Quote:
Originally Posted by cjones2451
I have seen that proposed elsewhere too, but let me ask you this. If not for the reasons I proposed, why would the league do this. Lets say for arguments sake it is for going after the US Market. Is that going to offer more security and financial upside that focusing on Canada. Every Spring League in the US has been a disaster and bleeds money (Any big US network that has partnered with the AAF/XFL/USFL/UFL has done it on a revenue sharing model so no up front money.
There is also season overlap and once College and NFL starts they would be dead in he water so so what would they do start in March - no chance!
Seeing the pushback on these changes, could you imagine if they did other rule changes, or eliminated the ratio or became an NFL farm system - it would die and the owners know this. They are not idiots, Stewart Johnston is not an idiot, he was still running TSN and resigned to become CFL Commish, so its not like he was fired.
So this whole they want to Americanize the game to get US TV dollars or US expansion does not make sense
If one is really reaching to say they are planning to stay in Canada and trying to appeal to NFL and American football fans to grow, that is a WAY bigger risk than what I have hypothesized
|
To be clear, you mean this?
Quote:
Originally Posted by cjones2451
My hypothesis is there was urgency to get it done to have it ready for the new TV deal and they had to have some significant 'modernization' to get other networks (Prime, Netflix and possibly SN) to come to the table. Amazon Prime TV numbers for the NFL are huge, and at the presser yesterday they said they would like to get the new TV deal done before the season starts.
|
I think you are correct, in that US expansion is not it. But Prime/Netflix IS "chasing US TV Dollars", IMO.
I don't know the answers. But the shady way they've acted, and the flimsy explanations that don't hold up to any real scrutiny, make me think there must be [I]something[/I afoot].
If "change these rules and we'll have more bidders" is the reason, then somebody somewhere
is an idiot.
Because I truly, truly believe that these rule changes
will not bring in noticeable new fans or viewership.
We may see a chicken-or-egg scenario play out. Netflix comes in offers a pile of money for the TV contract. Guess whey they will do next? Promote the shit out of the CFL.
THAT would be what increases viewers, along with the more accessible technology and reach that Netflix has vs TV (let's not pretend TSN's streaming options are cutting-edge, here. It's expensive and sports-specific - a different market than Netflix).
If Netflix paid a huge pile of money then promoted the shit out of the league,
with no rule changes, the
exact same thing would happen.
So why are the changes required? Netflix
thinks the changes will attract the fans they need for the deal to pay off? Then someone at Netflix is an idiot.
Netflix says it's okay either way, but they have big sponsor who won't come on board without the changes? Then someone at that sponsor is an idiot.
Somewhere down the line of who-pays-who, somebody thinks this will make a difference. And they are misguided.
Quote:
Originally Posted by cjones2451
I think you make a great point. No other nation on earth has the influence of a neighbour (yes see what I did there) like Canada and the US. The NFL and increasingly the NCAA are such a juggernaut because of the sheer size, hype, etc. that it is understandable that people who are swept up in the hype bypass the CFL. So I think the league needed to make a bold move to try and get some of the hype and attention. Maybe it won't work and by 2030 things change back (who knows).
|
I can't help but think that becoming more similar is fundamentally the opposite of "bold".