
AFL fans expected to fork out as Saturday live coverage goes behind paywall in 2025
A new AFL broadcast agreement with Fox Sports and Channel Seven kicks in this season. Kayo Sports or Foxtel will required to watch live AFL on a Saturday in Victoria and Tasmania for every round of the home-and-away season, and nationally for the first eight rounds.
Patrick Delany believes Australians 'see as normal paying for content these days' and the new exclusive live Saturday AFL matches on the pay-TV provider will be enough convince them to sign up with a subscription platform.
'Sport is nothing unless it's live. 90% of all viewership on Kayo is live sport, so that's the beginning and ending,' he said. 'If you're not live, you're not in the game, and $25 a month is so cheap for a family to be entertained, so I think it's one of those moments where Australians will run towards the light.'
Kayo has kept its basic plan at $25 per month since its launch seven years ago although its premium tier – offering streaming on two simultaneous devices and 4K picture quality – will increase in price from $35 to $40 in March.
This season Foxtel will also use its own AFL commentators for every match of each round, rather than taking the Seven feed for matches it shares with the free-to-air broadcaster.
Seven has been promoting its new rights deal which allows matches it screens via TV aerials to also be streamed on 7plus and a Saturday focus on state footy including the WAFL, SANFL and prime time VFL as part of a push for new footy content every day of the week.
Seven's Saturday matches last year consistently averaged an audience of half a million viewers according to ratings provider Voz, and were regularly Australia's highest-rating Saturday program.
The start of the new seven-year, $4.5bn AFL rights agreement comes as competition in streaming is increasing. Disney+ will begin to offer ESPN – also available on Foxtel and Kayo – in coming weeks, and Amazon and Netflix appear to be increasing their appetite for sporting properties.
Delany said ESPN and its American codes represent 'a great offering of sport, but they're very minor sports in Australia, and they skew mainly to summer'. He said adding them to Disney+ is not unlike Foxtel's decision to add live AFL and NRL to subscribers of Binge, Foxtel's streaming platform with news and entertainment.
The Fox Footy team have been working internally on the transition to the new rights arrangement since June, and Delany said he had collaborated with the AFL on a fixture which would assist in driving subscriptions.
'With the line-up of sports rights shifting and the way in which we do things, we always see change as great opportunity for growth,' he said. 'You want the subscribers to stay longer and to be better engaged, and we just see this as a golden era of sports streaming.'
Sign up to From the Pocket: AFL Weekly
Jonathan Horn brings expert analysis on the week's biggest AFL stories
after newsletter promotion
Despite Seven's move into the streaming space this year, Delany said the network's new digital AFL rights won't affect Foxtel and Kayo subscriber numbers. 'Our kids are not watching free-to-air TV, they're watching YouTube and Tiktok. The world's moved on, and I think the network should have moved quicker to digital,' he said.
'In terms of how it affects us, Nine has had digital NRL rights forever [since 2018], it doesn't affect us and our growth. What affects what people want to watch is being able to see every game live, 4K, great commentary, and now the exclusivity of Saturday and other games.'
Foxtel is awaiting ACCC and FIRB approval on a takeover by Saudi Arabia-backed streaming company Dazn. Delany said he hoped it could be resolved before the government went into caretaker mode ahead of the coming federal election, but he was excited about the global opportunities for Australian sport.
'To date, we've had to convince people like Sky and ESPN, can you do us a favour and put it on,' he said. 'Dazn are in 200 countries, this is one of those moments where we can really march forward and represent Australian sports very, very well.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Spectator
9 minutes ago
- Spectator
The Donald and the art of golf diplomacy
In 1969, one of the great acts of sportsmanship occurred at Royal Birkdale golf club in Southport, when the Ryder Cup came down to the last green. Britain's Tony Jacklin had a three-foot putt to halve the final match with Jack Nicklaus and make the score 16-16, but the American picked up Jacklin's marker and said he was happy to share the spoils. 'I don't think you would have missed,' he said, 'but I didn't want to give you the chance.' The gesture was immortalised in the naming of a Florida golf course, the Concession, which has just been awarded the next three senior PGA Championships, one of the majors. I suspect that Donald Trump, who owns three courses in that state, might regard Nicklaus as a loser. The coat of arms for Trump's latest course in Scotland has the motto Numquam Concedere ('never let them have a gimme', to paraphrase) and the emblem of an eagle clutching two balls. Subtle. Police and protestors are ready for Trump's visit to Aberdeenshire this weekend, where he will open the course at Menie, which is due to be named the MacLeod after his mother and has, the family boasts, 'the largest sand dunes in Scotland'. That might trigger environmentalists, since the ancient links has lost its Site of Special Scientific Interest status as a result of Trump's development. Sir Keir Starmer is expected to travel north during the visit to bend a knee and watch Trump drive, since the way to the President's heart is by admiring his swing. One of the things Trump would most like the Prime Minister to bring as a gift is the right to host the Open Championship, which was held last week at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland. When Trump bought the Turnberry course in Ayrshire in 2014, it was with the expectation that the Open would follow. The R&A, which organises the Open, initially made positive noises and it is believed the course had been earmarked to host the tournament in 2020. Turnberry is undeniably a magnificent course, rated the eighth finest outside the US by Golf Digest, and it has hosted four excellent Opens including in 1977, when Nicklaus slugged it out for four days with Tom Watson, and the Open in 2009, when Watson almost won again at the age of 59. It would be a more than worthy venue. Then Trump decided to become president, and his controversial comments made people feel uneasy. In 2015, Peter Dawson, the outgoing chief executive of the R&A, said that a bit of time should pass before returning to Turnberry. His successor, Martin Slumbers, took a harder line, saying it could not be held there because the focus would be on the course's owner rather than the golfers. This came after the PGA of America removed the 2022 PGA Championship from Trump's Bedminster course in New Jersey following the attack on the Capitol in 2021. Since then, the position against giving Trump an Open has become more nuanced. Mark Darbon, the new R&A chief executive, says he would 'love' the Open to return to Turnberry but while he has discussed it recently with Eric Trump, Donald's son, there are 'logistical challenges'. The course is in the middle of nowhere and the transport links and hotel accommodation can't cope. Only 120,000 could attend Turnberry in 2009, while 280,000 came to Portrush. Sorry Donald, nothing personal. A feasibility study, that old favourite for kicking things into the long grass (and the rough can be very long at the Open), has been commissioned to ease the political pressure. If that fails, they can fall back on Sir Humphrey's 'in the fullness of time' tactic. The next two Opens have been allocated – Birkdale in 2026 and St Andrews in 2027 – and it is believed that Muirfield in East Lothian, which last hosted an Open in 2013, will be given 2028 as the reward for agreeing to allow women members. The last time three successive Opens were held in Scotland was 1893, so that means we're looking at 2030, when Trump will be 84 and (presumably) no longer in the White House. This may be nudged back even further if there are difficult scenes at the Ryder Cup in late September, to be held in Bethpage, New York, where the fans are notoriously raucous. Trump will surely be there on the tee, a week after his state visit to Britain, having missed the chance to host a Ryder Cup in his first term. It was to be at Whistling Straits, Wisconsin, in 2020, a few weeks before he fought re-election, but was postponed by the pandemic. A US win might have swayed the election for him. He will not miss this Ryder Cup but if it is a rowdy one – expect no sporting concessions this time – the R&A may find a new reason to delay a decision. One thing that is certain about Trump's visit to Aberdeenshire is that he will have a GREAT opening round. He is a more than decent golfer to judge by footage (though his declared handicap of 2.8 raises eyebrows), but he has never knowingly played badly, certainly not at a club he owns. Two weeks ago, he won the members' championship at Bedminster yet again, while in 2023 he won a two-day competition at his West Palm Beach course, despite being 600 miles away on the first day. Trump explained that he'd had a brilliant practice round two days before and so submitted that as his Saturday scorecard in absentia, meaning the field began Sunday five strokes behind. This performance, Trump declared, proved that he had the 'strength and stamina' to deserve a second term. He certainly has the sneakiness and chutzpah, though he falls a long way behind Kim Jong-il, the Eternal Scratch Champion of Pyong-yang, who famously once had five holes-in-one during a round that was 38 under par. Trump and Kim's sporting prowess matches that of Vladimir Putin, who has scored eight goals in an ice hockey match three times, and Mao Zedong, who was said to have swum ten miles of the Yangtze in just over an hour. It was ever thus with vain leaders, whose sporting boasts are rarely challenged. The Emperor Nero competed at the Olympics in the race for four-horse chariots, steering a vehicle pulled by ten horses. The excessive horsepower meant Nero crashed at the first corner, but he successfully persuaded the judges to award him the laurels since he should have won. Trump's latest visit to Bedminster put him within sight of Barack Obama in the list of golf-mad presidents. Obama played 306 rounds while in office, and Trump is now up to 304 after six months of his second term. During the 2016 election, Trump claimed he would be too busy to play golf as president. He then squeezed in 11 rounds in his first eight weeks. This term, he was back on the course on Day 6. And again on Day 7. Trump is also not far behind Bill Clinton, the only president whose handicap went down in the White House – but he has some way to go to beat the top two. Dwight Eisenhower notched up 800 rounds in office, some quite iffy. Bob Hope quipped: 'If Eisenhower slices the budget like he slices a golf ball, the nation has nothing to worry about.' Way out in front is Woodrow Wilson, who played every other day during the first world war, including at the Versailles peace conference, but he remained mediocre. As a presidential duffer, he comes behind William Taft, who once recorded a 27 on one hole, including 17 to get out of a bunker, but believed that it was gentlemanly to be honest. 'There is nothing which furnishes a greater test of character and self-restraint than golf,' Taft said. Trump takes a different view, which is why it is unsurprising that world leaders now see golf as a tool of diplomacy. Shinzo Abe, the deceased former prime minister of Japan, played five rounds with Trump and in 2016 gave him a $3,700 golden driver. Abe did so well out of this that Yoon Suk Yeol, the President of South Korea, took up the sport to help his own diplomatic game. Nigel Farage's close friendship with Trump may in part be due to this shared interest – the Reform UK leader says he almost took up a US college golf scholarship – though Farage's bad back doesn't allow him to play any more. When Cyril Ramaphosa visited the White House in May, the South African President took with him a pair of major-winning golfers, Ernie Els and Retief Goosen, in the hope that it would impress Trump. Alexander Stubb, the Finnish President and a former college golfer in South Carolina, negotiated the purchase by the US of some Finnish icebreakers after he played (and won) a tournament in Palm Beach with Trump as his partner in March. That will be the challenge for Starmer when he pays homage. Unlike David Cameron, who rewarded Obama for his Brexit intervention in 2016 with a round at the Grove in Hertfordshire, Starmer can't fake an interest in golf. He was the first prime minister to reject honorary membership of the Ellesborough golf club near Chequers. Perhaps he will bring a star golfer like Sir Nick Faldo with him to swing for Britain. Starmer did have a professional golfer on his backbenches in Brian Leishman, MP for Alloa and Grangemouth, but the Socialist Campaign Group member, who recently lost the whip for rebelling, will surely not play ball. How about the Paymaster General? Nick Thomas-Symonds's skill with a mashie niblick is unknown, but he was named Nicklaus by a golf-mad father. For diplomatic reasons, Starmer may want to allow Trump to say that his course was blessed by a British Nicklaus. Just don't expect the President to concede any short putts.


Belfast Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Belfast Telegraph
CJ Fulton on proving he belongs at NBA Summer League, mixing with Real Madrid stars and what comes next
As the Las Vegas lights scanned the court, Adrian and Jackie Fulton felt the needles of pride pricking their skin. Before them and 20,000 others, son CJ donned an NBA jersey. 'It was surreal,' admitted Irish basketball legend Adrian. Five years ago, on the back of leading Belfast Star to the All-Ireland Superleague crown, the St Malachy's College student had left home as an 18-year-old for the Winchendon School, a mile from the centre of Boston in preparation for a university scholarship. The American sojourn culminated in a history-making five-game NBA Summer League experience with the Minnesota Timberwolves that he and his family are still absorbing.


NBC News
3 hours ago
- NBC News
Tesla continues its financial struggles even after Elon Musk's White House exit
Tesla's financial position is getting worse, as the fallout continues from CEO Elon Musk's politics. The electric automaker reported Wednesday that both revenue and profits fell in the second quarter of the year compared to a year earlier. It's the second-straight negative earnings report from the company, which has suffered damage to its brand and become a lightning rod for street demonstrations. While Tesla is still the No. 1 seller of electric vehicles in the U.S. by a wide margin, the earnings report shows a deteriorating situation with no obvious quick fix for Musk, the world's wealthiest person. Revenue was $22.5 billion for the three months ending June 30, down 12% from a year earlier, while earnings were 40 cents per share, down 23% from a year earlier. Musk has angered people across the political spectrum this year, first with his embrace of far-right politics and his chainsaw-wielding tenure as an adviser to President Donald Trump, and then when he and Trump had a high-profile falling-out. Musk has vowed to start a political party but so far has not followed through in any visible way. The earnings report covers Tesla's finances for April, May and June — a period that overlapped with Musk's tenure in the White House. Musk left his government job May 30. Shares in Tesla were flat in after-hours trading immediately after the earnings report. Tesla had already warned this month that vehicle deliveries were sagging, down 14% in the second quarter from a year earlier. It was the second straight quarter of falling deliveries as Tesla faces not only damage to its brand but also increasing competition, including from Chinese electric vehicle makers. Musk has tried to keep shareholders happy with developments on other fronts, including by trying to launch a nascent robotaxi service in Austin, Texas, although that service is small and still uses human safety observers in the vehicles. Musk has also hyped humanoid assistants as a future potential Tesla product, but none have shipped. On Monday, Tesla opened a diner and drive-in in West Hollywood, California. Musk's companies are also increasingly intertwined. He merged his social media app, X, with his AI startup, xAI, in March, and his rocket company, SpaceX, is an investor in xAI. This month, Tesla began integrating xAI's chatbot, Grok, into Tesla vehicles, days after Grok went on neo-Nazi tirades. Musk has said that while he does not support merging Tesla and xAI, he will put a potential Tesla investment into the company up for a shareholder vote. Wall Street analysts had expected Tesla revenue of $22.74 billion and earnings per share of 43 cents, according to an average of estimates compiled by LSEG. Tesla executives, possibly including Musk, are scheduled to hold a conference call with analysts at 5:30 p.m. ET to discuss the financial results and their outlook. Musk is deeply unpopular with the American public, with 58% having an unfavorable view of him and 33% having a favorable view, according to a polling average run by statistics writer Nate Silver. public schedule of the events. A demonstration is scheduled for Saturday at the newly opened Tesla Diner.