June 19, 2013

Under pressure, NFL eases TV blackout policy

Pat McManamon has the story about the NFL dropping the limit to 85 percent.

Instead of requiring all tickets be sold 72 hours prior to kickoff for a game to be televised locally, the league’s ownership has decided that 15 percent of the seats can be unsold. Which is good for the guy sitting home who can’t afford a ticket, but might be concerning for the NFL as it assesses getting people out of recliners to watch games.

McManamon has some good stuff about what this means for the Bengals and Browns here in Ohio, but the fact remains that I really don’t think the NFL wanted to do any of this. The NFL could be proactively changing their rules in order to stave off further scrutiny from the U.S. government and the FCC. Earlier in the year, we talked about Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown being one of the politicians who signed on to urge the FCC to explore the NFL’s blackout policy.

Brown and company seemed to dig their heels in most because the NFL was blacking out games forcing local fans to purchase tickets to games in stadiums that were largely built, improved and subsidized by their own tax dollars. Of course, the worst thing going for fans who do actually go to games are the TV timeouts surrounding scores with the extra point, TV timeout, kickoff, TV timeout exchange.

Obviously we can’t forget the disparity in market size going on either.

Also consider the geographic disparities pointed out in the letter.  Buffalo has a stadium that seats about 73,000.  Chicago has a stadium that seats 61,500.  Buffalo’s population is nearly four times smaller than Chicago’s at 261,000 vs. 1 million or so.  Yes, Buffalo pulls from a region including Rochester (1 hour away) and Syracuse (about 2.5 hours away) but let’s not pretend the populations are even remotely close to being the same.

[Related: Minnesota stadium deal could ban TV blackouts]

Anti-LeBron sentiment being exploited in political battle against Josh Mandel

We don’t talk politics here at WFNY. Sometimes, politics crosses paths with sports, though. It appears that in the battle between Sherrod Brown and Josh Mandel, someone is looking to exploit an anti-LeBron James sentiment in order to convince people that Josh Mandel has something to hide from a campaign finance standpoint. Obviously, this site won’t be weighing in on any kind of debate between Sherrod Brown and Josh Mandel, but it is an interesting tactic that this group, Workers’ Voice, is attempting to use in June of 2012 as LeBron James plays in his second straight NBA finals with the Miami Heat. [Read more...]

Sherrod Brown signs letter to FCC attacking sports blackout rules

In Cleveland it has been a source of pride for many that no matter how bad the Browns have stunk that no games have been blacked out on local TV.  Some of you Clevelanders may not know this, but if you can’t muster up enough fans to go to a home game and make it a sellout, then the local TV broadcast is blacked out and you can’t watch it.  From the letter.

There were 16 blackouts in the 2011 NFL season. There were 23 in 2010, and 22 the year before. These blackouts are ruining the experience of rooting for the home team and are unjustly hurting fans. That many of these stadiums were constructed or remodeled using taxpayer dollars underscores the disservice done to fans by blackouts. [Read more...]