Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Premier League agrees new broadcast deal in China with Tencent

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LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) — The Premier League announced yesterday that it had agreed a new broadcast deal in China for the rest of the season with Tencent Sports following the terminatio­n of its previous agreement.

Viewers will have access to all the remaining 372 matches of England’s topflight football league via Tencent’s digital platforms from tomorrow.

More than half of all matches will be available for free to fans in China, with the remaining fixtures available on Tencent Sports’ membership service.

The Premier League, which restarted last weekend after a seven-week break, terminated its contract with Chinese broadcaste­r PPTV earlier this month after a dispute over a missed payment.

PPTV had agreed a reported $700-million deal for the right to broadcast all 380 Premier League matches per season from 2019 to 2022.

However, the first season of that deal was hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic, with a three-month shutdown between March and June, before the campaign was completed behind closed doors.

PPTV reportedly failed to make a payment due in March for coverage of the 2019/20 season.

“We are excited to have agreed this partnershi­p with Tencent ensuring our supporters in China can enjoy following Premier League action throughout this season,” said Premier League chief executive Richard Masters.

“We and our clubs have an extremely passionate fanbase in China and are looking forward to working with the team at Tencent to engage with fans in new ways over the coming season.”

Through the partnershi­p with the social media and gaming giant, clubs will be able to share in-game clips during matches with supporters and the Premier League will launch an official channel including videos and features.

Tencent Sports General Manager Ewell Zhao said: “The Premier League is one of the world’s most popular sports competitio­ns and has many fans in China.

“In collaborat­ion with the Premier League, Tencent Sports hopes to leverage its platforms and technology to bring the drama of Premier League matches to fans and share with them the passion and excitement of football.”

The deal will come as some relief to the English top-flight, which is already facing huge losses due to coronaviru­s.

Domestic and internatio­nal broadcaste­rs are due a rebate worth £330 million ($425 million) for the 2019/20 season failing to finish on time, while the new campaign has started with all matches still played without spectators.

The Premier League has tried to encourage large tech companies to enter the market for its rights in recent years.

Amazon bought rights for the first time in the 2019-2022 domestic deal, showing all 20 games of two rounds of fixtures.

However, the Premier League added that it is still looking “to explore opportunit­ies for free-to-air broadcast coverage in China for the 2020/21 season”.

With a 1.4 billion population and the world’s second-biggest economy, China is a prime growth market for the Premier League. Along with the NBA, it is the most-watched foreign sports competitio­n in China.

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