A year and a half ago, CBS Sports secured the rights to Italy’s Serie A on a three-season deal worth around $75 million per year.
But if CBS wants to retain those rights following the 2023-24 season, it might cost them a lot more.
Reuters reports that Serie A is looking for a big increase in international rights fees, and will look to double those payments by 2027 and triple them by 2030.
Serie A secured only around 670 million euros ($657 million) from the sale of overseas TV rights in the 2021-2024 period, a ninth of the sum earned abroad by England’s Premier League, the world’s most lucrative domestic soccer competition.
[…]
Under a scenario drafted by Serie A Chief Executive Luigi De Siervo, the league sees international broadcasting revenue potentially growing to some 1.1 billion euros in the 2024-2027 cycle, to reach about 1.9 billion euros in the 2027-2030 period.
If they’re able to succeed, that would mean an American rightsholder could expect to pay around $150 million per year in the next cycle, increasing to $225 million in the cycle after that.
This might be a hard sell for CBS. The company’s deal with the Big Ten begins in 2023, and they’re paying around $350 million a season for those rights. CBS also retained the rights to the UEFA Champions League for the next two cycles, more than doubling its current rights fee to a reported $250 million per season. With an extra $400 million per year in commitments (for the Champions League, and the Big Ten when compared to the SEC’s current $55 million per year), would CBS really be willing to fork out an extra $75 million to Serie A?
If not, you’d imagine ESPN (the rightsholder prior to CBS) would at least be interested in talking with Serie A about the rights, and NBC would probably be keen as well. Perhaps even Warner Bros. Discovery (Turner was publicly linked to the Serie A rights several years ago before a series of mergers), which inked an eight-year deal with US Soccer earlier this year, or Apple, which locked in a decade-long deal with MLS, could be players.
I’m curious how much American broadcasters will value Serie A going forward. The league’s rights have bounced from beIN Sports to ESPN+ and now to CBS Sports, though the rights fees paid by beIN and ESPN were never reported. While the quest for more revenue is understandable, Serie A switching US media partners for the third straight cycle might raise some eyebrows going forward.
[Reuters]
About Joe Lucia
I hate your favorite team. I also sort of hate most of my favorite teams.
Recent Posts
Former Ohio State, WVU president calls for media rights centralization in college football
Gordon Gee claims college football is leaving billions of dollars on the table.
Steve Gelbs: Aaron Glenn ‘doesn’t have to act this way’ with the media
"I don't know if there's any deeper intent behind it or if he's just a guy that doesn't feel like he has to share anything with the media and so he's going to make a thing out of it."
Jameis Winston calls out reporter for not listening during media scrum
"Are you just not listening to me talk this entire time?"
Kirk Ferentz delivers surprise tribute to longtime Gazette columnist Michael Hlas
Saturday marked Hlas's last game at Kinnick Stadium for The Gazette.
Lincoln Riley calls reporter’s question ‘dumbest’ he’s been asked, tells him to be embarrassed
"This is a professional thing. You ought to try it."
Andre Ware says Tommy Castellanos, Diego Pavia could have long CFL careers
"I don't know what his aspirations are, in terms of the NFL, but he and Diego Pavia at Vanderbilt can play a long time up north."