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Pete Thamel Joins ESPN as College Football Insider

“Richard Deitsch of The Athletic notes that Thamel will become a “major” part of College GameDay.”

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Just like the NFL, the news rarely stops in college football these days. That is why ESPN is hiring someone to cover the sport the way Adam Schefter covers the NFL. That someone will be Yahoo’s Pete Thamel.

Andrew Marchand reported Wednesday night that Thamel is expected to join ESPN in a insider role covering college football.

ESPN already has three reporters that it classifies as “college football insiders.” Those are Heather Dinich, Adam Rittenberg and Mark Schlabach. Thamel appears set to become the face of that operation though.

Richard Deitsch of The Athletic notes that Thamel will become a “major” part of College GameDay.

Thamel’s hire continues something of a trend for ESPN. Marchand points out that whenever the network is in the market for an insider to cover a sport, it tends to go shopping at Yahoo!. Pete Thamel joins Adrian Wojnarowski and Jeff Passan as insiders that left the site for Bristol.

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Report: NBC Could Steal NBA Rights from TNT to the Tune of Around $2.5 Billion Per Year

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A report from the Wall Street Journal says NBC is making an offer around $2.5 billion per year to obtain part of the NBA media rights package. Joel Flint, Amol Sharma and Isabella Simonetti all contributed to the story which says Warner Bros. Discovery is making a “last-ditch effort” for TNT to continue as an NBA partner.

The TNT portion of the current agreement, which expires after next season, is an average of $1.2 billion. ESPN had been paying $1.5 billion and that is expected to increase over $1 billion annually.

Last week, reports surfaced from Puck’s John Ourand that ESPN was nearing completion of their portion of the package and that it would include the NBA Finals staying on ABC. All indications had been there would be more than two partners in the next deal and that it would include a streaming network. Andrew Marchand of The Athletic also reported last week that Amazon Prime Video and the league “have the framework of a deal” and that it would include “significant regular season and postseason games, perhaps even conference finals.”

The WSJ report says NBC’s discussions with the NBA have been about carrying two prime-time games a week. This is important as WBD has matching rights in their current agreement. However, they do not own a broadcast network and therefore could not offer something similar to NBC.

Multiple reports have said any new agreements will be for a period of ten years.

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NFL Draft Night One Averages Over 12 Million Viewers, Best in Three Years

The NFL and Nielsen said that 34.3 million viewers tuned in at some point to watch the first round.

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Logo for the 2024 NFL Draft

On Thursday, the NFL kicked off night one of the NFL Draft live from Detroit. A record 275,000 people attended, and it had its best viewing audience in three years.

According to numbers posted by Sports Business Journal’s Austin Karp, ESPN had 5.6 million viewers, while ABC had 4.5 million and the NFL Network and other digital streaming had 1.6 million. Add those numbers to what ESPN Deportes did and it comes out to around 12.1 million. The NFL and Nielsen said that 34.3 million viewers tuned in at some point to watch the first round.

The figure for 2024 is up 6% over last year’s draft and is the highest since 2021’s 12.5 million. The record for the most-watched NFL Draft came during the pandemic in 2020 and hit 15.3 million.

According to Karp, ABC had the largest increase as it featured the College GameDay crew including the newest member, former Alabama head coach Nick Saban.

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Paramount CFO: ‘Sports Continued to Overdeliver’ in Q1

“The game broke records across CBS, Paramount+ and Nickelodeon, a great example of the power of our multiplatform offering.”

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Paramount Global
Courtesy: Paramount Global

As the company is on the verge of potentially agreeing to a merger, Paramount Global is moving on from chief executive officer Bob Bakish. Various reports have indicated that Bakish has lost the trust of Paramount Global controlling shareholder Shari Redstone, who owns National Amusements and is looking to sell her stake in the company. The company has established an Office of the CEO that will include George Cheeks, president and chief executive officer of CBS; Chris McCarthy, president and chief executive officer of Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks; and Brian Robbins, president and chief executive officer of Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon.

Skydance Media has reportedly made Paramount its last and final offer for a merger that would include a $3 billion cash injection to pay down debt and re-purchase stock. Additionally, Skydance has reportedly offered a premium for a percentage of non-voting shareholder Class B shares, which could presumably help the company following its debt being downgraded to BB+ status by S&P Global last month. Earlier in April, The Wall Street Journal reported that four members of the Paramount board of directors stepped down from their roles.

The company has been trying to diminish its linear television losses and adapt to the changing media environment predicated on innovations in the digital and streaming spaces. Just after attaining record average viewership of 123.7 million viewers for its broadcast of Super Bowl LVIII, the company laid off 3% of its workforce with the intent to “grow revenue, while reducing costs.” During the company’s Q1 earnings call, Paramount executive vice president and chief financial officer Naveen Chopra stated that “sports continued to overdeliver,” which included the NFL Playoffs (average of 45.6 million viewers), Super Bowl LVIII and NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament.

In the fiscal first quarter, the company attained $7.7 billion in revenue, which is up 6% from Q1 2023. Television advertising revenue had a 23-percentage point benefit from the Super Bowl that led to a 14% overall increase in the category. Continued subscriber declines in television media resulted in a 3% drop in affiliate and subscription revenue. Adjusted OIBDA in the quarter equated to $1.4 billion, an 11% increase that was partially driven from the Super Bowl LVIII broadcast.

“The game broke records across CBS, Paramount+ and Nickelodeon, a great example of the power of our multiplatform offering,” Naveen Chopra, Paramount executive vice president and chief financial officer, said on the company’s earnings call.

During last year’s fiscal fourth quarter, Paramount garnered $7.6 billion in revenue and $404 million in operating income, the latter of which was up 122% year-over-year. Additionally, Paramount+ revenue grew by 69% through the net addition of 4.1 subscribers in the quarter. The platform added 3.7 million subscribers in Q1 2024, coming to a total of 71.2 subscribers worldwide. Average revenue per user (ARPU) also expanded by 31% year-over-year as advertising revenue rose by 14% on the year as well.

As CBS Sports serves as one driver of Paramount+ subscriptions through live game broadcasts and other sports content, the sports division recently endured a change of its own with the retirement of chairman Sean McManus and advertising chief John Bogusz stepping down from his role. Earlier on Monday, the company announced that former NFL quarterbacks and longtime analysts for The NFL Today, Phil Simms and Boomer Esiason, would not be returning to the studio show. Former NFL quarterback Matt Ryan will be joining the studio show next season, along with host James Brown and analysts Bill Cowher, Nate Burleson and J.J. Watt.

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