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Susquehanna
27 Feb 26 09:08
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Date Joined: 21 Jul 14
| Topic/replies: 248 | Blogger: Susquehanna's blog
The Premier League will launch its own streaming service in Singapore next season - and is looking to see how it could be "replicated all around the world".

The Netflix-style app, which will be named Premier League Plus, will allow users to watch all 380 matches of the season, as well as other content.

It is a departure from the way games have traditionally been broadcast with rights packages sold to broadcasters, although it will not affect current deals such as those in place with Sky Sports and TNT Sports in the UK.

A number of other sporting organisations have already set up similar streaming platforms including the NFL, NBA and Major League Baseball in North America, as well as Formula 1.

Premier League chief executive Richard Masters announced the service, previously mooted as "Premflix", at the Financial Times Business of Football Summit in London on Thursday and said it followed "a very long, considered process".

'Looking to build a business'
Masters said: "For the first time the Premier League is going to have its own customers.

"This is a new app you can download and have on your smart TVs, your laptops, and watch 380 matches and loads of shoulder content, 24/7 channel service and it's going to be an exciting product.

"We're also looking to learn, to see how that might be replicated all around the world."

Masters added "if it goes well, it may be replicated" but did not "want to predict further than that" at this stage.

The launch will coincide with the opening of a new Premier League Studios production hub in Olympia in London.

Traditional broadcast rights have been a highly lucrative source of revenue for the league, with the current domestic package split between Sky and TNT worth a record £6.7bn.

However, offering action to fans directly through their own subscription-based platforms opens up the opportunity for organisations to have greater control over the distribution of content, and potentially take in more revenue.

......


Current deal with Sky ends is 3 years time, I don't see how Sky survives without Premier League football, subscription numbers already been declining for some time. Looks like Comcasts 30 billion pound takeover a few years ago wasn't the best timing.

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Replies: 4
By:
Crisp77
When: 27 Feb 26 09:16
I hope this doesn't mean Man Utd and Liverpool are going to start getting all the decisions going their way MischiefWink
By:
loui
When: 27 Feb 26 09:21
The 3pm Saturday rule will always be the spanner in the works, var been shafting us for years crisp Laugh
By:
DIE LINKE
When: 27 Feb 26 09:45
does sky still have channels with those women scratching their fannies and pretending to speak on the phone?
By:
DIE LINKE
When: 27 Feb 26 09:49
Think it was called Soccer Saturday.
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