The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - Hour 1: Sports Business Class: NFL is King, and Taylor Swift is its Queen
Episode Date: February 2, 2024Meadowlark Media CEO John Skipper and Nothing Personal's David Samson are back with another episode with host of Pablo Torre Finds Out ... Pablo Torre! Welcome to the Sporting Class! The Super Bo...wl is almost here! The Kansas City Chiefs! The San Francisco 49ers! Taylor Swift! Las Vegas! America! Would you say that the NFL playoff game on Peacock was a success? Let’s dive into the numbers! What will come next? Adam Silver has been extended as the commissioner of the NBA. This extension matters: expansion, media rights, CBA. It’s all happening now. How does a commissioner keep their job? They get owners to back them. Here’s how that happens. The Baltimore Orioles are next on the selling block. A deal that has the franchise valued at $1.725 Billion is in place for David Rubenstein to buy the team from the Angelos family. Is this a fair deal? A low deal? Should MLB owners be concerned about this price tag? It’s closing time. What are we thinking about to end the episode? What didn’t we get to? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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You're listening to Giraffe Kings Network.
This is the Don Lebatur Show with the Stugatz Podcast.
This is not how it was to pedal our car.
I've been a terrible moderator. We've been doing this for 20 minutes.
You now have a sense of just a brief small glimpse into the chaos that is trying to prepare
for this show with John Skipper and David Sampson.
I think we should actually start and go from there.
Okay, so now the mystery is even more mysterious.
We've started, but not before the part that John just asked to cut out.
And so now people are wondering what is happening
and what's happening is that this is a sporting class.
And this is how this goes the week before
the largest sports business event, possibly of all time.
I mean, I'm gonna test and pressure test these,
you know, superlatives, David.
But the question I want to bring you guys
internationally the World Cup's got to be bigger than the Super Bowl. Fair. Way bigger. Fair. Finals of the World Cup. Right. Already exposed as being an ugly American.
But forgive me because. I got you a pretty good looking actually. Thank you. Thank you John. Yeah. Thank you. My confidence has been flagging and has been buoyed by the
perpetually spinning chair of John Skipper, spinning my own PR. So
while I hear in my ears, John, stop moving away from the microphone.
Las Vegas, the Chiefs, the Forty Diders, a Super Bowl, unlike any other American sports business
event. I want to ask John this question very simply to start. Is this peak NFL?
The NFL has described everything. It rules our country.
Is this as big as it could possibly get?
No, I don't think so.
I see no reason to think that their momentum, which is pretty
stupendous, is going to end here. Their ratings are up.
Their ticket prices are up.
I don't understand why anybody would think this is
peak NFL, my suspicion, other than the fact that they're in Las Vegas for the Super Bowl,
which is a unique environment. But other than that, what is it? Taylor Swift? I mean, again,
I think that's something they have capitalized on to create a great deal of atmosphere and talk.
I don't really believe people are paying more money for their ticket for the chance to catch a
glimpse of Taylor Swift in her suite. And I love when they suggest that the brand value of her
appearances has been worth $300 million. What does that
mean? Is there timing how much airtime she gets? And if you were paying for that airtime,
it will cost $300 million. I think that's what it means.
Right. How do you calculate something though, David?
So it's her limits.
I'm interested in why you're poo-pooing that so quickly in that you're in the industry
where you're trying to value
What it is when people are associated with Dan Levitar is an example as a Taylor Swift of sports media the town
like the Travis Kelsey but
Melissa ethridge, that's right. Not sure he's the Taylor Swift, but I don't want to quibble
The way these numbers come of course they you cannot justify them in a court of law.
You cannot say there's $300 million of exposure.
What they are trying to say is there's more people
who are engaged in all of what NFL has to offer.
And it's manifesting itself through merch,
through ticket prices, through viewership,
where they can announce more people watch
the championship game than in a decade or in 12 years.
So all the different touch points for the NFL, they get to go to advertisers and say,
look at the demographics.
We're now getting Swifties, which are girls of an age, which every sports dying to do,
this is a brilliant way to have done it for the NFL.
So I believe there are actual physical things that the NFL points to that helps it increase its business.
One note from the other side of the glass here.
Our resident Swiftie has entered the chat
and apparently there is a theory
that Travis Kelsey may well propose
on the field after the game,
which means that they're also getting tickets
to a proposal of historical unique
imports. I will bet you a dollar Mortimer that Travis
Kelsey will not propose to Taylor Swift on the field after the game.
Is that proposal before or after the endorsement of Joe Biden?
It's all the same. I think it's all together.
Yes, on one knee. There are bets that are being taken, but not by US sportsbooks, interestingly
enough. Bet relative to the proposal rather to whether
Taylor Swift will be proposed to whether they will endorse Joe Biden
Whether she will make it from Tokyo people don't understand the math of how easy it is to fly from Tokyo to Vegas on a side note
It's not a big deal. So especially with your own plane, but even in a commercial plane
She'd make it to Vegas. I'm gonna predict no proposal, no endorsement.
I would say you're a winner.
That's like minus 4,000.
I guess I'll be the one guy who believes in love here.
That'll be plus 3,000.
Put your money where your mouth is in the Caymans.
No, no, I believe in love.
And I believe that he actually loves her.
He will do it in a restaurant somewhere
or in a private moment,
as opposed to doing it in front of a bunch of people.
Is there a correlation between love and selling it?
So there's many couples who sell their engagement photos
to People Magazine or who allow for the publicity
of their love, does that take away
from the level of their love?
I think they're trying to,
do you think that Travis Kelsey-
Do you wanna recline your chair into a therapy couch?
No, I like the angle because what Kelsey's doing is all business.
This has been, he's the number one podge.
This is what I mean by-
He's not in the sports industry.
Being the only one who believes in love.
I'm mostly talking about me versus David here.
David is seeing the monetization and the brand value.
And by the way, I wanna put some numbers on this too, right?
The tickets, let's talk about the tickets because
from, for almost everybody, this is a television
show.
In Las Vegas, the tickets are record levels, right?
And the secondary market currently at last report is almost $11,000 to get in to the
building on average.
Yeah, that's higher than ever before.
But everything but cricket, I would say, is a television first event. to the building on average. Yeah, that's higher than ever before.
But everything but cricket, I would say,
is a television first event.
So more people watch the Knicks than the 19,000 who go.
More people, of course, watch the Super Bowl
than the 60,000 who go.
The question is, who wants to be in the event like that?
And the answer is, as you know, from Super Bowl days,
it's not local Las Vegas.
Las Vegas, Las Vegans. It is sponsors.
I think Las Vegans are actually people who don't eat meat in Las Vegas.
I'm a...
Viva Las Vegans.
That, hey, we should have done that for Metal Arts.
It's the Miami Heat Jersey for Vegans.
But can we think about this from who's going to be in Vegas?
Owners, every team gets an allotment of tickets.
All 32 teams.
Let's talk about what this is on the ground.
This is not what people are thinking.
That ordinary people are just getting super bowl tickets.
Ordinary people can have access to tickets
in the secondary market.
But if teams get caught by the league,
taking their allocations and selling them
on the secondary market, they get in big trouble.
You're not allowed to.
The tickets that are given to the broadcaster,
and you give them to people,
you didn't let those people put them
on the secondary market, I assume.
No, in fact, we called some people a couple of times.
And did you fire them?
Trying to.
Look, Stu Gatz just had a guy.
He just needed to pay back.
Yeah, no, we did discipline people
who did try to sell their tickets on the secondary
market.
It is tempting.
I can understand the temptation, but it's no, your point is accurate.
A good, enormous percentage of the tickets are specified for specific groups, advertisers,
sponsors, teams, friends, broadcasters.
League, family, family and friends of, you know, Travis Kelsey, Jason, they don't just
get a suite magically. There's a suite, you know, it's funny where they show Taylor Swift
in a suite as though there's some sort of free VIP suite. Each owner gets a suite of
when you're at a game or even if you're in the Super Bowl, there is a suite.
However, like in the World Series, you pay for your suite.
We paid for our suite when we were in the World Series
in the All-Star game you pay for your suite
because it's a league event where revenue is split
with players, with other constituencies like umpires
and the union and other owners.
So everybody's looking for the last dollar and
extra money on the secondary market doesn't go to the league or the teams. And that's why it's
not ideal when you have a secondary market that is this out of whack to the actual cover price.
Chief is taking it right now on StubHub, one of those secondary markets, $7,600.
And I assume that's for a bad seat in the end zone.
the secondary markets, $7,600. And I assume that's for a bad seat in the end zone.
I presume, although I guess the question here,
because we've now talked about all of these figures
from the literal president to the pop cultural president
and Taylor Swift is the trend line
of how much bigger the NFL can get, right?
And by the way, we should also mention Patrick Mahomes,
like his name,
he's in this. I mean, truly, like this is maybe the most talented quarterback of all
time. Certainly, I would have said he's the biggest name, but now Travis Kelsey is again,
how do you measure Q rating? I don't know the answer to these marketing questions, but
I imagine that, I don't know, John, let's use the parlance of Disney's marketing campaign
at the end of every Super Bowl.
I'm going to Disneyworld slash land.
I imagine this is a dream scenario for a marketer
who gets, I don't know, can you get Taylor Swift
in the frame?
Can they engineer that?
That is pre-planned.
If Travis Kelsey is MVP, there is a deal
that would be in place.
The work Taylor Swift would either participate or not.
I promise you that's been discussed
with their business managers of how that would work
because the value to Disney of that ad
versus an offensive lineman or a defensive lineman
or a cornerback or even, Mahomes is a close second,
but actually probably not even a close second to having
Kelsey and Swift do that commercial.
There's nothing that will be a close second.
So for example-
Mahomes would be good.
And they do, in fact, you guys are right, the deal, the Walt Disney Company does make
a deal with multiple parties before the game.
There have been instances where there were reluctant participants. I
doubt there will be reluctant participants here, but they have these deals in place before
the game with, I don't know, eight or 10 people who are the likely MVPs and they have to scramble
around if for some reason it's not one of the expect.
Rarely happens, I bet. Rarely happens.
The AFC Championship, a game where Kelsey has a hundred yards catching yeah I would assume if that
happens in the Super Bowl it would not be my home so would be the MVP which would
be shocking and actually does cost my home's money as part of his contract but
I believe that the MVP would then go to Kelsey because it's just good for the
league it's good for their sponsors it's good for everyone. I would not think they would manipulate.
I'm not quite sure.
David is casually creating a sigh up.
I see how just the MVP get selected.
It's voted on by members of the media.
Exactly.
So how are they going to go give the members of the media?
We did.
We didn't.
I mean we didn't.
When we were in the AL, when we were in the NLCS and in the World Series, it wasn't, we
weren't surprised by the NLCS.
Okay, hold on.
Let me give you a little wrinkle, right?
Okay, because starting in 2001, I am reading, the winner of the Super Bowl MVP Award is chosen
by a panel of, yes, 16 football writers and broadcasters, but also, and that's 80%, the
remaining 20% is fans
voting electronically.
Text 3678 for your MVP choice.
And I would have to imagine that this is where an aforementioned pop star might have a bit
of sway.
You think they count those the way they count the votes in the Ugandan Democratic election
by throwing them away?
If you think if you got 20% of MVP votes on you,
then you'd be coming second?
I just thought, with conspiracy theories,
there needs to be a reasonable upside
for doing something that outweighs getting caught
manipulating the matter.
And the NFL doesn't need to manipulate this.
It's good
Okay, so this is the question about about peak everything right like we're now talking about
Squeezing yet more money out of every margin and I think of course there are edges that you could leverage and play
but
Do we want to even consider the incentives at play when people are talking about?
What's the conspiracy theory that you're talking about?
When we have PR people talk to the writers
during the course of the game to get an idea
of where their head is or what they're thinking
and then trying to lead them in a direction
and that MLB PR people and team PR people are involved,
you're saying that does not happen.
I'm saying that that is literally a conspiracy theory.
No, I think this idea.
This is happens.
It, I've, wait.
Me, what?
Me, what?
That's clear up.
That'd be, that'd be,
Major League Baseball and the teams manipulate
that the person who would bring the most value to the league
by getting the MVP is selected as the MVP.
Oh my God, what a horrible thought.
I just don't think it.
You're not watching on YouTube
with the drafties that work, David.
I just don't think it.
What is high into his mouth like a damsel
and lock the stress?
I just don't think it happens
because there's not enough value.
What value does the league get
if they pick Kelsey as the MVP instead of moms?
They get all that happens over the next
entire off season when he is doing his off season as the Super Bowl MVP.
It is a brand awareness.
It is monetized. Sponsors will be all over him,
which they already are. If you're watching NFL games now,
the NFL doesn't get that money.
If if Kelsey becomes a bigger star, he gets more money,
what advantage is that to the NFL?
Well, this is a good question.
Yeah, and I think that you're talking like a CEO
a little bit because who wants to keep his talent
nameless, faceless, and replaceable.
What I think that you're trying to do, not you,
but what should be done by companies
is they're trying to raise up their talent,
make them more popular, more recognizable,
less interchangeable, creating stars.
Spoken like a guy who's stressed about the faces
that people knew in baseball.
You have, anytime you want to enter into a conspiracy
to manipulate something, you have to at least think about
what happens if you get caught and is the damage
worth the upside you'll get. What's the conspiracy when you're doing your staffing for SportsCenter?
You don't do it in a way to get the most viewers into... It's so...
When...
It's...
What is the case?
So I'm reluctant, I'm gonna be careful.
I am so excited.
So the Espeys at one point,
I wasn't an Espeys one time where there was an athlete
who was very angry at not being selected for something.
And there was a scurrying around to see whether there was an award they could give said athlete.
So that did happen.
However, I did institute the fact that whoever we instituted fan voting and insisted whoever the fans voted for would win and that
there would be no manipulation of the SP winners whatsoever.
And by the way, it took it out of the hands of ESPN employees or ESPN writers or anybody
put in the hands of the fans so nobody would say oh they
wanted such and such a person to win this award and of course we would have
athletes tell us if I'm not gonna win I'm not coming right no well nobody knew
who was gonna win I didn't know who was gonna win I know you'll be shocked now
I wasn't picking the first and young new huh Ernst and young new they're probably
yes they probably wc yourC. Your independent auditorium.
And we never had a mistake, but I do not believe the NFL has any incentive to try to influence.
We want this person to be the MVP rather than this person.
I just want John to know that it is my duty as the host of Publatory Finds Out to find out who that athlete is.
I'm going to find this out, John, whether or not you help me.
Go after him.
He's not the only one put it this way.
Go get it.
If you can just get a year and you can narrow it down
to when he was in the SPN, when the SPs were,
and then you can figure out whether or not
there was any sort of award.
I suppose the LeBron James award for being LeBron James
was a little suspicious in retrospect.
I just... James Award for being LeBron James was a little suspicious in retrospect.
I just.
Journalism will happen. Journalism will happen. We can leave it at my journalism. Yeah. I don't know why you would open yourself up to.
Yeah, let's keep going. Let's move to something else.
I am merely a host steering us through a stormy sea
of theories and topics related to sports business.
David Sampson is crying.
I am tearing up a little bit
because I've gotten to know John more and more
over the past year and what he does with his body
is very fascinating to watch.
He's closed now.
So if you're not watching this on YouTube,
his arms are crossed, he's very,
when we start talking about stuff
that makes him uncomfortable, he gets closed.
He has a different facial sort of tick
from his sort of smile that goes into more of a that, that.
Which is not a good one.
And Pablo just keeps rolling merrily along,
not paying attention to any of it.
Can I ask a follow-up question about what we learned
with the whole Peacock story?
Because John, the question,
and I wanna get us back to the question of the empire
and its peak.
So Peacock, the whole thing with the Kansas City Chiefs,
Miami Dolphins Wild Card Game.
This is January 13th.
The audience was an average of 23 million largest
in the history of online streaming services.
Turns out now we have the thing we'd been asking for
the last time we gathered here,
which is how many subscribers did they add?
And that's 2.8 million.
The single biggest subscriber acquisition event
that has been measured by this industry research firm antenna.
And so, the question I have relates to your grandest theory about the super-bulgoing pay-per-view.
Where are you on that in light of everything we've just discussed?
Well, I think that the fact that that game did 23 million viewers, I think the fact that
that game generate 3 million new subscribers, the fact that there is no way that Peacock
did that without consulting with the commissioner of the NFL.
So I assume they regarded it as an experiment to see what would happen and the results are excellent. And obviously means people will build upon this and more
games will go behind a paywall. Um,
and I did it as a lark in one of our,
a metal art potentially, but a lark,
I did it as a lark in one of our meetings when somebody asked me,
well predict something that might happen. And I said, oh,
I think the Super Bowl go behind the paywall.
So I would not want it to be assumed that I had put much thought into that.
Turns out to be, I think a pretty good instinct because
somebody is going to go before too long.
I believe to the commissioner and saying, saying gee we have the Super Bowl this year
What if we put it in our behind-the-pay wall? What if we charged a hundred dollars for the game?
They just figured out I think NBC paid
100 $110 million dollars for that game if you assume that
25,000 of those subscribers stick
I'm sorry 25% of those subscribers stick for a'm sorry, 25% of those subscribers stick
for a year or two years and you have a lifetime
of a thousand dollars to subscriber, that's $70 million.
That's not far off of what they paid for it.
So they got their money's worth and made more money on that
than they would have made if they broadcast that game.
There'll be some.
Who's that then? NBC. NBC. NBC. NLFL doesn't make any more money. Then they would have made if they broadcast that game. There'll be some who's they the NBC
NBC and the NFL doesn't make any more money. They they
Got paid for the game
NBC makes more money because of they own peacock
So when a game when the Super Bowl is on CBS
They're not requiring people to sign up for Paramount Plus to watch the Super Bowl.
They're side by side.
There'll be different casts of the game.
I'm interested in your saying that because NBC, when they're valuing their deal with
the NFL and they allocate the Super Bowl and how often NBC gets the Super Bowl or playoff
games, they're looking at the entirety of the deal, all the revenues associated over the years of the deal.
And this was an expected level of revenue in your mind
when they cut the deal, or this was a bonus upside case.
And I believe when they cut the deal with the NFL,
this could only have been as a best case scenario situation,
because I don't believe that it was set in stone
upon these broadcast deals being done, that there would be this behind a
Pock. I don't think the deal included a contemplation that this game would be
behind a paywall. I think that NBC because of how important it is for them
for Peacock to work decided to take the most valuable content they have which
was a playoff game for the NFL,
and put it behind a paywall.
Because it takes away from NBC's P&L.
Now, of course it's two pockets,
you're taking out your left pocket into the right pocket,
they're separate silos.
Peacock is its own entity, they get to announce results.
But the point being.
Also, Peacock versus NBC, Universal,
they're all different.
Well.
NBC had an asset that they negotiated for that they bought,
that they then passed on to one of their subsidiaries.
Well, part of the same company.
I mean, Brian Roberts is the CEO
and somebody among Brian and his core team decided
this was better value for the overall company.
How would you feel if when you were at ESPN,
if there were revenue that was part of ESPN
got recategorized as part of theme parks?
I'd be fine with it if it was of such importance
to the stock price because almost every executive
of any statue at the Walt Disney Company
is making more money if the stock goes up.
This is the best use of that game because
Wall Street wants to see the streaming services work.
So putting on the game was smart relative to a public company with a stock price.
And the guys...
I'd fight a little harder.
Huh?
I'd fight a little harder if I were president of ESPN and something, they were taking away
IPNL to give to theme parks?
Well, that's exactly how companies end up in dissonance and disarray. You're right. At least
when I was at Walt Disney, we prided ourselves on the fact that, gee, if there's something that is
good for the overall company, we're all going to go along. So why would you fight? I mean,
I'll answer that if we have time,
because if you look at what Jamie Dimon's doing
at J.P. Morgan is my favorite example of this.
When he's doing his succession plan,
he's having all of his top lieutenants
run different silos within the bank.
So they'll do investment banking,
then they'll go to consumer, then they'll go to lending,
they'll do all different things, different silos.
And the reason is, he wants whoever the CEO is to have an appreciation for all the different fiefdoms within JPMorgan.
And the only way to appreciate it is to run it, because if you don't run it and you just know
about it, it's another guy in the food room or another person in the food room, there's many,
many women who are part of this. Thank you for diversifying this hypothetical food. No, no,
well, it's,
oh, the JPMorgan is not a hypothetical.
This is happening right now with Jamie Dimon's
succession plan.
There is fighting within all these companies
between sort of revenue streams.
And so NBC is not willing the executives at NBC.
NBC sports.
Yes, just think about their, their, their being, especially showtime disappears, all
sorts of sports, things are disappearing.
NBC loses a whole playoff game to Peacock.
It was not a small decision.
That was my only, I just wanted to point out that it was not a small decision.
Not a small decision at all, but I am assuming that they understand that they will be given the indulgence of not, when that
comes out of their P&L, it comes out.
And I can't imagine being in arguing with the CEO about, well, I know this will be
good for the NBCU Comcast Universal Company, but this is bad for my little individual P&L.
So what David is right about, if you took companies, many of them would be divided philosophically
between people who believe, I love for my direct reports to fight with each other over
a nickel or a dime.
And those people who believe are all sort of working together will create more
value for the shareholders. So that's what we're going to do. Now, and by the way, the
I've seen instances where pitting, pitting division heads against each other can be constructive
financially. I believe it is destructive culturally.
It does though all speak to a bottom line,
which is the bottom line,
which is that the stock price of MVC right now
has never been more existentially dependent
on this streaming service working.
So there's a rare clarity, I think,
in terms of the incentive.
Why are we investing in this?
Because our future is collectively,
of course, then the domino effect of even your little fiefdom,
all of us are eating off of the table
ostensibly of the streaming service
by definition a fiefdom is a controlled entity
that squabbles with other fiefdoms right it comes from medieval
times when
the earth fiefdom was your castle in your keep and
you fall against the guy who had the next cast all over there, that in my opinion,
is not the best way to organize a business
into competing fiefdoms.
That's very aspirational of you.
David's just over here,
believing himself to be a peasant,
begging for a warm stone to be dropped into his pot of soup.
Or even a second producer.
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Don Lebatardard David Samson
weirdo Because he was not
He was not the fun substitute teacher who'd wheel out a TV and play a VHS taper Armageddon in science class
He was the weird one who would eat an egg salad sandwich while clipping his toenails into the trash can and running about Ronald Reagan
an egg salad sandwich while clipping his toenails into the trash can and running about Ronald Reagan.
Stugats.
The guy kept talking about how his ass was smooth,
smoother than a newborn's cheek.
He wouldn't stop bragging about his bare buttocks to me.
This is the Don Lebatar Show with the Stugats.
I wanna get to the other notion of CEO dynamics here
because look, a story that I've wanted to get to
for a long time with you guys that now dovetails nicely
with an update about his counterpart in the NBA
is Roger Goddell's pay.
And now Adam Silver's contract extension.
We've talked about fiefdoms, power dynamics,
among these competing but cooperative groups.
And so this naturally begs the question of what is it
that you want from a commissioner
when it comes to the business side,
when it comes to Adam Silver now getting an extension
of a contract that will take him through the end
of the decade and most relevantly perhaps,
passed this next negotiation of the collective bargaining
agreement for the MBA.
So, David.
That's a very important thing you just blew by, collective bargaining when we have a commissioner one of the main things
The main thing is asset value. That's the number one
Governor that we have to evaluate how commissioners I mean, what are our teams worth?
What are they being sold for etc number two the union we can't have the union think there's any issues
That's why they
Put them past the CBI. Yeah. So it would be interesting to speculate. I mean, that is definitive. We sort of know that.
What we don't know is, does his new contract put him past the next right deal or in front of the
next right deal? It has to be passed because the new right deal is up in 25. No, no, no. They're not going to do a four-year deal.
That's why I'm suggesting this is interesting because if I was an owner, I would want Adam
Silver to be there to negotiate the next deal.
Now, David, you-
The one after the next one.
Well, they're doing one now.
They're doing one now.
So I'm counting that one.
That's already in his current contract
He's doing that. So he's done a new deal
At least if I happen to
own an NBA team very unlikely prospect
I would I would think about I mean to your point David
You think about the collective bargaining agreement you won't add them to do that
I want the union to know who they're dealing with because if there's a lame duck commissioner,
you lose a lot of incremental grievances
during the course of a CBA.
There's a ton of fighting that goes on with players
during a CBA.
And if they sense any little weakness
in the commissioner or in the commissioner's deputies,
they'll exploit it.
So we always wanted our deputies to be extended
like the Dan Helms of the world
It used to be the Rob Manford under Bud Silk. We wanted them to have contractual security through
the next cba negotiation so that the union leaders whether it was
gene orza or michael wiener or
I can't watch oh my god donnell fear. Oh god. That was a moment. The late great. Don fears passed away. Excuse me.
Keep going. Keep going.
We want to. I think it's Michael. Michael Weiner has passed away. Not down here, but I could be wrong.
Born in 1948 and strong as ever.
Thank God.
Congratulations to the fear family.
So
75 and loving it.
Please proceed.
It was important to us to have employees that were out past the collective bargaining because the union does exploit things like that.
We had never thought about it from a rights fee deal because when negotiating rights,
did the relationship that God would have with you or that Rob would have with you,
it never really entered our calculus that there would be an issue that would hurt or quash the value of our rights,
depending on who the commissioner was, where we were actually worried about the impact it would have on salaries,
payrolls, if there were not a commissioner who had the backing of the owners with the CBA.
Okay.
Interesting.
So, the question here with, I suppose, how we should think of a commissioner versus the
normal quote unquote CEOs we've mentioned at a media company or any bank, as we've mentioned
as well, or a fast food enterprise. What's the job here really?
Like the standard of success seems like it's,
it's perceived in one way from fans and very differently
from the people who are actually in these rooms
where billions of dollars are at stake.
Well, I think David laid out already what the number one
measurement of a commissioner's
performance is, and that's team values.
And I think, and David weigh in, the two most important factors in that team value are the
meteorites, so the revenue, and the corraling of expenses, which is what money the players
get. So that's a collective bargaining agreement.
And the antitrust.
And the antitrust. Very helpful.
Yes.
That there can all of a sudden be 70 NFL teams
or 70 NBA teams.
Yes, but I'm not at least aware
of any significant movement or sentiment
to take away these antitrust.
There is not.
Right. Which is a hell of a set up for these businesses.
No, it's fantastic because the ego premium,
which is really the biggest part
of the franchise valuation,
ego premiums keep increasing
because it's so hard to get a team.
Explain what an ego premium is.
When you look at an asset that you wanna buy
and you assign a value to it
based on analytics, based on numbers,
and then you offer above that. Any amount that you want to buy and you assign a value to it based on analytics, based on numbers, and then you offer above that any amount that you offer above what an asset
is worth. You explain away by saying that's ego premium because I get to say that I own
this and ROI where the eye is actually eyes. The eye is eye.
I would have, you know me, I'm a softie. I would have referred it to it as the intangible value of scarcity, right?
There are only so many.
I tend to compare it to art, right?
They are only so many and the greatest one to use is Vermeer because there are only 34
Vermeers.
They're extremely valuable.
If you could get one, I don't think any of them really ever come to market.
And I think the same thing here.
I think it's the value, it's the intangible value
of being the owner and getting to walk across the court.
Let's sure always look to me like Mark Cuban loved
owning the Dallas Mavericks.
And that is what you're talking about.
But to me, it's intangible.
When you look at Adam Silver and the job he's done and you think about what teams have
sold for, the fact that he had to get rid of Sarver and Sterling, that he was able to
do that, which were two big things that Adam's done.
You look at the relationship with the players way better than what David Stern's relationship
was, even though he was very popular.
Adam's even more popular than David was with the players.
That's another positive. When you look at who owes him what,
the more owners you bring in as a commissioner,
the more favors you're owed.
So the more job security you have.
So commissioners love turnover on their watch
because it creates loyalty.
So that's a factor.
That's a key point, right?
People don't talk about that a lot, but that.
Well, okay, let's talk about that though,
because it's the question of why isn't this wildly rich powerful billionaire automatically?
Invited in when a Vermeer is up for auction and why and who is preferred as a member of the club
Do you actually want you just power-ranked based on money seeminglyingly no, that's not. You didn't, Mark Cuban, we took votes
not on the floor of owners meetings
that we did not want Mark Cuban owning a baseball team.
And so he was never, he was told in very certain terms,
he didn't have the votes.
You need 23 votes in baseball to be approved
by the other owners to allow you into their club.
It's like a fraternity bringing in pledges.
They throw shit against the wall if they don't like your face.
Yeah, I was just going to say, in amounts to the same thing, these are basically clubs,
right? I mean, they are small associations of owners and it is what is different. I do
accept that a commissioner is a kind of CEO, but it's a specific, it's a unique kind because they
have 30, 31 or 32 bosses.
And those guys do get to decide some things.
And one of the things they do get to decide is who else gets to join the club.
That's the biggest one.
Who's Iger's boss, the board?
Board.
So, how many board members at Disney would you suspect, 17 to 24?
Just, I think that's high.
My recollection is a dozen to 15.
A dozen?
Brand probably closer to a dozen.
Every CEO has a boss.
Every president of a team has a boss.
The only people who don't have bosses
are the people who own stuff.
You have to own it.
And in a public company, the owners are shareholders,
and what they do is they elect people to speak for them.
And those are called board members.
So board members are really quote unquote shareholders,
voices of shareholders, and they're the boss
of the people in the C-suite.
That certainly is the construction.
Of course, many, many CEOs
have managed to pack their board with people who are quite,
and they don't get to pack their owners, right?
The owners are-
Well, this is what I'm saying.
That's what I'm saying.
They do, commissioners do.
Talk to Adam about this.
Well, so-
He is packing his board by who he wants and manipulating.
Bud Selig wanted John Henry to get the Red Sox.
He wanted, when Peter Angelo's got the Orioles,
that was not in their control.
And they said, never again.
We will never allow a team to be in bankruptcy court
in a live open auction again,
because we cannot control who gets into our club.
Done, we're not doing that again.
But you wouldn't disagree
while Commissioner Selig could influence who got it. gets into our club, done. We're not doing that again. But you wouldn't disagree while commissioner
C. Lee could influence who got it.
He already had to have 23 votes.
He only had to have 23 votes.
Yes.
He actually preferred always getting 30.
He was weird.
No, no, but I'm saying the ultimate control sits with the other owners.
The commissioner can, and by the way, the ultimate look, Elon Musk's pay package
from 2016 was just thrown out because every board member was a crony of his.
That was the ruling.
And there has been a frequent criticism of American business is that the boards don't
really exercise a significant amount of oversight
for many CEOs.
They're tremendous lawsuits happening right now.
There's a lawsuit happening where shareholders are suing
and it's in the WWE with that merger.
Remember the Vince McMahon, well he's now gone,
but the merger of WWE, they formed this entity.
Another enormous sports business story.
And there's a lawsuit saying,
wait a minute, you allowed us to merge with this entity, UFC.
There were way better offers on the table,
but this was you, Vince McMahon, as the CEO,
or Stephanie McMahon, et cetera, saying,
no, no, this is the best deal for our shareholders.
No, it's not.
And there's a lawsuit about it.
So these sorts of lawsuits happen,
they're shareholder lawsuits.
When you're on the board of these companies,
you have fiduciary duty and that's a legal term.
You have to maximize money for your shareholders.
So self-dealing is not allowed.
$55 billion was Elon Musk's Tesla pay package.
That's a good pay package.
$55 million?
Billion.
Billion. Billion. $55 million. $55 million is. $55 million is a good pay package. That's a good pay packet. 55 million. Billion. Billion, billion.
55 million.
55 million is.
55 million is a good 5 million is.
Yeah, I'm a little bit.
So, Gadel, 63.9 million.
But the board sat around and went,
50, ain't 50 billions enough or,
if we need 55.
I'm not backing Elon Musk,
but I'd like a little more information.
How much of that is in stock grants?
They didn't write a $50 billion check backing Elon Musk, but I'd like a little more information how much of that is in stock grants They didn't write a 50 billion dollar check to Elon Musk
It's the value of the shares that is of a certain date. There's restrictions on when he can sell them
I am not backing up Elon Musk. I want to be clear
But I also don't want the audience to think that he
Pressed refresh in his bank account and there was 55 billion in cash
That is accurate I pressed refresh in his bank account and there was 55 billion in cash.
That is accurate. I do wanna get back though to this notion of okay,
the CEO, the commissioner has one incentive
or set of incentives around who he would like
to be one of the owners of this artwork,
one of these teams, this exclusive club,
and the other owners also have incentives.
And so the question I have is,
is there such a thing as an owner who wants to buy a team, a potential owner, who is too rich,
speaking to the other way that this specific enterprise sports is different, right? They're
competing. They're actively competing around what they're paying their employees.
And is there such a thing as an owner who is then too rich?
So that's very funny because we had that exact debate.
And the answer was there used to be
until the valuations got into the multi-billions.
So Steve Kohn was not a candidate to buy the Mets
because there was a concern by the Yankees
and more than seven other teams.
And that's enough to block a vote.
The concern was that he will raise payrolls, pay players,
and that will make us look bad.
When Jeff Morad, a player agent, tried to buy a team,
he was not allowed to, we voted against it,
because we thought he was an agent.
That we thought that he would be too good to the players,
that he would be too loyal to the players, that he would be too loyal to the players.
Therefore, he did not get 23 votes
and could not be in the club.
But Steve Cohen then says, all right,
I hear what you're saying,
but I'm gonna pay the WPONs 2.4 billion.
Hold on, 2.4, okay, you're in.
So there's a-
Because they care more about the asset value.
Because in theory, what it was supposed to do
is make every team worth more.
But what we found with the Orioles transaction,
which was just announced this week-
Here we are at that story.
It actually has not increased the value of franchises
in the way that was supposed to happen
when the Mets were sold at 2.4.
And so the 1.7 for the Orioles is a negative
for the commissioner and the other owners.
And I'm sure they're quite disappointed about it actually.
1.73 billion dollars to this new ownership group feels like a disappointment to David.
John, do you have a knee jerk reaction to that number feeling disappointing?
I don't see it as much of a problem as David does.
He knows more about this subject than I do.
But if you look at the Mets 2.4 in New York City, Baltimore 1.7 and Baltimore, I mean,
there's a significant difference in market there.
The Orioles have had problems as a second, a smaller market team competing in the-
What's the euphemism, David?
You guys liked for a small-
Low revenue.
There it is.
Low revenue.
I mean, and by the way, they have had a very advantageous situation with the regional rights
through Massen because they control it.
They get 75% of the rights fee.
Shared with the nationals.
By the way, I do remember a year in which the Orioles were the lowest rated team in
the major league in terms of their regional network. I think they were getting about 30,000
views per game.
Oh, we were well below that.
We were always below that.
You were below that. Oh, 30,000. We were always below that. You were below that.
You were always below that. So they weren't. Never, never, they never finished 30. Perhaps
maybe what I'm thinking is they were relative to the money. The money per viewer was higher
than any other. It was unbelievable. They were getting a huge... That's like cost per
win for Tampa. You get to celebrate. I was like, why isn't David so ashamed by this?
Oh, it's because he actually had a this? Oh, it's very actually had a had a percentage
Justification for why it's not actually no
The reason I'm not ashamed is that we were able to sell a team at 1.2
And if you think about that seven years ago, there it is
It turns out that the value of the team is not based on so the year
I don't know if you know any of the buyers
But they're their venture capitalists private equity guys and one of them is seven you're talking about the Orioles. The new Orioles, the new limited partners.
They actually don't run the Orioles.
They're buying a limited partnership share
where they have the ability to buy the rest
once Peter Angelo's passes away.
But I promise you when they were evaluating this deal,
they didn't look to the ratings on Massen
and how many people were watching the games.
It doesn't even go into your financial model.
I was suggesting though that the money
they were getting from Massen is not,
is going to decline.
Yes.
Massen is probably not,
I don't see how it exists three years from now.
And it used to be an asset of the Angelo's family
and it still is an asset that part of this deal
is that they're not getting,
they're not selling their right of Massen,
their rights to Massen.
So interestingly, Rubenstein is going to have a deal with a
network owned by the previous owner and the previous owner's sons in large part. And the
bigger issue is what value do you assign to these deals now? And so when a private equity
guy is valuing a deal, they do numbers and projections and he used to really put in
Pen what the TV revenue would be and now it's in pencil and that changes how you value a team
And I think that's what's her Rob the most as commissioner and the reason why
Franchises have not gone up the way Adams gotten them or Rogers gotten them in the NFL, is because the revenue is so,
the broadcast revenue is so questionable
and it's sort of, you can't make it actual.
Well, it's the league with the biggest problem
around the regional network collapse, right?
They had the largest percentage of money.
I think the National Hockey League has a similar problem.
It's just smaller smaller
And so the question here David
For a for a a seller of a team. How do you maximize?
Your market given the pencil that everything is being written in you have to build competition
The way we maximize is having multiple people who want to buy it that and therefore making the ego premium larger
is having multiple people who want to buy it, and therefore making the ego premium larger.
But you look at teams like the Los Angeles Angels,
Hardy Moreno's been trying to sell,
Mark Lerner with the Nationals, they've been trying to sell.
The Angelo's boys have been trying to sell.
And it's hard because people have a view that,
oh, the Marlins were at one too,
we should be at two billion or two four, and they're not.
But aren't they also disadvantaged?
They want to do this deal now right for a state planning purposes so you're having the leisure as Mr.
Moreno did right he decided not to sell his team because the collapse of the regional
sports networks is depressing prices I'm assuming they've made the decision that one
one seven one point seven billion dollars is enough for the next generation to live
on probably, but they have just-
It's not been a great investment.
Okay, so let's talk about it.
Well, you'll explain why.
Yeah, let's talk about it.
They asked money on an annual basis.
When we looked at the proformers in 1993 and I looked at them from the side because I was
not involved in the deal, but I got to see what work the bankers had done for Jeffrey,
the profitability of that team
was de minimis and those were low payrolls and sold out stadiums. Now the Orioles don't draw
and while their national revenue has gone up the local revenue has not. So let's let's let's lay out
the uh the outsider interpretation of what it means when in 1993, you pay $173 million for the Baltimore Orioles.
And now you sell this thing at, you know,
just a billion in some change.
Which seems like the dream,
but David Sampson is here to tell you
that you misunderstand what about that basic.
Well, if you have $173 million,
and it wasn't exactly 173,
that was the enterprise value in 1993 you take out
the debt and there's other sorts of things but let's just assume that's 173 million dollars and
you deposit that in a stock account even in a fixed income you could do fixed income and a stock
but let's just there's a saying you double your money every seven years in a reasonable investment return,
which is where we've been over the course of,
if you look over the past, call it almost 100 years.
Of the stock market.
Of the stock market, or I could say also,
and it's been rough recently in fixed income,
but it's fixed income as well,
double your money every seven years.
So take 170 in 1993, you're up to 340 by Y2K
Then invest 340 in 2000 by 2007 year at 680 by 2014 year at 1.3 billion by
2021 year at 2.6
So if Angelo's had skipped being an owner
That 173 would be over $2.5 billion today.
By sheer compound interest.
Just by sitting there and doing nothing.
Now you don't get to go to owners meetings,
you don't get to sit in the dugout.
That ego premium not there.
Nothing like that.
But from an ROI standpoint, a 30 second story
is that when Jeff Connine was traded to the Marlins,
Peter Angelo had his GM say to us
that Jeff Connine's my favorite player
and we will not trade him to you
unless you give us another player.
Jeff Conine, when traded to the Marlins,
told me he had never met Peter Angelo.
But there was a conine premium.
So Peter Angelo's in theory was not the type of owner
who was, you know, jock sniffing,
not the type of owner who would take
such a big ego premium while he has dementia now and is not with it and hasn't
been for a long time.
I don't believe that he would approve of $1.7 billion for his team in 2023.
Yeah.
He, um, I think the, the numbers that big for the average person, they just go, wow,
if you just got $1.7 billion and you only paid $173 million,
you just did great.
If you think of it in terms of a real person who has $17,300 in the bank in 1993 and is
25 years old and wanting to have that money work for their retirement, that would be a
return. If you do the math, I guess if
17, 3, you'd have 173 million dollars.
17 turns to 34, 34 to 68, 68 to 120, 120 to 240.
No, no, I was doing something different. Just if you had put $17,300 in a savings account, invested it to pay for your kids' colleges,
and you had, how many years later,
seven, almost 30 years later,
you had what is amounts to $173,000, give or take, right?
But they could have had 240 if they had invested it better.
But yes.
But you would be disappointed.
But nobody is disappointed because of the size
of $1.7 billion.
I take issue with that because you shouldn't be disappointed
if you put 17,000 away.
The problem we have, and this is a societal issue,
people have a hard time saving,
but even saving a dollar per paycheck,
I don't know if you encourage your employees to do it,
but that's what 401ks are.
And anytime you can put money into savings
and put it to work for you, it's gonna benefit you.
I'm gonna go around to all the employees here
at Metal Art today and ask them to take $1 from their tech
and give it to me.
And if you put all this $1 together and I invest it.
Yeah, it's just fiduciary prima nocta, I believe.
Yeah.
You just get a claim.
Fiduciary prima nocta?
Mock me, John.
But it is a brave heart.
Having people save money.
Gross, roughly.
No, no, no.
I'm for that.
That is very important.
By the way, what I'm slightly mocking is the idea that I should have any concerns about
Peter Angus who would have spent his money better and have more than a billion
certain. I'm merely saying that people telling you that it's the greatest
investment, the guy who made he's a genius. I don't view that as a genius
investment. He may have loved being an owner, but he actually didn't. There's
certain owners who do. Right. You're saying that even with all the caveats
appended of antitrust exemptions and all of the stuff that the civic, this is a
whole other rabbit hole, but the civic benefits that accrue to owning a sports team,
you're saying that from a pure financial perspective,
if you put that money in the market,
you come out with something comparable.
Or better, in a Baltimore situation.
This is why I refer to this show as rich guy only fans,
by the way.
I hope people out there enjoyed listening
to John and David do math
because it's actually relevant to how it is that we think about the values of all of this rich guys only fans. How do rich guys think about stuff?
So before we take issue with that,
before we rich rich guys only enemies for David,
perhaps before we get out of here at the end of every show we like to
Give you guys the opportunity to mention something that's on your mind that we have not yet gotten to and so
David is pulling out his phone. David's also been coughing a lot John. I don't know if he's alright
well, I talk for a living like you do and I forgot my
My menthol and we were delayed in the start of recording
so my body was used to this being done 12 minutes ago.
Man, that's a delicate mechanism.
It's very delicate.
I'm a very delicate guy.
Corpus De David, Corpus De David.
That's a lot of layers to my onion.
Very rare Vermeer painting actually.
I'm gonna need a prompt
since I don't have my notes with me
What do you think would be interesting for me to comment upon here as we
What do you think I'm thinking about how funny the NFL is and that they're having their teams stay at Lake Las Vegas
Okay, what is that? I don't know what I know at Lake Las Vegas. It's not the strip
It's about 40 minutes away from the strip
So the teams in order to keep them out of trouble, to keep them from being distracted,
are going to hotels away from the strip and away from where the game actually will be.
It sounds savvy to me.
I was at the last Super Bowl ABC ever had was the one in San Diego and the Tampa Bay
Bucks one.
I forget who they beat.
And yeah, the Raiders.
Is that Barrett, the Barrett Robbins?
Yeah, Barrett Robbins didn't he slip across the border?
Something bad, but he was sick.
Yeah, it was sick.
Not a happy ending to that, but.
So, and by the way, not a funny story, but.
But actually a thing that's relevant to our.
But it was a real story our story relative to your concern
I would I'm not sure I'd even send them to Lake Las Vegas. I think I would send them somewhere deep in the desert
So around players it doesn't work
Oh, you think the players are gonna go to the coffee shop in Lake
Oh, I want to I want to ask David Samson
How would you program this if your goal
was to keep your team maximum prepared
for the most important game of the year?
I would get to Vegas the latest possible time,
but the NFL makes you come early
during COVID MLB Institute and security in the lobby.
And there are players who would get around it by back
going out the back door or paying off the security,
but I would have security so players could not leave
because bad things happen. I love Las Vegas. But the problem with the Super Bowl in Vegas to buy back going out the back door or paying off the security, but I would have security so players could not leave
because bad things happen, I love Las Vegas.
But the problem with the Super Bowl in Vegas,
the reason why there's never been a Super Bowl in Vegas,
is it's so much easier to find trouble.
You can find trouble anywhere in Missouri.
I mean, this could be the case for why sports in general
would hesitate to go to Vegas.
Exactly.
So what they're saying is, the reason I'm thinking about it is,
oh, we've got this covered, we're gonna put the players in Lake to Vegas. Exactly. So what they're saying is the reason I'm thinking about it is oh we've got this covered we're gonna put the players in Lake Las Vegas. It's it's absurd it's
like having the Miami Super Bowl and saying hey we're gonna have you stay in Boynton Beach
and that'll keep them away from South Beach. What are your thoughts about ankle braces?
I have worn them before but not the kind that beat.
Did you have to wear after you got out of the big house?
No, it was a camping.
It was a way to get more girls.
Only fans.
John, the thing that you had mentioned before
that I maybe want to squeeze in here
is an update to your prediction though.
The prediction of Super Bowl going paper view,
the Peacock information has given you what perspective.
I want to close that loop here as we enter the next calendar NFL year, so to
speak. Look, I would have thought that the, uh, the NFL did,
I believe a 10 year deal last time, um,
with each of the networks, uh, with each of the networks,
I would have thought that pay perper-view for the Super Bowl would
be on the outside of that deal.
I now think that in the life of that deal, the one of the Super Bowls will go pay-per-view.
The Super Bowl will go pay-per-view.
Do you mean pay wall or pay-per-view?
I think either there's a possibility and depending upon who owns the Super Bowl, it would be
more or less be able to put it behind a paywall
and get subscribers.
After you have the consolidation of streaming services
and big broadcast companies,
that's when it likes to go pay per view.
I think so you're looking at three or four years,
it'll be within.
So first paywall then pay per view.
Just to clarify what the prediction is,
those are two different things.
At the very end of the show,
Mark it down, John Skipper,
Profit spinning around in his chair,
David Sampson clinging on for dear life.
Thank you for another educational episode.
Thank you.