- Apr 24, 2022
- 3,651
- 9,975
- AFL Club
- Brisbane Lions
north is the sick man of the afl.
not a matter of if theyre going to get kicked out its a matter of when.
not a matter of if theyre going to get kicked out its a matter of when.
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AFLW 2024 - Round 9 - Indigenous Round - Chat, game threads, injury lists, team lineups and more.
Clubs are bracing for the commercial impact of delayed free-to-air AFL coverage on Saturdays from next year as Fox Footy holds exclusive live broadcast rights of the game nationally for the first eight rounds.
The AFL’s lucrative new broadcast deal starts in 2025 and runs for seven years, and it is having an impact on the schedule for next season, with the league working to release the fixture by mid-November.
Assuming we are fixtured on a Saturday prior to R8, for the first time since 2001 not all Lions games will be live on FTA into Brisbane, which is a shame.The $4.5 billion broadcast deal has some restrictions on the number of games teams can play on Saturdays for the first eight rounds to share the load across the competition, but that desire to spread the number of games each team plays on a Saturday is also making the development of the fixture more complicated.
Clubs want clarity from the league as to how it will affect them, and their fans.
The deal means that supporters of teams playing anywhere in Australia on Saturday in the first eight rounds will need a Foxtel or Kayo subscription to watch them live, with free-to-air coverage on Seven to be delayed. Only the Anzac eve, Anzac Day and Dreamtime games will be shown live on free-to-air if they fall on a Saturday.
I have Foxtel so it doesn't matter too much to me, but why would anyone want to watch a game on delay, its not the 90's or early 00'sHow Fox Footy’s ‘Super Saturday’ deal will shape the AFL fixture (The Age, 1 Nov 2024)
Assuming we are fixtured on a Saturday prior to R8, for the first time since 2001 not all Lions games will be live on FTA into Brisbane, which is a shame.
I remember watching games on delay back in 2003 and getting the result spoiled occasionally before I moved away so at least there's a couple more years there.Assuming we are fixtured on a Saturday prior to R8, for the first time since 2001 not all Lions games will be live on FTA into Brisbane, which is a shame.
I remember watching games on delay back in 2003 and getting the result spoiled occasionally before I moved away so at least there's a couple more years there.
Just did digging - 2002 was the first year every game was shown live or on delay, which is probably what you're thinking of. I think 2012 was the first year of the deal that meant every NSW/Qld game was live and every local team game would be on FTA, the combination getting us where we are today.
Welcome to watching AFL on free to air in SEA. Every game is on a slight delay, even the grand final.I have Foxtel so it doesn't matter too much to me, but why would anyone want to watch a game on delay, its not the 90's or early 00's
Isn’t that the case everywhere?Welcome to watching AFL on free to air in SEA. Every game is on a slight delay, even the grand final.
Yes, the digital tv/radio process has an unavoidable delay of about 10 seconds compared to analogue, which was what killed radio-TV simulcasts like Roy & HG's calls of RL and AFL grand finals from their card table. Video over the internet adds more delay again, might be about 20s.Isn’t that the case everywhere?
I'm sure you're right, but I don't remember watching Lions games on delay during that time other than those played on Friday night, which were fairly rare. My memory isn't what it once was though!I remember watching games on delay back in 2003 and getting the result spoiled occasionally before I moved away so at least there's a couple more years there.
Just did digging - 2002 was the first year every game was shown live or on delay, which is probably what you're thinking of. I think 2012 was the first year of the deal that meant every NSW/Qld game was live and every local team game would be on FTA, the combination getting us where we are today.
Honestly can't remember which night games - could well have been Friday nights only, but I thought it was Saturdays too. I mainly know the year because I lived in a share house in 2003 and I remember setting up camp in the rumpus room until after midnight.I'm sure you're right, but I don't remember watching Lions games on delay during that time other than those played on Friday night, which were fairly rare. My memory isn't what it once was though!
The large screen viewing at The Gabba has a 1-3 second delayYes, the digital tv/radio process has an unavoidable delay of about 10 seconds compared to analogue, which was what killed radio-TV simulcasts like Roy & HG's calls of RL and AFL grand finals from their card table. Video over the internet adds more delay again, might be about 20s.
You're right though in that the 2012 deal was the first one that didn't actively withhold live games from Qld/NSW fans. The new deal is a slight step back but at least you can watch the games live for a price.Honestly can't remember which night games - could well have been Friday nights only, but I thought it was Saturdays too. I mainly know the year because I lived in a share house in 2003 and I remember setting up camp in the rumpus room until after midnight.
It has the advantage of being able to take the feed directly from the broadcast van outside the groundThe large screen viewing at The Gabba has a 1-3 second delay
It is a long way to and back from those satellites
I'd say it's pretty big deal if Qld and NSW stop getting all local team games live and on FTA. That was a big part of the push into our states. Start putting that behind a paywall or on a delay and you'll start losing some casual fans when they can't find the game or it starts going until 11:00pm or later on a Saturday night.You're right though in that the 2012 deal was the first one that didn't actively withhold live games from Qld/NSW fans. The new deal is a slight step back but at least you can watch the games live for a price.
Hopefully our exposure is limited. We'll have seven games in that period, one of which will be on Easter Thursday night so on Seven, and it's expected we'll open the season in R0 on Thursday night as well, so fingers crossed it's 2-3 games max. We're a premiership team, play attractive footy and get great crowds, so we're a good chance of getting more Friday and Thursday night games.I'd say it's pretty big deal if Qld and NSW stop getting all local team games live and on FTA. That was a big part of the push into our states. Start putting that behind a paywall or on a delay and you'll start losing some casual fans when they can't find the game or it starts going until 11:00pm or later on a Saturday night.
The grand final is the only game I watch on FTA all year. So many ads, that it's an ad for Kayo/Foxtel in of itself. I don't think I'd be able to watch footy much outside my own team if I had to put up with thatI have Foxtel so it doesn't matter too much to me, but why would anyone want to watch a game on delay, its not the 90's or early 00's
Yes. And the two rights holders will have their own calling teams for all matches, even those broadcast by Seven. The trade off for Seven is that they'll be able to put their games on Seven+ live and on demand.Will the Grand Final be on Foxtel ?
When I tried out the SEN Sync function during the season, I had to delay it by about 50 seconds using Foxtel Go.Yes, the digital tv/radio process has an unavoidable delay of about 10 seconds compared to analogue, which was what killed radio-TV simulcasts like Roy & HG's calls of RL and AFL grand finals from their card table. Video over the internet adds more delay again, might be about 20s.
I think it varies a lot by internet speed, ISP, service... A lot of variablesWhen I tried out the SEN Sync function during the season, I had to delay it by about 50 seconds using Foxtel Go.
I once had a fascinating discussion with someone in TV who had a physics background. Essentially if there is a delay of 2-3 seconds, this basically means the signal is travelling around the world several times before it reaches the receiver.The large screen viewing at The Gabba has a 1-3 second delay
It is a long way to and back from those satellites
Yes. And the two rights holders will have their own calling teams for all matches, even those broadcast by Seven. The trade off for Seven is that they'll be able to put their games on Seven+ live and on demand.
I imagine that arrangement will be maintained going forward, given that it's a government regulation that restricts "major" events to free-to-air television live exclusively.Will the Grand Final be on Foxtel ?
Fun fact - a lot of pre-Starlink satellite communications used geosynchronous (positioned so they're always above the same point of the earth) satellites so they could always know there would be a certain number in view for reliability, etc. A geosynchronous orbit is about the same distance as the world's circumference at the equator (~35,000 km vs ~40,000+ km). So yes, if the coverage was beamed to one of those satellites and back to the HQ by a dish on a TV van - it was roughly the equivalent of going around the world twice.I once had a fascinating discussion with someone in TV who had a physics background. Essentially if there is a delay of 2-3 seconds, this basically means the signal is travelling around the world several times before it reaches the receiver.
Incredible when you think about it and how these signals, wherever they are being (mis)directed, are still travelling at the speed of light.