Shackelford: PGA Tour’s TV negotiations have left many in the dark

The speculation surrounding the PGA Tour’s TV rights has been rampant, with some saying AT&T and Amazon will have a say in the matter.

Thanksgiving came and went with no announcement. The PGA Tour and LPGA Tour’s television future is still only full of possibilities with no concrete answers.

The future of how golf will be broadcast could land moments after this story is published. Or not.

The Tour’s current contracts with CBS, NBC and Golf Channel run through 2021. An international broadcasting arrangement with Discovery network is locked in much longer. What’s the fuss all about with plenty of time to sort this out?

Millions of dollars are at stake. Hundreds of jobs may be affected. The sports media world is eyeing the Tour’s decision. And some of the planet’s most powerful moguls are weighing whether to overpay as they unbundle cable into streaming networks that they will eventually rebundle all over again.

The hopeless effort to guess the outcome started in earnest this summer, with Tour executives hoping to have their next media rights deal locked up in time to enjoy Black Friday. Initial pitches were in early October, and the PGA Tour’s man in charge of the project, Rick Anderson, briefly surfaced to share insights with Sports Business Daily, but otherwise the leaks have been minimal and the speculation has reached levels of absurdity. (I have heard, at one time or another in the last month that every major network was out and also all-in, sometimes with the news arriving the same hour.)

Now, with the Hero World Challenge and Presidents Cup upon us, any announcement of the decision will impact those events given the intrigue surrounding who televises golf and what they will spend for the privilege.

The PGA Tour opened up its bidding early to avoid next year’s NFL rights talks and to buy necessary time should it decide to start a new network. While the timing is less than ideal, the alternatives never were better given how much the NFL is expected to syphon from networks and streaming services.

The only real indication of where the race stood came when CBS did not pick up options on Gary McCord and Peter Kostis, a sign of the network’s eagerness to freshen up its broadcasts in the face of tour apathy toward its week-to-week broadcast presentation. The signing of Davis Love, a longtime Policy Board member with inside knowledge of the Tour’s vision, changed that narrative briefly before a surprising new Champions League rights deal and signs of post-merger Viacom money made clear CBS will be back.

Other reports have suggested AT&T is still proposing to turn its TruTV channel into a new PGA Tour Channel, while incumbents NBC/Golf Channel and former partner ESPN are big parts of the equation. (Full disclosure: I’m a contributor to Golf Channel.)

One fairly consistent rumor: ESPN+ will be the home of significant amounts of streaming coverage.

A few insiders insist Amazon still may have a say in matters, while Fox Sports did not seriously bid. All are grumbling about what you’d expect: outrageous financial demands and contract terms without the streaming wars having even begun in earnest. And there is AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson’s inside access as a longtime PGA Tour Policy Board member that has everyone wondering what that could mean (though Stephenson has much bigger issues on his desk, including a pesky activist investor and billions in merger-related debt).

The main intrigue at this point surrounds the remaining media companies and how far they are willing to go for a sport featuring a wealthy, but ancient demographic by sports standards. Golf fans are highly unlikely to stream in large numbers outside of big weeks or when Tiger Woods is not in the television window. Which is why one sponsor rep called me last week asking if his tournament was going to get what might be seen as an unfavorable broadcast arrangement that could reduce the delivery of eyeballs. Another rep for a massive sponsor said his company was totally in the dark as well, leaving him perplexed given how much his company values its current broadcast setup. Both people spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

If sponsors — the lifeblood of the PGA Tour — are in the dark, then you know it’s been a relatively small group in on the discussions.

Soon we’ll know which moguls wrote the biggest checks and who most sees professional golf as a viable media business. For those sponsors in the dark, we’ll find out just how much the new deal valued their desire to reach certain audiences. And fans will soon find out what it will cost to watch their favorite PGA Tour events and stars over the next decade. Small stuff in the grand scheme, but do not tell that to the small world awaiting the Tour’s decision.

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Cristie Kerr set to join Golf Channel booth as guest analyst at CME

Cristie Kerr will be part of Golf Channel’s CME Group Tour Championship coverage, but she’s not quitting golf anytime soon.

NAPLES, Fla. – Cristie Kerr will make her debut in the Golf Channel booth on Thursday at the CME Group Tour Championship, but she’s not quitting golf anytime soon.

“It’s been a helluva year,” said Kerr, who had an emergency root canal in Portland, dealt with a minor lower back injury and missed out qualifying for the Solheim Cup, the Asian swing and the chance at a $1.5 million payday. A 20-time winner on the LPGA, Kerr finished 80th on the money list with $181,456. Sixty players qualified for this week’s season-ending event at Tiburon Golf Club.

SCORES: CME Group Tour Championship leaderboard
MORE: Record prize up for grabs at CME

“It was kind of a bit of a wake-up call for me because I felt like I was fitting golf in,” said Kerr of her 2019.  “As competitive as it is out here now, you can’t fit anything in. You’ve got to make it a priority. For however many years I have left, whether it’s two, five or 10, I’m going to make the most of it, and I’m going to go out on my terms, whenever that is.”

Cristie Kerr makes her analyst debut during the Golf Channel’s coverage of the CME Group Tour Championship. (Golf Channel)

The 42-year-old mother of two kept busy this fall juggling family and her growing wine business. Kerr said her family won’t travel with her on the road next year outside of a few of the California events that are easy to drive to. She’s in the market for a new caddie and new clubs for 2020. And she’s ready for a fresh start.

“This year I’ve been pulled in so many different directions,” said Kerr, “probably for the first time in my career I didn’t know how to handle everything. I just thought ‘Oh I can just go practice for an hour and a half or two every day and it will work.’ Clearly not.”

The only upside to not qualifying for the CME is that Kerr gets a rare opportunity to test the waters of television commentating. She’ll be in the booth alongside Judy Rankin and Terry Gannon on Thursday and will shadow Jerry Foltz for on-course reporting on Friday.

“I’ve been playing professional golf for 24 years,” said Kerr. “I have a lot to talk about. That’s why I’m here this week is to learn the ropes.”

Kerr’s fine wine business puts out around 2,500 cases annually. She’d like to get that up to 10,000 in the next six to nine years. Longtime friend Kelli Kuehne will join the staff full time next year as director of events. They’ll soon be opening a tasting room in Napa.

“I’m pretty serious about my wine,” said Kerr.

One day she might be serious about the TV business too.

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Golf Channel executive producer Molly Solomon takes on new role with NBC Olympics

Molly Solomon adds NBC Olympics production and executive producer to her job role in addition to overseeing production of Golf Channel.

Molly Solomon was playing the 16th hole with Golf Channel commentator Brandel Chamblee recently at her home course, Country Club of Orlando, when her phone buzzed. It was her boss, Pete Bevacqua, president of NBC Sports Group. As any golfer should do, she let it go to voicemail.

“I finished the round, got in my car and called him back,” she said. “Sometimes you get a call that changes the direction of your professional life.”

NBC Sports Group announced Tuesday that Solomon has been named executive producer and president of NBC Olympics production and executive producer of Golf Channel.

Solomon, who has worked 10 Olympics for NBC Sports, including as coordinating producer of the 2012 London Olympics opening ceremony and prime-time show, will oversee all day-to-day editorial production of NBC Olympics’ coverage of the Games, as well as the Olympic Channel. She will continue to oversee production of NBC Sports Group’s Golf Channel as well, a position she has held since 2012, and report to Bevacqua.

“As a broadcast partner at the PGA of America, and now as a colleague at NBC Sports, I’ve had a front-row seat watching Molly skillfully and creatively lead a tremendous Golf Channel production team,” Bevacqua said. “We are excited to put oversight of our Olympic presentation into her exceptionally-qualified hands, and are especially proud to see a long-time and well-liked member of our NBC team return to her roots.”

She’s also not the only Golf Channel executive to take on a bigger role within NBC Universal. Will McIntosh was recently promoted to executive vice president of NBC Sports digital and consumer business and moved to its Connecticut offices. The timing of these announcements with Golf Channel in the midst of a fierce battle to retain rights to the PGA Tour suggests Golf Channel may be bracing for a big shakeup if it loses out in a bidding war, but Bevacqua downplayed the significance.

“I don’t think it has any impact at all,” he said of NBC/Golf Channel’s TV negotiation effort.

Solomon replaces Jim Bell, who stepped down earlier this month after three decades with NBC.

“To lead NBC Sports’ Olympic production team is an immensely rewarding opportunity in a 30-year career,” Solomon said. “Growing up at NBC Sports, I’ve been so fortunate to work with the gifted Olympics storytellers, and then to combine it with my other sports love – golf – with the incredible, dedicated team at Golf Channel.”

Solomon, who begins her new role immediately, returns to work with the NBC Olympics team, where she previously held a succession of positions beginning in 1990 as a researcher (the last time she was in Tokyo was in 1991, as a researcher for NBC Sports’ coverage of the world track and field championships).

An 11-time Emmy Award-winner, Solomon continues to serve in her role as Golf Channel’s lead production executive. Solomon also oversaw the network’s production of golf’s return to the Olympic Games in Rio in 2016. She will now be based at NBC Sports Group’s International Broadcast Center in Stamford, Conn.

“Molly is a fantastic leader who has helped showcase the most historic championships in golf and new events designed to help grow the game,” Mike McCarley, president of golf for NBC Sports, wrote to Golf Channel staff in an e-mail obtained by Golfweek.

“She’s worked closely with many partners to elevate championships like THE PLAYERS, The Open, KPMG Women’s PGA Championship and the new FedExCup Playoffs, as well as launch new events like the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals and Augusta National Women’s Amateur, and of course, golf’s return to the Olympics in 2016. It’s only fitting that she returns to her Olympic roots as the leader who will now shape the way in which America experiences the Olympic Games.”

When asked if she plans to give Olympic golf any special promotion, she noted that the golf likely will air during prime time.

“I do have a soft spot for golf,” she said.