Seasons1992 Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 A recent Forbes valuation article listed all NFL teams over 1B, with the Cowgirls at 4.2B. At #32? Da Bills, with a valuation of 1.5B http://www.forbes.com/nfl-valuations/list/#tab:overall Yes but that's VALUATION and not purchase price.
DasNootz Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Lets not forget that one MNF game went opposite the highest rated presidential debate in recent history. Matchups have been pretty unappealing for prime time games as well.
dave mcbride Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Is that because shale oil wells are at an all time high too? LOL!
H2o Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Yes, it's Pegula's fault that Ralph died when the NFL franchise value was at a peak.... Oh that tricky Russ Brandon....... He sticks it to everybody in the end.
Magox Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 NFL ratings are dropping big this year. I think there is a good explanation to why this is happening. Isn't the player salary cap somehow tied to TV revenues? If that's the case and salaries don't increase as much as they would have increased, I think there will be a certain back up football player that is going to receive lots of criticism behind closed doors from many players in the league.
dave mcbride Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 (edited) NFL ratings are dropping big this year. Coincidentally, when I walked onto the platform at 4th Ave and 9th St in Brooklyn this a.m., I decided to take a look around. Of the first 19 people I passed, 17 were reading on their phones and 2 were reading books. All network programming is cratering, not just the NFL, and I think we've finally reached a major inflection point in how the masses consume information and entertainment. Edited October 4, 2016 by dave mcbride
dpberr Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 The whole "THERE ARE PLAYERS KNEELING and I CAN'T WATCH IT" argument is weak. I see people who attend actual sporting events who are too lazy to 1) stand or 2) take their hats off.
Magox Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 @sportingnews Player protests aren’t the reason behind the NFL’s declining TV ratings; a poor product and bad decisions are. http://www.sportingnews.com/nfl/news/nfl-tv-ratings-colin-kaepernick-protests-poor-product-officiating-injuries-concussions/1g7wnxxk67kbp1mdwinajupivq Yeah, uh huh. His premise is that player protests aren't to blame for the ratings dip. He lists a bunch of other factors. Yet he concludes that: "Most, if not all, of these issues are merely continuations of last year and the years before." Because..... "The ratings are showing something now. It’s actually not unreasonable to blame it on the element that didn’t exist last season, players kneeling or raising a fist during a portion of the game that even now hardly gets televised." What useless piece that was.. Beyond useless.
The Big Cat Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Coincidentally, when I walked onto the platform at 4th Ave and 9th St in Brooklyn this a.m., I decided to take a look around. Of the first 19 people I passed, 17 were reading on their phones and 2 were reading books. All network programming is cratering, not just the NFL, and I think we've finally reached a major inflection point in how the masses consume information and entertainment. Thank god. But relative to that, per my previous post, I only see that driving bids for NFL exclusivity UP. You might have nine platforms that each show their own Vampire detective shows with boobies, but there's only one NFL.
Magox Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Coincidentally, when I walked onto the platform at 4th Ave and 9th St in Brooklyn this a.m., I decided to take a look around. Of the first 19 people I passed, 17 were reading on their phones and 2 were reading books. All network programming is cratering, not just the NFL, and I think we've finally reached a major inflection point in how the masses consume information and entertainment. Your argument would have more resonance if we saw a gradual decline, this sudden drop does not fit this piece of the puzzle.
Dr.Sack Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 The only things that matters is; ticket prices, tv contracts, and merchandise. It seems the Bills have expanded their revenue pie with the stadium naming rights and have now risen ticket prises in line with other teams. Pegula is no dummy. He will churn a profit as will the rest of the NFL for that matter. The key is not going into long term debt on a billion dollar stadium.
The Big Cat Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Your argument would have more resonance if we saw a gradual decline, this sudden drop does not fit this piece of the puzzle. Why not? The falls in ESPN/cable subscriptions have been precipitous of late. http://www.businessinsider.com/bleacher-report-ceo-says-why-espn-has-had-trouble-2016-8
dave mcbride Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 (edited) Your argument would have more resonance if we saw a gradual decline, this sudden drop does not fit this piece of the puzzle. "Cutting the cord" is really a thing now. It wasn't even on people's radar screens 3-4 years ago. http://fortune.com/2016/04/05/household-cable-cord-cutters/ Edited October 4, 2016 by dave mcbride
Magox Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Why not? The falls in ESPN/cable subscriptions have been precipitous of late. http://www.businessinsider.com/bleacher-report-ceo-says-why-espn-has-had-trouble-2016-8 Because that isn't an apples to apples comparison. If we go by the logic that was given by Mcbride, then this same theory should hold true for the NBA and MLB, correct? But they don't. Baseball NBA
The Big Cat Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Because that isn't an apples to apples comparison. If we go by the logic that was given by Mcbride, then this same theory should hold true for the NBA and MLB, correct? But they don't. Baseball NBA It's awfully disingenuous to compare the first four weeks in the NFL to the NBA finals...don't you think? Likewise, MLB, in the summer time, doesn't compete with new television programming. "Cutting the cord" is really a thing now. It wasn't even on people's radar screens 3-4 years ago. http://fortune.com/2016/04/05/household-cable-cord-cutters/ Like hell it wasn't. I cut the cord six years ago. A lot of people my age started around then. It's just only recently started to take hold. It didn't happen suddenly. It just hit its critical mass in the past few years.
GG Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Thank god. But relative to that, per my previous post, I only see that driving bids for NFL exclusivity UP. You might have nine platforms that each show their own Vampire detective shows with boobies, but there's only one NFL. Vampire shows with boobies are cheap. Shareholders don't care as much about the cost of those shows as they do about sports programming. Sports leagues are due for an awakening in the next round.
The Big Cat Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Vampire shows with boobies are cheap. Shareholders don't care as much about the cost of those shows as they do about sports programming. Sports leagues are due for an awakening in the next round. I believe your thinking on this is backwards. Vampire boobie shows are cheap, yes. They're also not unique and they're also a dime a dozen. Their audiences--relative to all other programming--aren't big enough to demand the kind of ad revenue the NFL can. The NFL's share may be dropping relative to itself. That shouldn't really be a surprise. What I'd like to see is how it's changed relative to everything else. That'll tell you what the content is worth.
Magox Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 It's awfully disingenuous to compare the first four weeks in the NFL to the NBA finals...don't you think? Likewise, MLB, in the summer time, doesn't compete with new television programming. Like hell it wasn't. I cut the cord six years ago. A lot of people my age started around then. It's just only recently started to take hold. It didn't happen suddenly. It just hit its critical mass in the past few years. You have an argument for the NBA, not so much for MLB. But here you go for the NBA, shows growth from the previous year.
The Big Cat Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 You have an argument for the NBA, not so much for MLB. But here you go for the NBA, shows growth from the previous year. Again, that's a Saturday Prime Time show. What else are they competing with? Answer: nothing. It's the cheapest slot to purchase ads for a reason. That was the same argument against the MLB data ,and it's completely relevant to this conversation. Monday Night, Sunday Night, Thursday Night Football, all of these are competing with networks that are introducing new content OR have established content in those slots. That it's down relative to itself is not a surprise, again. This all ties back to the original point that eyeballs are spread insanely thin these days. This is no new revelation. Also that's a self-touting press release from the Disney Corporation who denies any dip in MNF. So take it at face value. All those numbers and stats are fluffed to the nth degree.
Magox Posted October 4, 2016 Posted October 4, 2016 Again, that's a Saturday Prime Time show. What else are they competing with? Answer: nothing. It's the cheapest slot to purchase ads for a reason. That was the same argument against the MLB data ,and it's completely relevant to this conversation. Monday Night, Sunday Night, Thursday Night Football, all of these are competing with networks that are introducing new content OR have established content in those slots. That it's down relative to itself is not a surprise, again. This all ties back to the original point that eyeballs are spread insanely thin these days. This is no new revelation. You are reaching. I gave you a much better comparison than the ESPN argument you made. If you want to believe that only Football out of the big three sports is effected by this new phenomena that involves the internet and cell phones, that's fine, you are entitled to that.
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