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NFL Not In A Rush To Sell Stake In Media Properties

“My guess is we’re months away, not days away.”

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The NFL seems to be planning to sell a stake in their media properties, but it may take a little longer than previously expected. Commissioner Roger Goodell said “My guess is we’re months away, not days away,” regarding a sale.

The NFL hired Goldman Sachs to seek out investment partners for NFL RedZone, NFL.com, and NFL Network.

Amazon was a frontrunner to purchase a minority stake in the media properties, however the league could sell stakes in individual properties and not as a whole.

Part of the delay in finalizing a deal is due to the numerous potential permutations of properties and potential investors.

There are a number of potential investors in the “NFL Sunday Ticket” package coming from Amazon and Disney. This entity is rumored to be able to fetch $2 billion to $3 billion per season in a deal that could include a stake in NFL Media. The league was reportedly hoping to entice Apple with “NFL Sunday Ticket” to establish a media relationship with the leading mobile device maker.

“We’ve had a tremendous amount of interest from some terrific media partners, technology partners that are interested in … everything from ‘Sunday Ticket’ to NFL Network to RedZone,” Goodell said, “and we’re looking to deploy [those] in a way that looks to the future in the next generation of media.”

Whether it be from Amazon, Apple, Disney, or another potential suitor it seems like the NFL selling a stake in their media properties is coming and it is only a matter of time.

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Chris Evert: Athletes in Individual Sports Have to Learn to be on a Team in Broadcasting

“It’s been growth for me to be on a team. Tennis, you’ve got to be selfish and so self-absorbed and think about yourself.”

Ricky Keeler

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It is never too late to re-learn something or adjust to a new way of doing things. For Tennis Hall of Famer Chris Evert, she did not have success in her eyes when she first started calling matches. 

Evert was a guest on the Fowler Who You Got? Podcast with Chris Fowler and she said that when she first called matches for NBC along with Jimmy Connors, she did not feel she was at her best.

“It was so circus and we got no training, nobody kind of guided us. I think right after you retire, maybe I needed a breather, but I was really bad. I was awful.”

Evert ended up going to ESPN in 2011 as an analyst and she said that having the Evert Tennis Academy in Boca Raton, Florida helped her learn the changes in the game of tennis compared to when she played and allowed her to go more inside the lines. 

“I watched the kids play tournaments. I see the pros would come in and I watched them train. I was getting an education by going to my tennis academy and I think that kind of made my commentating a little deeper and a little more informative. I feel like I can talk about the mental side with my eyes closed, but the physical shotmaking was what was different. I had to re-learn the game.”

When a tennis player goes from the court to the broadcast space, they go from being in a highly individual sport to being a part of the team. Evert mentioned that she used to worry about what assignments the other analysts were getting, but now that she feels comfortable, she wants the team to succeed.

“It’s been growth for me to be on a team. Tennis, you’ve got to be selfish and so self-absorbed and think about yourself. In this team aspect, you stand out like a sore thumb and everyone knows if you think about yourself. We have a great team. We have so many different personalities. Everybody is so different and I think that adds to the color and the commentating.” 

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Domonique Foxworth: First Take is ‘Us Against the Audience’

“When you do first take with Stephen A, you learn that he understands that we are on the same team.”

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There is an art to the debate shows on ESPN. Domonique Foxworth is a frequent presence on many of them. On Friday, he said that he had to learn that in that format, opponents are actually teammates.

“I think the First Take thing is always an interesting one, and I’ve mentioned this before. People forget when you’re on First Take, we on the same team,” he told Bomani Jones on the latest edition of The Right Time. “When you do first take with Stephen A, you learn that he understands that we are on the same team.”

Both Foxworth and Jones admitted that they are fierce debaters and like to win. Stephen A. Smith made sure that Foxworth understood the reality of television. Even if things seem adversarial to the audience, two people debating on a show like First Take have to come in with the same goal.

“It’s us against the audience. Like, we try to keep you from changing the channel.”

First Take is not your standard debate. Foxworth said that Smith made sure he understood that there is no score. Wanting to win the argument is good, but it is important to understand what “winning” means in that setting.

“My inclination was, I’m here for blood, I want to win. And while wanting to win is important, to make the show entertaining, cutting people off and yelling and preemptively defeating their points? That shit ain’t entertaining,” he said. “You know what’s entertaining? Having a conversation where I make a point, you make a point, we build on it, and we grow to a point that we get better information. That’s not how First Take is built. So what’s entertaining there is I shoot a jab, you shoot a jab.”

This isn’t the first time that Domonique Foxworth has talked about the learning experience he has had on the First Take set. On an episode of The Right Time last year, he told Jones that he has come into debates with Chris Russo with the goal of triggering one of Mad Dog’s infamous rants, because that is what the audience wants to see.

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Jimmy Pitaro: ESPN Priority is Expanding Our Audience & Pat McAfee Does That

“I have a son and a daughter, both of whom not just know who Pat is but they like him, and I have a father who also happens to really like Pat.”

Jordan Bondurant

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The announcement of Pat McAfee joining forces with ESPN raised a lot of questions as to whether McAfee’s daily brand of sports talk can sustain itself for the long-term on cable.

But ESPN president Jimmy Pitaro has no doubts that Pat can be wildly successful for years to come. He spoke with The Big Lead recently and said bringing McAfee’s show to the daily lineup allows the network to tap into a different audience.

“When we talk about our priorities at ESPN, one of the things we always mention is audience expansion,” Pitaro said. “That means a lot of things, but it especially means attracting a younger audience. We feel like Pat really helps us in that regard.”

“I have a son and a daughter, both of whom not just know who Pat is but they like him, and I have a father who also happens to really like Pat,” he added. “That’ll tell you a lot about his appeal.”

Also expanding the relationship between The Worldwide Leader and McAfee made sense in Pitaro’s eyes. The two sides already have a history.

“We’ve been in business with Pat for some time by now,” he said. “He’s done a fantastic job for us on College GameDay, he’s done some alternate broadcasts that have really resonated with our audience, so we feel like his show is a natural extension of what we’re already doing.”

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