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So Singapore, you will be able to watch the World Cup!

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  • So Singapore, you will be able to watch the World Cup!

    I have to say, the money FIFA were originally demanding was an absolute disgrace, and sums that corrupt and farcical organisation up...

    SINGAPORE: After more than six months of nail-biting suspense, sources have confirmed that football fans will be able to watch all 64 matches of the 2010 World Cup finals in South Africa 'live' on television in Singapore.

    Details of the closely-guarded deal were, on Wednesday night, still being ironed out by the two telco giants - StarHub and SingTel.

    One scenario is for the matches to be split between StarHub's cable service and SingTel's mioTV. However, a source familiar with the outcome, pointed out that if the telcos split the bill 50-50, it was more likely that all the matches would be telecast on both pay television platforms.

    Selected matches will also be telecast live on free-to-air television by national broadcaster MediaCorp. The number of matches on free-to-air TV could not be confirmed but is likely to include the opening match between South Africa and Mexico as well as the semi-finals and finals.

    TODAY expects an announcement to be made this week.

    What's the deal worth?

    When it comes to the exact dollars and cents of the deal the picture gets a little grainy, especially since both telcos are listed.

    According to sources, the telecast rights were finally negotiated down to about US$15 million, or about S$21 million. This is about half the S$40 million in many earlier news reports.

    How does this compare to past deals? Well, now the picture gets fuzzier. Exact numbers have never been revealed, the last deal inked by StarHub was for two World Cup finals - 2002 and 2006 - and given that the deal is in US dollars, the exchange rate has moved significantly over the past decade.

    It is believed that StarHub paid US$5 million for the telecast rights to the 2006 World Cup. If so, the US$15 million figure is in line with the three to four times more that many other countries are paying for telecast rights this year.

    So does that same three-fold multiplier apply to what fans will have to pay to watch the World Cup? In 2006, StarHub charged a $15 subscription fee for those who signed up during their early-bird promotion and $25 subsequently.

    Said banker Kelvin Tan: "I would definitely not pay more than $100 to watch the World Cup, at most $60 or so."

    Time was running out

    It was in December that StarHub and SingTel first revealed that they had submitted a joint bid to Football Media Services (FMS), the Asian representatives of the event's rights holder, FIFA.

    It is understood there have been at least half a dozen bids tabled unsuccessfully. Some have blamed SingTel for its aggressive bid of more than $300 million for three seasons of Barclays Premier League (BPL) matches which may have sent a signal to FIFA, and its agent FMS, that there was money to be made in football crazy Singapore.

    So why did both sides finally settle on this smaller sum?

    One theory: Each day that passed without a deal meant that the telcos had less time to score advertising deals, which are the main source of revenue to defray their costs - short of passing them on to consumers.

    This made it less and less attractive for the telcos to raise their bid. With the World Cup kicking off on June 11, the telcos now have just six weeks to sell advertising. - TODAY
    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori...053280/1/.html

  • #2
    Good news but still annoyed about having to sign up to Singtel just for the premiership, all their other channels are rubbish (to be fair so is 95% of starhub)

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    • #3
      Looking forward to it!
      Le jour de Saint Eugène, en traversant la Calle Mayor...

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      • #4
        Bah, live streaming is the way to go

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Kyo View Post
          Bah, live streaming is the way to go

          Don't they block that stuff...like so many things in S'pore?
          HUGE AL

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          • #6
            Today's media reports are that SingTel & Starhub have NOT acquired the rights.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by MAN Flyer View Post
              I have to say, the money FIFA were originally demanding was an absolute disgrace, and sums that corrupt and farcical organisation up...

              Once you work out SingTel is paying the EPL something like $100m per year for a 3-yr contract then it's not FIFA that are corrupt and farcical its actually SingTel themselves for screwing themselves and the rest of SG over.

              FIFA is right to say, look you pay $100m for one year of epl then surely you can pay some $$ to the governing body of the sport to what is arguably the largest football event on the calendar? At once every four years it still works out very cheap in comparison.

              SingTel are the ones that screwed it up for everybody.

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              • #8
                Yay, now back to the streaming plan...

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                • #9
                  Can imagine the coffee shops in SG logging on to a website and showing it on their TV screens... They could possibly hire a few "tiger ladies" who are skilled in troubleshooting to help out...
                  God must have been a ship owner, he placed the raw materials far from where they are needed and covered two-thirds of the earth with water...

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                  • #10
                    those lucky enough to receive malaysi'a TV1 can see about half of the matches live.

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                    • #11
                      World Cup football matches to be shown "live" in Singapore

                      Deleted
                      Last edited by Megatop; 17 November 2011, 09:08 AM.

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                      • #12
                        No thanks FIFA. I can do without soccer for a month. Opening, semi-finals and final free on mediacorp is good enough for me.

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                        • #13
                          It's a complete con job Fifa's pulling down on Singapore residents... for shame

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