollars.

Per the report:

Sources said that the league and its current partners are working on frameworks for agreements that would keep the Sunday afternoon games on CBS and Fox, “Monday Night Football” on ESPN/ABC and “Sunday Night Football” on NBC. ESPN/ABC is expected to add Super Bowls when all is said and done.

The deals are not completed so the NFL could change course, but this is where it is trending, according to sources. The NFL is the highest-rated programming in television, which gives the league exceptional leverage and they are expected to receive substantial increases over their current contracts.

One big change would be ESPN/ABC getting involved in the Super Bowl rotation. Currently, CBS, NBC, and FOX take turns with the championship.

With ABC/ESPN added to the Super Bowl rotation in 10-year contracts, the NFL may just assign Super Bowls for eight seasons. In this scenario, ABC/ESPN, NBC, CBS and Fox would receive two Super Bowls each. The NFL could auction off the final two Super Bowls at a later date, if it goes with the 10-year term.

 

Reasons to believe in the rebirth of the XFL

The XFL is back and there was promise in the league’s first weekend.

Luck — Oliver Luck, actually — is on Vince McMahon’s side and it gives hope to the second incarnation of the XFL.

Rather than partner with an Ebersol, again, the WWE impressario hired Luck as his commissioner for this go-round at a spring league. In his first run he teamed with Dick Ebersol and NBC, which led to grandiose ratings on opening night and an 100-yard circus following it, which resulted in the end of the league after one season.

McMahon watched Ebersol’s son, Charlie, launch the AAF in 2019 and saw it sink faster than the 2001 version of the XFL. Meanwhile, this verison of the XFL took its time in reaching kickoff and the results have been good football, enthusiastic fans and reasonable results.

The kickoff

Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

Start with the kickoff. A completely unique look that could give the NFL something to think about. Talk about a 100 percent turnaround from the first go-round when the coin toss turned into a demolition derby.

Then

Now