Taranaki Daily News

Payment a boost for to restart of A-League

- Vince Rugari

The A-League has cleared a major hurdle for the resumption of the season after Football Federation Australia belatedly received its full quarterly payment from Fox Sports.

Football industry sources have confirmed Fox has now paid the near $12 million (NZ$12.7m) instalment of its broadcast deal with FFA, which was due mid-last month.

It is a positive developmen­t for FFA amid tense negotiatio­ns with the payTV operator, although it does not come with a guarantee that Fox Sports will continue as the A-League’s broadcaste­r for the final three seasons of the contract.

But the fact it has been settled is a sign that relations between the two parties are perhaps not as frosty as first feared, while also enabling the continuati­on of planning for the last few rounds and finals series of the A-League to be played.

FFA declined to comment, while the head of Fox Sports, Peter Campbell, did not return calls. But, in a separate statement welcoming the federal government’s new principles for the return of profession­al sport, FFA chief executive James Johnson – who has led the game’s negotiatio­ns with Fox – said: ‘‘We will, in conjunctio­n with our own guidelines, use the principles and the AIS Framework for Rebooting Sport in a Covid-19 Environmen­t to guide our ongoing plans for the return of the A-League and community football.’’

The money from Fox will be forwarded on to clubs but further decisions will need to be made regarding how much they will receive and what players will be paid, with commercial revenues nosediving for both FFA and the clubs as a result of the shutdown.

Pay cuts are inevitable for players, while FFA and the clubs will also have to reach agreement with Profession­al Footballer­s Australia over a shortterm extension of player contracts, which expire on May 31. Sources at FFA do not foresee that being an issue.

FFA has refused to set a public target date for the resumption of the A-League – nor has it revealed how it plans to stage games or if the ‘‘hub’’ concept being contemplat­ed by the AFL and NRL could be used – but it

remains committed to playing on as soon as state and federal government­s allow it. Club sources indicate, however, that even a return to training is not likely to come until July at the earliest.

Foxtel, the parent company of Fox Sports, is in significan­t financial turmoil following declines in advertisin­g revenues and the suspension of sporting competitio­ns caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has also accelerate­d the shift of audiences towards over-the-top streaming platforms. Foxtel made 70 staff redundant this week, the organisati­on’s third major round of job cuts this year.

Fox has been the A-League’s major broadcast partner since the competitio­n’s inception in 2005, but has been unhappy with the terms of the current deal, worth nearly $60m (NZ$63.5m) a year, for some time – primarily because of the negative publicity surroundin­g the code in recent years during the A-League clubs’ fight for independen­ce, as well as poor ratings on linear television.

Football stakeholde­rs have feared that Fox could use the Covid-19 outbreak as an opportunit­y to tear up the contract and abandon the sport.

However, the company is yet to declare any intention to do so.

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