It's not impossible. You could have asked the same question of ManU, Chelsea,Arsenal and ManCity a hundred years ago and it would have seemed a very fanciful suggestion.How long it takes and what needs to change is another matter, The current pecking order, which probably has as much to do with TV rights as anything, is geared towards the status quo being preserved. It will probably take quite a few things to change, but BT kicking Sky to one side is probably one of them.
I dare say that Lerner's acquisition of the club probably didn't fit the league's plan either.
Quote from: Steve Rose on August 28, 2015, 08:59:54 AMIt's not impossible. You could have asked the same question of ManU, Chelsea,Arsenal and ManCity a hundred years ago and it would have seemed a very fanciful suggestion.How long it takes and what needs to change is another matter, The current pecking order, which probably has as much to do with TV rights as anything, is geared towards the status quo being preserved. It will probably take quite a few things to change, but BT kicking Sky to one side is probably one of them.How exactly is this "one of them"a) No one tv broadcaster can have all of the rights now so Sky, provided they bid, will always have some TVb) If BT were to outbid Sky and become the dominant force then they would have had to have paid even more than the recent TV deal - i.e. it would solidify further the current pecking order, rather than anything else.To blame the shortcomings of football on Sky is short-sighted, IMO. The real culprits are Uefa/Fifa and the Premier League. The governing bodies - for establishing a "members club" in the Champions League which (given the group stage nature and resulting multiple entrants from each of the major leagues) virtually ensures the same clubs are in it each year, whilst developing a second tier European League that is not financially rewarding enough for teams to take it seriously and actually hinders those who enter it given the rigours of Thursday football and early season starts. The FFP rules brought in that have locked teams into the status quo, rather than generate an even playing field.The Premier League - for developing (and all credit to them) such a marketable product with such wide appeal and then being allowed carte blanche on developing a bidding process that only benefits themselves.
Quote from: Villatillidie25 on August 28, 2015, 12:35:45 PMQuote from: Steve Rose on August 28, 2015, 08:59:54 AMIt's not impossible. You could have asked the same question of ManU, Chelsea,Arsenal and ManCity a hundred years ago and it would have seemed a very fanciful suggestion.How long it takes and what needs to change is another matter, The current pecking order, which probably has as much to do with TV rights as anything, is geared towards the status quo being preserved. It will probably take quite a few things to change, but BT kicking Sky to one side is probably one of them.How exactly is this "one of them"a) No one tv broadcaster can have all of the rights now so Sky, provided they bid, will always have some TVb) If BT were to outbid Sky and become the dominant force then they would have had to have paid even more than the recent TV deal - i.e. it would solidify further the current pecking order, rather than anything else.To blame the shortcomings of football on Sky is short-sighted, IMO. The real culprits are Uefa/Fifa and the Premier League. The governing bodies - for establishing a "members club" in the Champions League which (given the group stage nature and resulting multiple entrants from each of the major leagues) virtually ensures the same clubs are in it each year, whilst developing a second tier European League that is not financially rewarding enough for teams to take it seriously and actually hinders those who enter it given the rigours of Thursday football and early season starts. The FFP rules brought in that have locked teams into the status quo, rather than generate an even playing field.The Premier League - for developing (and all credit to them) such a marketable product with such wide appeal and then being allowed carte blanche on developing a bidding process that only benefits themselves. There is a posssibility/probability that Sky/BT will be 'kicked aside' by much bigger companies in future. And the bigger the broadcast income, the better it will be for competition. For illustration purposes: if each club gets a billion a year from PL broadcasters, then stadium size, CL income, sponsorship and rich owners become less and less relevant. PL clubs will have the world as their oyster for recruiting players and coaches who will be easier to retain, and all clubs will have equal training facilities ans sports science staff.
There is a posssibility/probability that Sky/BT will be 'kicked aside' by much bigger companies in future. And the bigger the broadcast income, the better it will be for competition. For illustration purposes: if each club gets a billion a year from PL broadcasters, then stadium size, CL income, sponsorship and rich owners become less and less relevant. PL clubs will have the world as their oyster for recruiting players and coaches who will be easier to retain, and all clubs will have equal training facilities and sports science staff.
I don't think the intention of the Milan clubs, Juventus and Bayern Munich was ever to generate less TV income than Bournemouth.Who would have predicted that a few years ago?**Me excluded.
Quote from: Percy McCarthy on August 28, 2015, 12:48:08 PMThere is a posssibility/probability that Sky/BT will be 'kicked aside' by much bigger companies in future. And the bigger the broadcast income, the better it will be for competition. For illustration purposes: if each club gets a billion a year from PL broadcasters, then stadium size, CL income, sponsorship and rich owners become less and less relevant. PL clubs will have the world as their oyster for recruiting players and coaches who will be easier to retain, and all clubs will have equal training facilities and sports science staff.I can't see it Percy. Prize and TV money will still be skewed towards those finishing higher and on TV more often - most likely to be the already established 4-6 clubs. The best players will still want to play for those clubs that are winning things/most popular/most renowned. The bulk of marketing income will still go to the established clubs. The authorities will continue to support whatever suits the marketing needs - promotion of the big clubs. I don't think there will ever be anything like a reasonably level playing field again unless there is a paradigm shift of the focus of the game back to sporting values and away from business values. And that's about as likely as us winning the PL this year.