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polsongrizz
April 18th, 2005, 05:04 PM
'Monday Night Football' Moving to ESPN

By DAVE GOLDBERG, AP Football Writer

NEW YORK - The NFL's "Monday Night Football," a staple on ABC for the past 35 seasons, will move to ESPN starting with the 2006 season.

And NBC is returning to the NFL after six years away by taking the Sunday night broadcast previously on ESPN.

The Monday night move from network TV to basic cable, hinted at continually by commissioner Paul Tagliabue, was confirmed Monday by two sources familiar with the deals who spoke to The Associated Press under condition of anonymity. The sources said the league is expected to get $1.1 billion over eight years from the network.

NBC will get the Sunday night package for $600 million over six years, according to the sources. The network will also get the Super Bowl in 2009 and 2012 as part of the deal, one of the sources said.

The moves leave ABC — which originated "Monday Night Football" in 1970 — as the only major network without NFL football.

ABC and ESPN are both subsidiaries of the Walt Disney Co. The deal with ESPN, which currently carries games every Sunday night and sometimes on Thursday, was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

Last month, Tagliabue said during the NFL meetings in Hawaii that the Monday night move was a strong possibility. ABC, which has been losing money on the package despite high ratings, had been balking at the NFL's asking price.

CBS and Fox already have agreed to pay a total of $8 billion over six years for the Sunday AFC and NFC rights.

That has become more pressing since parity caused by the salary cap has resulted in teams moving up and down the standings annually, leaving bad teams that were strong the previous season in prime time and good teams that were bad the past season off of it.

The NFL is still considering separate packages for Thursday and late-season Saturday nights

TexasTerror
April 18th, 2005, 07:12 PM
Well, times have changed.

MNF is now moving over to ESPN in 2006 and NBC is regaining the NFL for the first time in six years. Is the NFL losing on this one? I don't think so. Is ABC/ESPN losing on this one? I don't think so.

I think each of the three parties involved are gaining from this. ABC lets go something that wasn't working for them. The ratings were bombing for them and they need to find a different course of action. ESPN/ABC keep the MNF tradition under their big umbrella which is very important to them. And NBC gets back football, which they needed to bolster their image in sports. NASCAR and Olympics, as well as the French and Wimbledon and selected golf wasn't good enough for them.

ISUMatt
April 18th, 2005, 07:40 PM
They are also talking about Thursday night and some late season Saturday night games to be bid on also!!!

TexasTerror
April 18th, 2005, 08:00 PM
NFL is the most profitable sport of the majors and there's a reason why. They are very smart about how they handle things and they are going to market their product the best way they know how. I'd be interested to see if the NFL does expand to 34 teams -- Los Angeles and either Mexico City or Toronto, I'd suspect. Maybe not for atleast five years, but perhaps they will. If the parity continues, perhaps they could stretch it out, though 32 may be more than enough.

colgate13
April 19th, 2005, 10:45 AM
Link (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2005/football/nfl/04/18/bc.fbn.nflmondaynight.ap/index.html?cnn=yes)

"NEW YORK (AP) -- Monday Night Football, a television institution that over 35 years has helped transform the NFL into a prime-time ratings draw, is leaving ABC and moving to ESPN beginning with the 2006 season.

The NFL's new broadcast deal also brings football back to NBC for the first time since 1997. NBC will take over the Sunday night games currently broadcast on ESPN."


Plus, NBC gets Sunday night games...

Gil Dobie
April 19th, 2005, 12:22 PM
Is all this leading up to a pay-per-view Super Bowl sometime in the future?

TexasTerror
April 19th, 2005, 04:11 PM
Is all this leading up to a pay-per-view Super Bowl sometime in the future?

Never. Not going to happen in a thousand years. People watch the Super Bowl for the complete experience even the people on the fence, who just want to watch it for the commercials. All the complete value that advertisers get from the game would be gone if they went PPV. Just could not work and would not be rational.

Bronco
April 19th, 2005, 04:28 PM
When I first started watching MNF that was the only place you could see highlights of ALL the games. There was no ESPN and Howard always did the halftime show. I always enjoyed the halftime for that reason.

Seeing John Lennon interviewed during a game and then in 1980? watching a Monday night game and Howard announced that he'd been shot and killed. A stunning announcement.