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Will the A-League survive the Coronavirus?

Capn Gus Bloodbeard

Well-Known Member
With Fox seeming almost certain to give us the flick, I think we're in big, big trouble - Nobody is going to offer TV money anywhere close to what they were paying. We really needed a couple more seasons with Fox to allow the independent league to start making changes to secure the future.
I'll honestly be surprised if the league surprises a few more seasons.

So if the new world means no salary cap, transfer fees between AL clubs and pro/rel, how long before Charlesworth has to front up or f**k off from the club he has killed?
It doesn't mean any of those things anytime soon. and with Fox running away, I'd imagine that the value of clubs will drop. Perhaps MC should have gotten out while he still could.
 

turbo

Well-Known Member
With Fox seeming almost certain to give us the flick, I think we're in big, big trouble - Nobody is going to offer TV money anywhere close to what they were paying. We really needed a couple more seasons with Fox to allow the independent league to start making changes to secure the future.
The timing is terrible. If the FFA power struggle hadn’t gone so long maybe we’d be further in to that process by now but the league is in a vulnerable place at the moment trying to stop the rot and return to growth. Lowy Jr’s administration have a lot to answer for how they handled things.

There will be some tough conversations going on even if we are able to finish the season. How do you look to sign players with zero certainty around income for next season? That will leave lots of players facing uncertainty and even if contracted it doesn’t mean much if clubs fold. Even if they don’t fold the prospect of pay cuts will be there to keep things afloat.
 

Capn Gus Bloodbeard

Well-Known Member
There will be some tough conversations going on even if we are able to finish the season.
I don't see the point in finishing the season myself. I'd rather just cancel the end with an * next to the results. If we get back to games, the delay still changes a lot of things.

It's a shame the HAL is still so new - I don't even think it would be possible to reboot a new national competition unless it changed drastically (ie went to a model where existing clubs were used rather than the franchise model).

suffering the legacy of the world's worst league expansion (every expansion we've attempted has been utterly abysmal because there has never been a plan ) doesn't help matters right now either.

All I can see is Optus taking over for a lot less money, and given they don't have the sort of platform Kayo did, I wonder how that will affect viewership. I can only imagine it getting worse.
If FTA could get behind us seriously that would be a huge difference, but that won't happen.
tbh, I'm not even sure if covid really makes a difference to any of this. If Fox are pulling out, then they were going to anyway, we just miss a big payment.
 

pjennings

Well-Known Member
Paid in full: FFA receives belated quarterly sum from Fox Sports


The A-League has cleared a major hurdle for the resumption of the season after Football Federation Australia belatedly received its full quarterly payment from Fox Sports.
Football industry sources have confirmed Fox has now paid the near $12 million instalment of its broadcast deal with FFA, which was due mid-last month.
Football Federation Australia chief executive James Johnson has been involved in tense, delicate negotiations with Fox Sports for the past three weeks.


It is a positive development for FFA amid tense negotiations with the pay-TV operator, although it does not come with a guarantee that Fox Sports will continue as the A-League's broadcaster for the final three seasons of the contract.
But the fact it has been settled is a sign that relations between the two parties are perhaps not as frosty as first feared, while also enabling the continuation of planning for the last few rounds and finals series of the A-League to be played.

FFA and the head of Fox Sports, Peter Campbell, have been contacted for comment.
The money will be forwarded on to clubs but further decisions will need to be made regarding how much they will receive and what players will be paid, with commercial revenues nosediving for both FFA and the clubs as a result of the COVID-19 shutdown.
Pay cuts are inevitable for players, while FFA and the clubs will also have to reach agreement with Professional Footballers Australia over a short-term extension of player contracts, which expire on May 31. Sources at FFA do not foresee that being an issue.
FFA has refused to set a public target date for the resumption of the A-League - nor has it revealed how it plans to stage games or if the 'hub' concept being contemplated by the AFL and NRL could be used - but it remains committed to playing on as soon as state and federal governments allow it. Club sources indicate, however, that even a return to training is not likely to come until July at the earliest.
Foxtel, the parent company of Fox Sports, is in significant financial turmoil following declines in advertising revenues and the suspension of sporting competitions caused by the coronavirus pandemic, which has also accelerated the shift of audiences towards over-the-top streaming platforms. Foxtel made 70 staff redundant this week, the organisation's third major round of job cuts this year.

Fox has been the A-League's major broadcast partner since the competition's inception in 2005, but has been unhappy with the terms of the current deal, worth nearly $60 million a year, for some time - primarily because of the negative publicity surrounding the code in recent years during the the A-League clubs' fight for independence, as well as poor ratings on linear television.
Football stakeholders have feared that Fox could use the COVID-19 outbreak as an opportunity to tear up the contract and abandon the sport, but the company is yet to declare any intention to do so.
FFA had engaged the services of prominent barrister Bret Walker, SC, in anticipation of a legal showdown with Fox over the contract, which is worth $346 million over six years and was secured by former chief executive David Gallop.

 

Pirate Pete

Well-Known Member
I'm surprised that Fox stumped up the money to be honest.

Could the season be finished in Sydney?

A-League players are prepared to relocate to a Sydney-based hub to finish the season and have been "energised" by Fox Sports' decision to support the competition's resumption, according to their union boss John Didulica.
The players are brimming with excitement after learning Fox Sports forwarded its nearly $12 million quarterly payment to Football Federation Australia last week, allowing plans for the completion of the 2019-20 campaign to proceed.
Newcastle's Nikolai Topor-Stanley and Melbourne City's Jamie Maclaren contest the ball in the last A-League match before the COVID-19 shutdown.

Newcastle's Nikolai Topor-Stanley and Melbourne City's Jamie Maclaren contest the ball in the last A-League match before the COVID-19 shutdown.Credit:AAP
Clubs and players are anticipating a return to play in August, with the expectation that the last six rounds of the home-and-away season and the finals series will be played in one central location - as was suggested before COVID-19 forced the A-League into recess.
While players in other codes face the possibility of long-term stints away from their families, it's expected A-League teams will have to come together for, approximately, only one month to finish the season.

"The season itself will be a burst. It'll be a sprint home," said Didulica, the chief executive of Professional Footballers Australia.
"Culturally, our players have had more experience with camp-based competition - most of our guys have played with national teams and have been accustomed to being in these situations for three to six weeks.
"The prospect of doing a month is palatable, though clearly, at the other end of the extreme, some of them haven't been paid for over a month, so we need to make sure the economics work for the league as much as they do for the players."
PFA chief executive John Didulica.

PFA chief executive John Didulica.Credit:AAP
Didulica said he had been in daily contact with A-League chief Greg O'Rourke over possible configurations, although no locations, facilities or timelines had been set in stone. Wellington Phoenix CEO David Dome and Perth Glory owner Tony Sage both said on Monday they expect the hub will be in Sydney.

Didulica said there were still significant "complexities" that needed to be addressed over the coming weeks by the PFA, FFA and clubs before players would take to the field, but did not think they would be insurmountable.
Top of the PFA's list of concerns are health and safety protocols. The A-League remains the only major football code in Australia to have had a player test positive to COVID-19, with an unidentified Newcastle Jets player and a member of Wellington's coaching staff contracting the virus in late March while matches were being played behind closed doors.
Other issues include how much time teams will be given to train before the season resumes and between games, how much players will be paid, and how to handle the many contracts that will expire at the end of May.
FIFA has recommended to all member nations that contracts should be extended until the end of the 2019-20 season but has released only guidelines, which are not binding, and not every A-League player may be willing to comply.


"It's always hard, because you might have players who have signed for overseas clubs as of June 1, or other A-League clubs. Within those contracts there might be significant material differences," Didulica said. "There are some clubs who have got as few as 10 players contracted for next season. In the event contracts aren't rolled over, how would they meet their responsibilities to fielding a strong team?"
Players are also willing to accept pay cuts, Didulica said, but only once the PFA had been given a "clear view" of the economic impact of COVID-19 on football in Australia.
"It has been an incredibly tough period for a large number of players. Let's not forget we still have one club [Perth] who haven't paid their players a single cent since March," he said.
"But the fact that the Fox broadcast agreement will enable the season to be concluded has been warmly received, overwhelmingly, and now the work starts about ensuring that we look after the players who will be finishing the season and designing a league that's got the requisite level of integrity.
"These are good discussions to be having, given where we could have been a fortnight ago, and the players are very energised about having them."
 

turbo

Well-Known Member
I'm surprised that Fox stumped up the money to be honest.
It's all about the contract and legalities. We wont know for a while but maybe the terms didnt allow them to walk away with force majeure protecting the A league and once the league lawyered up the BS stopped. Then again it could be about strengthening their legal position by saying 'we've paid this last installment in good faith but now you havent upheld the contract which allows us to walk' which might be a small price for a stronger position in a legal battle.

I think the best outcome is the league can see out its deal with Fox and use that time to have an exit strategy if they dont bid at all for the next rights contract. Despite all the doom and gloom I do wonder if they may still bid but more inline with market rates rather than inflated figures theyve been throwing around to lots of sports.
 

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