No Amazon bid as Sky & BT renew Premier League rights

Sky and BT have each renewed their Premier League rights, with the former taking four and the latter one of the live rights packages for a total of £4.46 billion (US$6.18 billion), with Amazon seemingly not in the running.

Two of the seven packages for the three seasons from 2019 to 2022 are still available, with a move for rights by a new entrant like Amazon or Facebook yet to materialise.

Sky’s deal means that it will show more matches than ever before. Its four packs of rights total 128 games a season, up from 126 matches currently.

Sky has secured every first-pick weekend match, plus Saturday evening fixtures for the first time and will pay £1.19 billion per year for the new rights – down by £199 million per annum compared to its current agreement.

BT will continue to show games at 5.30pm on Saturdays next season and then move to Saturday lunchtime fixtures from August 2019.

In total BT will show 32 Saturday games per season, down from 42 currently, and will pay £295m per season, down from the £320m it agreed last time.

“As IHS Markit expected, competition from the big tech firms for the main season-long packages failed to materialise,” said IHS Markit research director, Ted Hall.

“Their enthusiasm for the two remaining packages, which were designed to appeal to streaming players, is apparently not as high as the Premier League had hoped, with the reserve prices reportedly not met.”

The two remaining rights packages are for: all 20 matches from one Bank Holiday and one mid-week fixture programme; and all 20 matches from two midweek fixture programmes.

“As we predicted, there was only one likely scenario, the status quo, and this is a huge sigh of relief for both BT Sports and Sky Sports,” said Paolo Pescatore, vice president of multiplay and media at CCS Insight.

“Despite more games being available, the Premier League has failed to maximise its prized asset. This suggests that there is clearly a ceiling that consumers are willing to pay for watching Premier League games and subsequently what providers’ are willing to bid for.”

Stephen van Rooyen, Sky’s UK CEO, said: “Not only do we remain the home of Premier League football but also the home of top quality drama, entertainment, comedy and other sports. Our disciplined approach means we continue to have the flexibility to invest in each of these areas as we choose, underlining our position as Europe’s largest investor in content.”

Marc Allera, chief executive of BT’s consumer division, said: “The Premier League is a big part of our live sport line-up, which includes the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League, the Emirates FA Cup, MotoGP, boxing, Aviva Premiership rugby and European Rugby Champions Cup.”

Premier League executive chairman Richard Scudamore said: “We are extremely pleased that BT and Sky continue to view the Premier League and our clubs as such an important part of their offering.”

“To have achieved this investment with two packages of live rights remaining to sell is an outcome that is testament to the excellent football competition delivered by the clubs.”

Amazon is still being linked with a bid for the remaining two packages, which are considered the more basic of the options available.

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