Ottawa Citizen

CFL, TSN set to extend TV deal

With more streaming services on the rise, broadcast partners set to extend agreement

- DAN BARNES Edmonton dbarnes@postmedia.com Twitter.com/sportsdanb­arnes

It appears the Canadian Football League and TSN have been huddling up at the highest levels and will be announcing a new, long-term partnershi­p before the end of this season.

Well-placed sources say the league and the all-sports television network have agreed on a six-year deal that runs through the 2025 season and should be worth about $50 million to the CFL, though that number could grow significan­tly as there will be incentives, ratings-based and otherwise, written into the contract.

A TSN spokespers­on said in an email that the company does not comment on rights negotiatio­ns, while a CFL spokespers­on did not immediatel­y respond to Postmedia’s request for comment on Friday.

The current agreement was scheduled to run through 2021, but there was apparently impetus from both the league and TSN to hammer out a long-term arrangemen­t that functions more as a partnershi­p than a rights deal, so it is believed the final two years were reworked and four more were added.

Revenue is obviously preferable to the alternativ­e, so it makes nothing but sense for the CFL to seek an extension, particular­ly one that will offer a healthy base amount that each of the nine franchises can rely upon, and also leave top-end room if ratings trend up, as both the CFL and TSN would hope and expect.

It’s especially important if and when the CFL adds an expansion franchise in Halifax. Principals with the Atlantic Schooners are now hopeful of a 2021 kickoff, most likely in an existing stadium in Moncton, N.B., before switching to an as-yet-unbuilt venue in Halifax after a season or two.

The CFL will be charging the Schooners’ owners an expansion fee, and a lucrative, long-term TV deal will surely bolster the value of a 10th franchise.

Under commission­er Randy Ambrosie, the league continues to shift perception and pursue new revenue streams all over the world as part of his ambitious CFL 2.0 initiative. The CFL signed a TV deal with a Mexico City company and is due to announce a streaming deal with another Mexican media outlet. In time, there should also be streaming deals in Europe, as global players start to populate CFL rosters.

If the deal with TSN represents a new approach to domestic television rights and includes previously untapped sources of revenue, it would stand as another example of Ambrosie’s innovative leadership and stated intention to strengthen the league’s bottom line.

An even more interestin­g aspect of the deal would be TSN’s motivation to rework the terms. They had the CFL locked up for two more years, apparently at a somewhat lower rate, and by all accounts were satisfied with the ratings and what the product was doing for them in terms of driving ad revenue.

So why extend a favourable deal? Well, without hearing it from anyone at TSN who was directly involved in the negotiatio­ns, how can this not be about the very real threat that global streaming companies pose to more traditiona­l TV networks?

Think specifical­ly about the landscape in Canada. The CFL is partly aligned with the new Canadian Premier League that has brought another profession­al soccer loop to Canada, with teams in Hamilton, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Calgary, Halifax, Victoria and York Region.

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers own Valour FC, while the TigerCats’ so-called caretaker Bob Young owns Hamilton’s Forge

FC.

The CPL kicked off its debut season last spring by signing a 10-year streaming deal with Mediapro, a Spanish media conglomera­te that generated revenues equal to $2.7 billion Cdn in 2017 (it is branded as OneSoccer.ca).

It has been reported, but not confirmed by anyone with the CPL or Mediapro, that the deal is worth $200 million, so $20 million per year. For a fledgling, domestic soccer startup. That’s really good money.

As one source said Friday, there is “incredible upheaval” in the broadcast market these days and TSN would surely have been looking for long-term stability with a major partner like the CFL.

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 ?? PETER POWER/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? TSN is set to ensure it’s the home of all CFL plays, like Hamilton Tiger-Cats defensive back Jumal Rolle snatching an intercepti­on against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, through 2025.
PETER POWER/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES TSN is set to ensure it’s the home of all CFL plays, like Hamilton Tiger-Cats defensive back Jumal Rolle snatching an intercepti­on against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, through 2025.
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