The Rugby Paper

Wales in bid to get £20m for TV rights

- By PETER JACKSON

WALES are attempting to negotiate a record deal of more than £20m from the sale of TV rights to their Autumn Internatio­nals.

They have gone to the market in the hope of securing a hike of at least 20 per cent from their last contract by pushing the average price of the four November Test matches beyond £1.5m. The current three-year agreement with the BBC, which runs out this year, is understood to be worth around £15m.

WRU chief executive Martyn Phillips wants substantia­lly more from the next rights deal starting from 2020.

Sky’s five-year deal for all England’s non-Six Nations matches until 2020 virtually doubled the RFU’s money to more than £35m from the previous contract.

Wales have been talking to Sky and every other potential broadcaste­r,

including BT Sport, ITV, Channel 4 and the BBC.

In an ever-changing landscape, Ireland have moved their autumn Tests from Sky to Channel 4. Their move away from satellite television back to terrestria­l takes effect from this autumn, a series which includes the showdown between the world’s top two ranked teams, Ireland and New Zealand, in Dublin on November 17.

Ireland’s pre-World Cup home friendly against Wales next August is part of the Channel 4 contract. Wales’ home and away warm-ups against England, as revealed by The

Rugby Paper six weeks ago, are expected to be shown on Sky late next summer with the old rivals splitting the television money.

Income from those matches and the home return against Ireland will go some way towards offsetting the revenue lost from the suspension of the November internatio­nals during a World Cup year.

The WRU say they have cast the net ‘far and wide’ and talked to ‘some of the newer entrants to the market’. Phillips said: “The television market in sport is changing rapidly and we want to be at the forefront of that.”

If the BBC lose the autumn matches, as seems likely, they will still have the blue riband of rugby championsh­ips, the Six Nations, albeit in tandem with ITV. “The WRU are still courting all parties,’’ an insider said. “They’ll go with the highest bidder although finding a broadcaste­r prepared to pay them what they want could be a struggle.’’

Wales, in tandem with Scotland, have over-estimated the value of internatio­nal rugby as the Six Nations found to its cost last season.

The two countries rejected the tournament’s title sponsorshi­p deal and instructed Six Nations chief executive John Feehan to go back to the market place.

He failed and by then the title sponsors, RBS, withdrew their offer leaving the Six Nations no alternativ­e but to accept a lower price. A month after the tournament ended with Ireland celebratin­g a second Grand Slam, the Six Nations announced that Feehan had ‘stood down’.

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