The trend line for TV sports dollars goes in pretty much one direction: higher, for TV networks and advertisers.
But there’s more to it.
The new Los Angeles Rams will get
pretty much the same share that the St. Louis Rams did. NFL teams split equally its
share of the money from national TV contracts. In 2015, that came to $226.4 million per team. That’s right, all teams get the same money.
In other sports like Major League Baseball and
the NBA, teams get significantly more TV money from their regional sports TV deals versus the money from national TV contracts. Bigger markets teams can prosper more than smaller market teams.
The new Los Angeles Rams will get -- in theory -- better in-game attendance and merchandise sales. (Though many may disagree with that, due to L.A. citizens' somewhat lazy attendance record for
other professional sports).
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More importantly, the Stan Kroenke-owned Rams will see something better: a big rise in valuation for the team, which is estimated to climb by $500 million.
But that isn’t the whole story. The NFL will add to its record supply of viewers for its national TV games -- on Fox, NBC, CBS, NFL Network and ESPN. Some are projecting that having a
team in the second-biggest market in the U.S., viewership should climb substantially.
That, in turn, means those national TV networks can charge advertisers more. And that in turn means the
next round of TV contract negotiations will go even higher -- which means more money for each team, including the team in Los Angeles.
How much higher? Look long-term to overall football
revenues. The NFL is projecting it could rise to a $25 billion business in 11 years from $12 billion in 2015. NFL is at the top of all sports on a revenue basis: Major League Baseball is a $9 billion
business; the NBA, $5 billion, and the NHL, $3.6 billion.
For the NFL, a sure bet is that ticket seat prices will rise. But more than that, TV will pay a big part of it -- $7.2 billion of the
$12 billion per year coming from TV contracts.
Getting a team in Los Angeles is only the first step. And if they get, say, two teams in LA, the league will be looking to run up the score
a bit more.