Serie A clubs agree TV rights deal (1 Viewer)

serfaraaz

Senior Member
Apr 14, 2005
1,912
#1
Serie A clubs agree TV rights deal Tuesday 30 October, 2007



Serie A clubs have agreed on the division of pay-per-view television rights money after a marathon nine-hour meeting.

The debate had threatened to cause a schism between the big sides and the smaller outfits that worried they were going to be left in a financially unstable position.


The move finally passed with 15 votes in favour and just four against – Atalanta, Siena, Palermo and Cagliari. Fiorentina were absent from the meeting.


From 2010 Serie A will return to selling its pay-per-view TV rights in a package deal, just like the Premiership, rather than the current method where each club negotiates its own contract.


The smaller clubs feared they would be given a very small slice of the pie, but the agreement will see 40 per cent of the money shared out equally, 30 per cent based on the history of the side and another 30 per cent divided up based on the number of fans.


The remaining 10 per cent goes to the Government to help support sport in general around the country.


“The Presidents showed a great sense of responsibility, which was not easy,” commented Lega Calcio President Antonio Matarrese.


“Our suggestions were taken to heart and this solution strengthens all of Italian football. This is still only a step, though, and not a finish line.”


Palermo patron Maurizio Zamparini had been vehemently against the motion, calling Milan’s Adriano Galliani “the antithesis of football” and stating earlier this week than an agreement “would not be reached on Tuesday.”


The way the history of the club is analysed will be in three sections. The previous season’s table sees the top team given 20 points and the bottom one point, deciding where five per cent of the money is distributed.


Another 15 per cent takes into account the placements in the previous five years and the remaining 10 per cent is based on “sporting tradition.”


http://www.channel4.com/sport/football_italia/oct30r.html
 

Buy on AliExpress.com
Jan 7, 2004
29,704
#3
The smaller clubs feared they would be given a very small slice of the pie, but the agreement will see 40 per cent of the money shared out equally, 30 per cent based on the history of the side and another 30 per cent divided up based on the number of fans.

The remaining 10 per cent goes to the Government to help support sport in general around the country.
 

Elvin

Senior Member
Nov 25, 2005
36,829
#5
I guess for "some reason", "they" didn't want the whole world to see what was going to happen in that game...
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
83,441
#6
Admittedly, the piecemeal approach to Serie A coverage is a complete mess. It sends us running to online streams on one match, to TV for another, etc. So from a consumer perspective, it makes sense.

From a club perspective, yeah -- the big clubs like Juve are going to have to cope with a more financially balanced league than they enjoy currently. All the more reason to get our asses into the CL soon. But for the long-term health of both the league and the competitiveness of Italian football overall, I think these are moves in the right direction.
 
OP

serfaraaz

Senior Member
Apr 14, 2005
1,912
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #8
    Milan's Juve fan club proud to be different
    By Mark Meadows
    MILAN, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Real Madrid fans from Barcelona are seldom seen and Manchester United supporters born in Liverpool are just as rare.
    In Milan, though, a Juventus supporters' club is thriving with around 630 members.
    They meet in relative secret, with no Juve shirts in sight, but every other week about 100 of the group troop off to Turin an hour away and expose their black and white hearts.
    On Sunday, members will have to be extra careful as they share the motorway and Turin train-line with Inter Milan fans. The leaders are visiting title-chasing Juve.
    The fan club is called Madunina, a fortunate name as it does not include the word Milan, something which could further anger Inter and AC Milan fans already aghast that fellow Milanese would dare support old enemy Juventus.
    The football rivalry is so intense that anyone going against the grain and supporting the other team risks jocular banter from work colleagues at best.
    Verbal abuse and physical harm can happen though, prompting the question of why they put themselves through it when they have two perfectly good teams on their doorstep.
    "The history of Juve is written in letters of gold on the roll-call of glory and victory. Juve will always be and when the other teams are no longer, Juve will still be there," Madunina member Guido Secreto told Reuters.
    FINDING JOBS
    The Milanese in the fan club, founded in 1964, are proud of being from Milan and for having chosen Juventus rather than having one thrust upon them because of where they were born.
    Members also point out that any knowledgeable person would be aware they came from Italy's second city because Madunina refers to the Virgin Mary statue on the main spire of Milan's cathedral.
    "Between the organised Juventus and Inter ultra groups, there is a deep hatred," said Igor, who asked not to reveal his second name.
    "But many Inter fans live with Juventus supporters as if Juve was another team from their city."
    Several in the fan club are not originally from Milan but have gravitated to Italy's financial centre from all around the country in order to find jobs.
    Juventus, like Bayern Munich in Germany, are the club most supported in their country by people not from the city and are almost viewed as the nation's team.
    Rather than support smaller hometown clubs, Italians, especially in the south, tend to choose Juventus as many fans do across the globe.
    "I support Juve because I cannot at all imagine supporting any other team. As I say to my friends I follow football because I am a Juve fan. Otherwise I probably wouldn't follow football at all," said fan club member Paolo Bencardino.
    "Supporting Juve is like being part of a religious sect."
    Inter and Milan fans would rather Milanese supported one of the city's teams, even if it was their rivals, rather than Juve.
    They allege that Juve fans outside of Turin are simply 'glory supporters', attaching themselves to a successful club.
    GIVEN POTENCY
    The animosity between Juve and Inter is slightly more pronounced than the rivalry between Milan and Juve and is almost as intense as Inter against Milan.
    The bitterness is deep-rooted, with the two sides battling over titles in the 1960s, but it has been given potency in the last couple of years following Juve's demotion to the second tier for match-fixing and their subsequent promotion back to Serie A.
    Inter were the main beneficiaries of Juve's demise. The Turin club were stripped of their 2005/06 Serie A title and after second-placed AC Milan were deducted points, Inter ended up being crowned champions despite finishing third.
    Roberto Mancini's side officially counted the scudetto as their 14th league championship, much to Juve's annoyance, and thanks to Juve being in Serie B and Milan suffering a further points deduction, Inter wrapped up their 15th title last season.
    They did so with the help of striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic and midfielder Patrick Vieira, who both had moved to Inter from Juve because they did not want to play second tier football.
    Vieira is injured for Sunday but Swede Ibrahimovic can expect a rough ride.
    "The truth is that we are superior, we always have been and soon we will return to the top. November 4 will be our judgement day," added Bencardino.
    http://football.guardian.co.uk/breakingnews/feedstory/0,,-7037160,00.html
     

    V

    Senior Member
    Jun 8, 2005
    20,110
    #9
    • V

      V

    "The truth is that we are superior, we always have been and soon we will return to the top. November 4 will be our judgement day," added Bencardino.
    Turk?
     

    mondo1

    Senior Member
    May 14, 2006
    10,588
    #13
    so is there now a bigger chance to see the serie a outside italy? i think of premiere (german pay tv) they did not get the rights this year.
     

    Geof

    Senior Member
    May 14, 2004
    6,740
    #14
    According to Italian Economic paper Sole24Ore, Juventus will be the club to benefit the most of the new tv rights deal.

    Their calculations revealed that Juve would get 10,61% of the 900 Million Euro. Inter is second with 9,82, Milan: 8,61 Roma: 7,97 Napoli: 6,49 Lazio: 6,07
     

    Quetzalcoatl

    It ain't hard to tell
    Aug 22, 2007
    65,501
    #15
    i thought that the agreement was that all serie a teams would receive an equal amount of the rights money, like the premiership. it's good in a way that juve would receive the highest, but it really should be equal so that the smaller teams would have a fair chance to compete and make for a better overall serie a.
     

    Geof

    Senior Member
    May 14, 2004
    6,740
    #16
    ..
    i thought that the agreement was that all serie a teams would receive an equal amount of the rights money, like the premiership. it's good in a way that juve would receive the highest, but it really should be equal so that the smaller teams would have a fair chance to compete and make for a better overall serie a.

    The smaller clubs feared they would be given a very small slice of the pie, but the agreement will see 40 per cent of the money shared out equally, 30 per cent based on the history of the side and another 30 per cent divided up based on the number of fans.


    The remaining 10 per cent goes to the Government to help support sport in general around the country.
     
    Jul 2, 2006
    18,806
    #18
    According to Italian Economic paper Sole24Ore, Juventus will be the club to benefit the most of the new tv rights deal.

    Their calculations revealed that Juve would get 10,61% of the 900 Million Euro. Inter is second with 9,82, Milan: 8,61 Roma: 7,97 Napoli: 6,49 Lazio: 6,07
    Greatest Club will eat biggest piece of cake,this is normal.

    btw 900 million for how many year?
     
    OP

    serfaraaz

    Senior Member
    Apr 14, 2005
    1,912
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #20
    According to Italian Economic paper Sole24Ore, Juventus will be the club to benefit the most of the new tv rights deal.

    Their calculations revealed that Juve would get 10,61% of the 900 Million Euro. Inter is second with 9,82, Milan: 8,61 Roma: 7,97 Napoli: 6,49 Lazio: 6,07
    as the article says 15% to sporting tradition of previous five years so how can such a calculation be made
     

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