Actually, what would be funny as hell is if Deano or any other Spanii would be in the same room as Stan Kroenke, and just one of them criticize Kroenke's choice of colors for the stadium, or ask to get equal billing or revenue, or complain about the general design of the place. That would be a fun time...
Is He Gone Yet? - YES HE IS - Anthony Lynn Discussion
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Originally posted by WindsorUK View Post
I might be wrong but I somewhat recall a program that chronicled his life now with dementia? His wife is his full time carer.
I do remember when he was coach of Chefs and he had Montana and those speeches we saw on NFL Films ("we, two little letters but powerful men, powerful!!") -- I called him Marty ShittenLoser. But damn, what a good solid NFL Coach.
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Originally posted by Bolt4Knob View Post
Yes, this is correct. ESPN did a show segment a couple years ago and he was kind of going through early stages. Now I am sure much more serious. God speed to Marty and his family.
I do remember when he was coach of Chefs and he had Montana and those speeches we saw on NFL Films ("we, two little letters but powerful men, powerful!!") -- I called him Marty ShittenLoser. But damn, what a good solid NFL Coach.
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Originally posted by Charge! View Post
they wont because they make the same money if they win or lose....... no motivation to spend any extra money on coaches which comes out of Spanos pocket and profits and not from the required cap.....
NFL Revenue Sharing 101
Posted on January 23, 2020 by Steve Thomas
January 23, 2020
By Noonefromtampa
Many people have questions as to how revenue is divided up among the various NFL teams, so I wanted to provide a general overview on the subject from publicly available sources and estimates made by industry followers. The NFL does not make detailed financial information available.
NFL revenue is split into two major categories: national revenue and local revenue.
National revenue, which is shared across all 32 teams, consists of:- TV deals with the various networks
- NFL Ventures:
- Merchandising; Fanatics is the lead NFL partner on this
- NFL Enterprise:
- NFL Network, NFL.com and NFL Sunday Ticket
- Licensing deals, such as “official sponsors of the NFL”
- Ticket sales (40% of gross)
Local revenue, which goes to the local team, consists of:- Ticket sales (60% of gross)
- Concessions and parking, which are split between the team and stadium ownership
- Corporate sponsorships with the local team
Tickets sales are split between the home team, which gets 60% of the gate, with the remaining 40% going into a shared pool that is split across all teams. This helps negates the impact of poor attendance on individual teams, such as the Redskins.
2018 Estimate of Shared Revenue SourcesWe know from the 2018 Green Bay Packers’ financial report that the league provided $274.3M in shared revenue per team. Multiplying that amount by 32 teams yields a net total shared revenue pool of $8.8B. The estimate of shared revenue from various sources is around $9.1B, so the difference between the two values means that league expenses are around $300M.Category Amount TV Deals $5.1B NFL Ventures $1.4B NFL Enterprise $2.3B Ticket Sales $330M
While every team gets an equal of the national revenue, the local revenue can vary greatly based on the size and type of the stadium, ticket sales, how much of the concession/parking revenue the team gets and the value of the team’s corporate sponsorships. In 2018, the Packers had $203.7M in local revenue for a total revenue of $489M. Economic experts who track sports league finances have estimated some teams have much higher total revenues than the Packers.
Some total revenue estimates for 2018 for the top revenue teams:- Dallas Cowboys – $950M
- New England Patriots – $600M
- New York Giants – $520M
- Houston Texans – $500M
- Washington Redskins – $495M
- San Francisco 49ers – $495M
So, the better a team does at generating local revenue, the more money goes into the team’s pockets.
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Originally posted by like54ninjas View Post
Here is the revenue splits and revenue opportunities.
NFL Revenue Sharing 101
Posted on January 23, 2020 by Steve Thomas
January 23, 2020
By Noonefromtampa
Many people have questions as to how revenue is divided up among the various NFL teams, so I wanted to provide a general overview on the subject from publicly available sources and estimates made by industry followers. The NFL does not make detailed financial information available.
NFL revenue is split into two major categories: national revenue and local revenue.
National revenue, which is shared across all 32 teams, consists of:- TV deals with the various networks
- NFL Ventures:
- Merchandising; Fanatics is the lead NFL partner on this
- NFL Enterprise:
- NFL Network, NFL.com and NFL Sunday Ticket
- Licensing deals, such as “official sponsors of the NFL”
- Ticket sales (40% of gross)
Local revenue, which goes to the local team, consists of:- Ticket sales (60% of gross)
- Concessions and parking, which are split between the team and stadium ownership
- Corporate sponsorships with the local team
Tickets sales are split between the home team, which gets 60% of the gate, with the remaining 40% going into a shared pool that is split across all teams. This helps negates the impact of poor attendance on individual teams, such as the Redskins.
2018 Estimate of Shared Revenue SourcesWe know from the 2018 Green Bay Packers’ financial report that the league provided $274.3M in shared revenue per team. Multiplying that amount by 32 teams yields a net total shared revenue pool of $8.8B. The estimate of shared revenue from various sources is around $9.1B, so the difference between the two values means that league expenses are around $300M.Category Amount TV Deals $5.1B NFL Ventures $1.4B NFL Enterprise $2.3B Ticket Sales $330M
While every team gets an equal of the national revenue, the local revenue can vary greatly based on the size and type of the stadium, ticket sales, how much of the concession/parking revenue the team gets and the value of the team’s corporate sponsorships. In 2018, the Packers had $203.7M in local revenue for a total revenue of $489M. Economic experts who track sports league finances have estimated some teams have much higher total revenues than the Packers.
Some total revenue estimates for 2018 for the top revenue teams:- Dallas Cowboys – $950M
- New England Patriots – $600M
- New York Giants – $520M
- Houston Texans – $500M
- Washington Redskins – $495M
- San Francisco 49ers – $495M
So, the better a team does at generating local revenue, the more money goes into the team’s pockets.
also, omits that the Cowboys have a sweetheart deal that allows them to sell their own merchandise outside of the shared pool.
it does illustrate why the lack of fans in the stadium does not kill the owners financially. The shared pool of revenue covers the players salaries and overhead
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Originally posted by jamrock View Post
good breakdown but it completely ignores luxury suite revenue which is why the Cowboys are so high on the list and was the big reason for the Chargers move to LA. That revenue is retained 100% by the home team.
also, omits that the Cowboys have a sweetheart deal that allows them to sell their own merchandise outside of the shared pool.
it does illustrate why the lack of fans in the stadium does not kill the owners financially. The shared pool of revenue covers the players salaries and overhead
Jerrah was a maverick and marketing genius.My 2021 Adopt-A-Bolt List
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Maybe the Spanclan are also looking hard at getting a high draft pick. Could that be the reason for no coaching changes at this time? Does anyone think it's possible that they are looking to the future knowing the season is effectively over? Just trying to find a silver lining in this mess.
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