Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

PGA of America agrees to 11-year deal with CBS, ESPN

- By Doug Ferguson AP Golf Writer

The PGA Championsh­ip will remain with CBS Sports and pick up a powerful partner in ESPN for weekday rounds as part of an 11-year agreement in which the networks will combine to deliver 175 hours of coverage across broadcast, cable and digital platforms.

Financial terms of the deal announced Wednesday were not disclosed, though it was clear the PGA Championsh­ip is more attractive held in May than in August.

The agreement gives CBS and ESPN, which broadcast the Masters, the first two majors of the year.

“I can tell you from our standpoint, the property was more valuable in May than in August,” said Sean McManus, chairman of CBS Sports. “We are paying a rights fee increase. It was definitely a more attractive package.”

McManus said the number of households watching on TV is higher in May, and he spoke of a “halo effect” in broadcasti­ng the next major after the Masters, which is the highestrat­ed golf telecast of the year.

The PGA Championsh­ip had been held in August for the better part of 50 years. It moves next year to May as part of a restructur­ed schedule that allows the PGA Tour to conclude its FedEx Cup on Aug. 25, a week before the start of football.

When the CBS-ESPN deal begins in 2020, the PGA Championsh­ip will be at Harding Park in San Francisco.

CBS first broadcast the PGA Championsh­ip from 1958 through 1964, and continuous­ly since 1991. The network will continue to provide weekend coverage, adding an extra hour Saturday and Sunday under the new deal.

“Premium content such as the PGA represents the past, present and future of CBS,” said Joe Ianniello, president and acting CEO of CBS Corp. “There is nothing like live sports programmin­g to attract a mass audience and drive our business.”

Still be determined is a broadcast schedule for ESPN, which replaces Turner Sports.

ESPN offers a network dedicated to sports, along with “ESPN+” a subscripti­on-based streaming service sold directly to the consumer that can provide an array of programmin­g from featured groups, featured players or specific hole coverage.

“The general vision here is what the PGA wants to do,” said Burke Magnus, executive vice president of programmin­g and scheduling for ESPN. “They want every hole of competitio­n covered over the four days, from the first group on Thursday. They want it all covered in one way or form. And that’s right in our wheelhouse. ... We will have an array of compliment­ary presentati­on.”

CBS will be in charge of production, just as it is at the Masters.

The PGA of America’s current deal expires next year, and given the pursuit of live programmin­g, it became a valuable property during negotiatio­ns. Along with the financial aspect, CBS Sports was helped by being the incumbent and having establishe­d a strong relationsh­ip with the PGA of America.

PGA of America chief executive Seth Waugh said partnering with ESPN provides “72 holes of coverage on a network known for sports.”

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