silentstriker
The Wheel is Forever
http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/india/content/current/story/266288.html
Some of what he says makes sense, but I don't really trust the BCCI either...
Some excerpts:
Some of what he says makes sense, but I don't really trust the BCCI either...
Some excerpts:
...
Last time around, the ICC sold the rights to Global Cricket Corporation for $532 million; GCC re-sold the rights, mainly to its group companies, Modi pointed out. The highest amount ($208 million) was paid by Sony Television, which wasn't part of the group; the balance, he said, was made up by selling rights at low rates to its group companies. "If you look at the underlying revenues of all other broadcasters it would've been in the excess of a billion dollars. So the ICC actually suffered when they gave it out to one company for an eight-year-period."
As an example he referred to Sky TV which, he said, paid only $30 million for an eight-year deal but made $30 million in the first series. "If you actually looked at the Sky business plan, which I happened to, they were actually going to bid $90 million on their own. But now they didn't have to bid $90 million because the parent company of theirs had bought the rights and they got a share of it."
Another case where the ICC had lost out, Modi said, was the deal surrounding the Champions Trophy. The GCC deal, he explained, was based on a 12-match Champions Trophy format, which is now expanded to 21 games. "Did the ICC get a higher revenue? No."
...
The solution, he continued, is in the BCCI's bid for the ICC rights. This would not only put more money into world cricket - "We are ready to pay top dollar for it ... our money is as good as anybody else's" - but also allow for an MPA that would be acceptable to all members.
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