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Amazon, YouTube, Twitter Are Said to Eye Bids for NFL Rights

Amazon.com Inc., YouTube and Twitter Inc. are bidding hundreds of millions of dollars for rights to the NFL.

Amazon, YouTube, Twitter Are Said to Eye Bids for NFL Rights
An attendee holds up a novelty pointing finger during a National Football League (NFL) game in Mexico City, Mexico. (Photographer: Cesar Rodriguez/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Amazon.com Inc., YouTube and Twitter Inc. are all weighing bids for streaming rights to “Thursday Night Football,” according to people with knowledge of the matter, providing the latest evidence of technology companies’ growing interest in live sports.

The three are bidding as much as hundreds of millions of dollars for rights that will run for as long as five years, according to the people, who asked not to be identified discussing the negotiations. The National Football League is getting help in the talks from 21st Century Fox Inc., which acquired the TV rights to the games through 2022.

The NFL is looking for a technology company to offer an interactive stream with social-media commentary and statistics that entice kids raised on video games and Snapchat, the people said. Amazon already does this with the G League, a minor-league version of the National Basketball Association. The TV audience for the NFL has declined for two years in a row, slumping almost 10 percent last season alone.

Amazon bid for the rights in the initial round, but hasn’t decided whether to bid this time around due to changes in the NFL’s proposal requests, one of the people said. About 300,000 people watched games on Amazon in the most recent season.

Amazon shares were little changed at $1,463 at 9:48 a.m. in New York on Friday. They had risen 25 percent this year through Thursday’s close.

As in the past, the NFL is selling Thursday streaming rights as a complement to the broadcast deal to nurture the interest of new deep-pocketed bidders in Silicon Valley, with providers simply re-transmitting what was carried on regular TV.

Video Partners

No technology giant has become the main video partner to a major U.S. sports league, in part because of a reluctance to pull games off mainstream TV and award full rights to an online provider. But Facebook Inc., Twitter, Amazon and Alphabet Inc.’s YouTube have all dabbled in live sports over the past couple years.

YouTube Chief Executive Officer Susan Wojcicki, speaking this week at the Code Media conference in Huntington Beach, California, said she’d “love to stream” the NFL but declined to comment on ongoing talks. Twitter declined to comment.

Owners, leagues officials and TV networks have all blamed different factors for the decline in TV viewing, from the election and politics to poor quality of play.

While media executives have warned that there are too many games available in too many places, the NFL has managed to secure large increases in the price for TV rights. Fox paid more than $3 billion for its Thursday deal, and whichever technology company wins the rights will be spending more than the $50 million a year Amazon agreed to in the last go-round, the people said. Fox will also be able to stream the games through its own digital simulcasts.

ESPN parent Walt Disney Co., NBC owner Comcast Corp., CBS Corp. and Fox possess all the major football rights. That can’t change until at least 2021 or 2022, when rights for all the major games will be up for renewal.

--With assistance from Selina Wang

To contact the reporters on this story: Scott Soshnick in New York at ssoshnick@bloomberg.net, Lucas Shaw in Los Angeles at lshaw31@bloomberg.net, Spencer Soper in Seattle at ssoper@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Crayton Harrison at tharrison5@bloomberg.net, Rob Golum, Mark Schoifet

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.