IPL TV & digital rights sold for Rs 44,075 crore | Cricket News – Times of India
Package ‘B’ – Digital (India) – was bought by the Viacom18-led JV while the bidder that got Package ‘A’ was kept under wraps and will be revealed on Tuesday.
AS IT HAPPENED: IPL MEDIA RIGHTS AUCTION
For a total of 410 matches, and at a base price of Rs 49 crore per match on television and Rs 33 crore per match on digital, the two packages allowed the cricket board to rake in Rs 44,075 crore.
By the time Day Two concluded, bidding was on for Package ‘C’ – set of 18 non-exclusive matches including the three playoffs and the final (digital) – and Package ‘D’, which is the Rest of the World.
The day closed with three bidders – the identities are under wraps – gunning for Package ‘C’ at a base price of Rs 16 crore per match for a set of 98 matches and the bidding was on at Rs 18. 75 crore.
As for the rest of the world, Viacom has bagged the Australia and European territories while bidding is on for the remaining ones.
The present value of rights has already gone past Rs 46,000 crore and those tracking developments expect Package ‘C’ to drive the total value close to the Rs 50,000 mark.
The final results of the e-auction are expected to come out on Tuesday. “The bidding for Package ‘C’ will be heavy because the set of 18 matches, even if non-exclusive, include the three playoffs and the grand final every season alongside the evening matches on weekends, during double headers. The bidder that won Package ‘B’ for digital will not let go Package ‘C’. So expect a very tough fight,” say those tracking developments.
Disney+Hotstar was expected to make a bigger pitch for digital, while going strong for television, having built a massive network in India over 10 years. Alongside Culver Max (Sony) and Viacom, the bidding for Package ‘A’ and ‘B’ began on an aggressive note on Sunday and TV alone looked like it was touching the Rs 60 crore per match price.
“But we think the bidder for both Package ‘A’ and ‘B’ was wary that the more they bid aggressively for ‘A’, the price of ‘B’ would go up. And therefore, the pace slowed down towards the end of Day One. On Day Two though, I think Viacom walked away with a ‘steal’ on the digital with the price at which they got. Of course, Package ‘C’ is now the challenge,” sources added.
The BCCI, meanwhile, will laugh its way to the bank, having come up with a ‘winning’ tender document. For the base prices they came up with – that came under criticism early on – and for putting the Package ‘C’ in place, which had critics of its own, the cricket board has once again managed to rake in ‘top dollar’ from its marquee product.
The cricket board, for the record, had appointed KPMG to draft the tender document for this e-auction and devise the buckets and base prices based on which the bidding could be planned.
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