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China to air English league games on TV again
CHINESE soccer fans will be able to watch English Premier League matches on free-to-air television again from next season.
After years of free-to-air broadcasts, the exclusive TV rights until the end of the 2009-10 season were awarded to small digital broadcaster Win TV in 2007, denying millions of Chinese fans their weekly fix of Premier League action. That hampered clubs like Manchester United from building on its fan bases in the world's most populous country, where the English champion believes it has 71 million fans.
Guangdong TV, which broadcasts to most of the nation, said last week it had paid Win TV 18 million yuan (US$2.64 million) to show one Premier League game and a highlights package each week for next season.
"We have many pay TV partners in Asia and we have a responsibility to maximise revenue for our clubs so that we can continue to attract the best players in the world," the Premier League's commercial chief Richard Masters said at the Chinese Football Industry Development Forum.
"That said, we are obviously happiest when we can match strong revenue with good viewing figures. We want as many people as possible to see Premier Leagues matches.
"In China, we are very happy that our partner WIN TV has reached an agreement so that some matches will be seen free-to-air on local stations."
Masters said that a new approach might be taken for China when the rights for the 2010-11 season and onwards were negotiated.
"The Premier League is considering a strategy for China which has been successful in many regions in Africa whereby at least one ... match each week is guaranteed free-to-air coverage," he said.
Manchester United played a friendly in Hangzhou on Sunday and Tottenham Hostpur, West Ham United and Hull City will be taking on local side Beijing Guo'an in the biennial Premier League Asia Trophy in Beijing, starting today.
Asia accounted for more than 40 percent of the league's global audience with nearly one million fans tuning in, Masters said.
After years of free-to-air broadcasts, the exclusive TV rights until the end of the 2009-10 season were awarded to small digital broadcaster Win TV in 2007, denying millions of Chinese fans their weekly fix of Premier League action. That hampered clubs like Manchester United from building on its fan bases in the world's most populous country, where the English champion believes it has 71 million fans.
Guangdong TV, which broadcasts to most of the nation, said last week it had paid Win TV 18 million yuan (US$2.64 million) to show one Premier League game and a highlights package each week for next season.
"We have many pay TV partners in Asia and we have a responsibility to maximise revenue for our clubs so that we can continue to attract the best players in the world," the Premier League's commercial chief Richard Masters said at the Chinese Football Industry Development Forum.
"That said, we are obviously happiest when we can match strong revenue with good viewing figures. We want as many people as possible to see Premier Leagues matches.
"In China, we are very happy that our partner WIN TV has reached an agreement so that some matches will be seen free-to-air on local stations."
Masters said that a new approach might be taken for China when the rights for the 2010-11 season and onwards were negotiated.
"The Premier League is considering a strategy for China which has been successful in many regions in Africa whereby at least one ... match each week is guaranteed free-to-air coverage," he said.
Manchester United played a friendly in Hangzhou on Sunday and Tottenham Hostpur, West Ham United and Hull City will be taking on local side Beijing Guo'an in the biennial Premier League Asia Trophy in Beijing, starting today.
Asia accounted for more than 40 percent of the league's global audience with nearly one million fans tuning in, Masters said.
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