Los Angeles Times

No deal for UFC rights

Super agent Ari Emanuel is finding little interest in the mixed martial arts organizati­on.

- Bloomberg

Hollywood super agent Ari Emanuel’s reputation as a legendary dealmaker is being put to the test.

Emanuel’s Endeavor holding company has spent months trying to sell the TV rights to the Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip, the mixed martial arts organizati­on his company bought for about $4 billion in 2016 with the private equity firms Silver Lake Partners and KKR.

The buyers gambled that UFC could obtain a huge payday from TV networks hungry for more live sports.

But no buyer has stepped up to pay the $300 million to $400 million a year Endeavor wants, people close to the talks said.

21st Century Fox Inc., which has the contract now, has expressed interest in keeping the rights, and Endeavor is waiting to see if the company will increase its estimated $200-million bid, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing the negotiatio­ns.

The negotiatio­ns are a big test for sports rights owners, who have managed to squeeze higher and higher fees out of TV networks for years.

In January, Fox agreed to pay a record $3 billion for five-year rights to broadcast Thursday night NFL games. CBS and NBC, which had the games previously, concluded they couldn’t make money at the old rates.

Meanwhile, audiences for live sports continue to shrink, and the price for England’s Premiere League soccer fell in the latest auction.

“It’s unlucky timing,” said Michael Colangelo, assistant director of the Sports Business Institute at USC. “We see cord-cutters and people moving to digital. It’s a very weird time.”

Buying the UFC was Emanuel’s biggest investment in his bid to transform Endeavor from a talent agency representi­ng stars such as Matt Damon into a media colossus with live events, streaming services, athletes and models all over the world.

With backing from Silver Lake, Emanuel spent about $2.4 billion in 2013 to buy IMG, which operates one of the largest sports agencies in the world and sells media rights to events such as Premiere League soccer. He then acquired the Profession­al Bull Riders rodeo circuit and formed an e-sports league with Turner Broadcasti­ng.

Yet none of the investment­s yielded the big prize: rights to a major sports league in the U.S., the world’s largest media market.

The search for that prize led to the UFC, which Emanuel already represente­d in negotiatio­ns. Fox agreed to pay an average of about $120 million a year for UFC TV rights in 2011, according to published accounts. In selling the company, the previous owners forecast the league could get more than $400 million a year in its next rights deal.

Endeavor has lowered its expectatio­ns in private, and sports rights analysts say the company isn’t dependent on one market to justify the purchase price. The sport has a large following overseas, especially in Brazil, and has scored significan­t increases in deals in the Middle East and Latin America.

As the current UFC broadcaste­r, Fox has been considered the front-runner. UFC accounts for a sizable share of the programmin­g on FS1, the company’s cable sports network. Fox had an exclusive window to negotiate a new deal, but that closed last year and the talks have slowed, according to the people.

Live sports have grown in importance for Fox since the company agreed to sell most of its film and TV assets to Walt Disney Co. The company has also explored a bid for the rights to World Wrestling Entertainm­ent as an alternativ­e.

WWE gets higher ratings than the UFC, which has lost viewers the last couple of years. Fox’s UFC audience has shrunk more than 30% since 2015.

At the moment, UFC lacks a star of the magnitude of Ronda Rousey or Conor McGregor, Colangelo said, and has spread itself thin. The most appealing matches go on pay-per-view, leaving less for Fox. But the league should bounce back. “The UFC is a cyclical business,” he said.

Endeavor is talking to other suitors, including technology and phone companies and traditiona­l TV players, the people said.

Amazon.com Inc. bought non-exclusive rights to payper-view matches, and Emanuel could split the other rights between a tech company and a media company. Facebook Inc., YouTube and Twitter Inc. have all acquired sports rights in the last couple of years.

Emanuel would prefer one big deal that includes TV, which still offers the largest live audiences, two of the people said.

Major media companies are creating sports streaming services to complement their TV networks. Disney is about to introduce ESPNplus, while Turner and Fox are exploring new ventures as well. CBS Corp. also launched an online sports service last month.

Turner chiefs John Martin and David Levy have told several people they are interested in UFC, but their ability to bid is partly hampered by an ongoing government challenge to AT&T Inc.’s acquisitio­n of their parent company Time Warner Inc.

ESPN declined to comment, though several people familiar with the company’s plans said it was bidding.

“Live events are at a premium in the new media industry, and the UFC has a lot of them,” said Lee Berke, a sports media consultant who has worked with more than 30 profession­al sports team. “Even with the struggles on some platforms, overall they’ll still do very well.”

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? ARI EMANUEL, left, co-chief executive of William Morris Endeaver, shown in 2016 with director Peter Berg, is asking $300 million to $400 million a year for the TV rights to Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ARI EMANUEL, left, co-chief executive of William Morris Endeaver, shown in 2016 with director Peter Berg, is asking $300 million to $400 million a year for the TV rights to Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip.

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