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Ken Carman: Playoff Game on Peacock isn’t Sure Sign of Pay-Per-View Super Bowl

“I think so much stuff has to change for the pay-per-view Super Bowl to be a realistic conversation, for pay-per-view football in the playoffs to be a realistic conversation.”

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As a new media rights deal commences with the upcoming regular season, NBCUniversal and the National Football League announced Monday that Peacock will present the first-ever, exclusive live streamed NFL Playoff game on Saturday, Jan. 13. The game will take place during NFL Wild Card Weekend, a specific conference notwithstanding.

Additionally, the deal will make NBCUniversal the first media company to present three NFL Playoff games in one weekend, as its linear channel will broadcast an additional Saturday NFL Wild Card game and a Sunday NFL Wild Card game. NBCUniversal is reportedly paying the NFL $110 million for the additional game as it prepares to broadcast three Super Bowls over the next 11 seasons (2025, 2029, 2033).

“We’ve always had access, and when you walk into a bar, you know, ‘Hey, the playoff game is on.’ That’s a big part of the playoff atmosphere or the playoff environment,” said Anthony Lima, 92.3 The Game morning co-host. “Now the Peacock part of this is a lot of people are going to have to learn, again, how to get it. Do they want to get it, do they want to do the free trial, do they want to invest all that? They’re going to have to.”

During the NFL regular season, Peacock will be the streaming home for Sunday Night Football games on NBC, along with its accompanying studio show Football Night in America. The OTT platform will also present an exclusive NFL regular season contest for the first time when the Buffalo Bills square off against the Los Angeles Chargers on December 23.

“Two-thirds of this room does not have Peacock,” said Ken Carman, 92.3 The Game morning co-host. “I have Peacock, [and] there’s some pretty good shows on there. I said that they’re actually making a mistake there. They should have a regular season game on Peacock during Halloween, because their Halloween selection is just outstanding.”

With streaming services and ad supported television cemented as a regular part of people’s everyday lives – becoming the primary destination for television viewership according to Nielsen Media Research – questions regarding the future of the Super Bowl are starting to be raised.

Former ESPN president and co-founder and CEO of Meadowlark Media, John Skipper, has mentioned that he expects the Super Bowl to become a pay-per-view event in the future. While much of it has been speculation, a move in this way could force the NFL to fight for its broadcast antitrust exemption it was given under the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961. The NFL relies on this congressional decision most heavily compared to other major sports entities, as all of its regular season games are broadcast on national television.

“I think so much stuff has to change for the pay-per-view Super Bowl to be a realistic conversation, for pay-per-view football in the playoffs to be a realistic conversation,” Carman said. “Especially the Super Bowl because it’s such a global thing. Are people globally going to tune in and pay to watch the Super Bowl when they’re seeing it over network television?”

In presenting Thursday Night Football regular season games exclusively on Amazon Prime Video – an OTT service – the Supreme Court has not determined whether the congressional decision applies in this instance. Nonetheless, Amazon Prime Video streamed NFL playoff games in two of the last three seasons. However, those were merely simulcasts of a linear broadcast available in the home markets of the two teams. This year, Amazon Prime Video will be the home to the league’s first Black Friday game between the New York Jets and the Miami Dolphins.

The amended deal with Peacock follows a season where ratings were considerably behind those of traditional broadcast television and an ostensible experimentation by the league as to future endeavors in this sector. Whether the Super Bowl is exclusive to an OTT platform next remains to be seen.

“When the NFL does something, I go, ‘Oh, that’s not going to make sense,’ and they just make gobs of money over it,” Carman said. “But it’s the one thing that I do think it’s a bridge too far of, ‘Okay, what’s your return on it?’”

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Mike Florio: Chris Simms Isn’t Desensitized to Internet Criticism

“Chris takes a lot of crap. I take a lot of crap. I’ve been doing it a lot longer than Chris, and I think sometimes Chris just kind of reaches the end of the rope.”

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Courtesy: Heidi Gutman/NBC Sports

Chris Simms caught some heat this week while discussing the death of Miami Dolphins fan Eric Carmona. Carmona was the brain behind the Tuanon viral videos, which featured him in a Dolphin mask attacking critics of Miami quarterback Tua Tagovailoa. Simms was one of his frequent targets.

Carmona was killed in a motorcycle accident last week. He leaves behind a wife and four children. He was just 30 years old.

Mike Florio brought the story up on Pro Football Talk Live, because Tagovailoa himself donated $10,000 to a GoFundMe campaign to support Carmona’s family. Simms responded by noting that Carmona was a frequent critic of his.

Florio pushed back saying that trolling is better than being ignored. People are passionate about their teams and if they are passionate about attacking you for criticizing their teams, it means you matter to them.

“This is a deep subject and I think it’s societal and I won’t go into it because I’m only going to get myself in trouble,” Simms responded. “We’re also setting an example like, ‘Hey here’s money to a guy who was very negative too.’ That’s all I’m saying.”

On Friday, Florio made his weekly appearance on WQAM in Miami. Morning show host Joe Rose asked Florio what Simms was thinking with those comments.

“I don’t know. That’s a question for Chris, and you could invite him on and he could talk about that,” Florio answered. “And I’m not trying to be flippant by saying that. I understand the way he feels from my perspective.”

He did try to explain the point he was making to Simms in saying that being trolled is better than being ignored. He reminded Rose that there is a thick skin required to having the kind of jobs they do.

“Chris takes a lot of crap. I take a lot of crap. I’ve been doing it a lot longer than Chris, and I think sometimes Chris just kind of reaches the end of the rope. He doesn’t actively participate in Twitter. He has one of the producers at NBC that primarily updates his account. So I don’t think he’s become as desensitized to it as I have over the years.”

Simms caught heat earlier this week from another fan base. Joe DeCamara and Jon Ritchie of the WIP Morning Show ripped the NBC analyst for ranking Jalen Hurts as the seventh best QB in the league.

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Stoney & Jansen Baffled By NBA Finals TV Schedule

“They’ve got to get up early on the [West] Coast. We’ve got to stay up late because Monday Night Football can’t start until 8:30. It goes both ways.”

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Courtesy: Audacy

The NBA Finals and Stanley Cup Final continue with games taking place this weekend, and many basketball and hockey fans are expected to tune in to watch the action. The Denver Nuggets will try to take a 3-1 series lead on the Miami Heat, while the Vegas Golden Knights will look to rebound from an overtime loss to return home one win away from a championship. Aside from the pomp and circumstance, there is considerable intrigue pertaining to the action on both the court and the ice. The challenging part of the entire situation is knowing when the games are played due to the disjointed nature of the schedule.

Throughout the NBA Finals, games have taken place three days apart from one another, while the Stanley Cup Final has followed a similar pattern but both avoid playing games on Sundays. As a result, there were only two days between the first two games of the Stanley Cup Finals, but three for the remainder should it reach a deciding seventh game. Similarly in basketball, the first three games of the NBA Finals were played every other day, but the remainder of the series is scheduled with two days of rest. There is a chance the decision was made to accommodate travel schedules, as both series are aligned in a 2-2-1-1-1 pattern, meaning the first two games are played in one city; the next two are played in the other; and then they continue to alternate until a champion is crowned.

“I don’t know why the NBA’s not playing on Sunday,” 97.1 The Ticket morning co-host Mike Stoney said. “That big travel day – because you really need travel days nowadays with your private planes to fly from Miami to Denver.”

Show co-host Jon Jansen, who played 10 seasons in the NFL as an offensive tackle with Washington and Detroit, expressed how some players may need to acclimate themselves to the altitude in Denver, Colo. The city is located 5,280 feet, or one mile, above sea level, making the air thinner and dryer and presenting some visitors with difficulty breathing. Jansen never felt the effects of altitude sickness, claiming that it was never a big deal for him, but obviously, everyone reacts to things differently.

“Basketball in particular and hockey because it’s constant running, especially at your position,” Stoney proposed. “You’re not running like madmen [in football] like they do in basketball where I think it affects you the most.”

The schedule also presents challenges for consumers around the United States living in different time zones. The NBA Finals do not begin until 8:30 p.m. EST, and the games often do not include until close to midnight. Especially on weeknights, asking East Coast fans to stay up late and then go to work early in the morning limits the amount of sleep they can receive. Meanwhile, those on the West Coast are just returning home from a standard eight-hour workday and may have other tasks to carry out.

“They’ve got to get up early on the [West] Coast,” Jansen said. “We’ve got to stay up late because Monday Night Football can’t start until 8:30. It goes both ways.”

There is no perfect time slot that will appease all consumers, but even so, ratings for this year’s NBA Finals have exceeded most expectations. Game 3 attracted an average audience of 11.2 million viewers and peaked at a figure of 12.4 million, down 2.5% from last year’s third game of the NBA Finals between the Boston Celtics and Golden State Warriors. Viewership for the first three games of the NBA Finals is averaging 11.6 million, representing a nearly 2% decline from last year’s numbers. ESPN reported its most-watched playoffs across its platforms in the last 11 years, with the total playoff viewership audience averaging approximately 6.1 million people.

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Colin Cowherd: I Have Tried to Invest in MLS Teams Twice

“I think they’re smart. I think they’re boutique stadiums, their fanbases feel European. The in-game environment’s excellent.”

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Courtesy: FS1

Could we have seen FOX Sports Radio host Colin Cowherd having some sort of ownership stake in an MLS team? Cowherd said he tried, and then he tried again.

Talking about Inter Miami adding global superstar Lionel Messi on Thursday, Cowherd mentioned that he inquired about getting involved with the league, but the asking price at this point is too much for him.

“I have twice tried to invest in the MLS, and I just can’t afford it,” Cowherd said. “I think they’re smart. I think they’re boutique stadiums, their fanbases feel European. The in-game environment’s excellent. The academy is slowly becoming something, but it is becoming something their academy system. And they are now on a regular basis going and getting the world’s biggest soccer stars.”

Colin pointed out that Messi is the most popular athlete in the world, boasting social media followings and name recognition that easily eclipses that of superstar athletes like LeBron James and celebrities like the Kardashians and Beyonce. So not only is Messi’s signing a monumental moment for Inter Miami owner David Beckham, but it’s a feather in the cap signing for Major League Soccer as a whole.

“Messi is massive for the MLS. It’s the biggest moment in the history of the franchise,” he said. “Think Beckham times two. And Beckham was big when he arrived here in the States.”

“I think it’s cool that the MLS, our domestic soccer league, can go out and bring a superstar – not a star, a mega superstar on our soil regularly,” he added.

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