*This piece first appeared in the Front Office Sports Newsletter. Subscribe today and get the news before anyone else.
With nine months to go until its first game, the XFL has locked in its lineup of broadcast partners.
The deals will see all 43 games appear on either broadcast or cable TV and will see them divided up between ABC, Fox, ESPN, ESPN2, FS1 and FS2.
What do you need to know?
1. – 24 of the XFL’s 43 games to be on broadcast TV (13 on ABC; 11 on Fox)
2. – According to Joe Flint of the WSJ, the deals are for three years, but no cash is changing hands.
3. – As part of the deals, the broadcast partners will cover the production costs of the games, which John Ourand notes will run $400,000 per game.
4. – Disney and Fox will keep all the television advertising inventory for the games while the XFL will handle the selling of sponsorships in the venues, according to Flint.
Will we see a repeat of 2001?
The XFL’s reboot will come 19 years after McMahon and company attempted to make spring football a thing. Like the AAF this year, the league started with a promising opening night and then sputtered to the end. By the end of its first and only season, the XFL saw its ratings fall from a 9.5 to a 1.5 at their lowest point, according to OSW Review.
While the first time around may have not gone as planned, executives from all sides of the table are enthusiastic about the possibilities.
“The effort Vince is throwing behind it with his own personal capital and the combination of Fox and Disney platforms give us the best chance to make spring football work.” – ESPN programming chief Burke Magnus to Joe Flint of the WSJ.
Rolling into upfronts…
The announcement of the deals couldn’t have come at a more strategic time for all parties involved with upfronts scheduled to begin in six days. Given the fact that the broadcast partners will be responsible for selling ads, it would be rather surprising if the XFL inventory wasn’t included in their presentations.
Last year alone, the television upfront market for commercials generated $20.8 billion in commitment from advertisers, up 5.2% from the previous year, according to an estimate by Media Dynamics.