Acquired - The NFL
Episode Date: January 25, 2023The NFL — it’s almost synonymous with America today. And its history is a fascinating lens to explore the nation’s development over the last 100 years, from WWII to TV and suburbs to th...e Internet and social media. What began as a quasi-illicit league in small midwestern towns is now the single largest media property in the world today by revenue. And whether you watch football or not, this is one incredible business story. Acquired is ready for some football — let’s kick this Season off right! Links: Sports Illustrated’s oral history of the famous Joe Namath “pool photo” Episode sourcesCarve Outs:The MenuPeyton’s PlacesSponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So in my headphones, I have, are you ready for some football?
Yeah, I was listening to that too. Yes. Dude, it gets you so pumped up.
It totally does. I feel like I grew up on the Fox Sports theme.
It always makes me think of Thanksgiving.
It makes me think of, I think it was a Jock Jams tape that I bought,
or maybe it was like a knockoff Jock Jams produced by Fox Sports.
But I definitely had that theme song on a sports pump-up tape.
Oh my god, Jock Jams. That needs to make a comeback.
Who got the truth?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Is it you? Is it you? Is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight.
Another story on the way. Who got the truth? Welcome to Season 12, Episode 1 of Acquired, the podcast about great technology companies
and the stories and playbooks behind them. I'm Ben Gilbert, and I am the co-founder and
managing director of Seattle-based Pioneer Square Labs and our venture fund, PSL Ventures.
And I'm David Rosenthal, and I am an angel investor based
in San Francisco. And we are your hosts. Today's episode is on the NFL. Football is America's
favorite sport by far. In fact, football is more than three times as popular as the next highest
sport, basketball. The Super Bowl is watched by over 100 million viewers every year
in approximately two-thirds of American households. My favorite Super Bowl stat is that it's the
weekend with the fewest weddings planned of the year. It is the NFL's world and Americans are
just living in it, especially the TV networks, which have been reduced from pillars of our
nation in their heyday to largely distribution channels for the TV networks, which have been reduced from pillars of our nation in
their heyday to largely distribution channels for the NFL today, plus some other lesser programming
sprinkled in. Of the top 100 TV broadcasts aired last year, 82 of them were NFL games.
Wow, that is wild. Totally wild. But how did we get here? How did this game become the most valuable media property
in America? The story is one of incredible cooperation, of belief in growing the pie
over a century, and just like our benchmark episode, of communist capitalism at its finest.
The NFL owners have made bold long-term bets in choosing to divide their revenues equally in a way that no
other sports league has. Of course, the NFL hasn't been free of controversy. From the horrible recent
on-field collapse of Damar Hamlin to the now-obvious epidemic of CTE among former football
players, players are clearly putting their lives at risk. And from national anthem knees to alleged
cheating scandals, the modern fan's relationship with the sport is complicated. I personally love
watching football. It has been finely tuned over the years to be maximally, maximally entertaining,
but it comes with extreme cognitive dissonance for me every time I tune in, and I know many others feel the same.
Indeed. And talk about cognitive dissonance. 70% of the players in the NFL today are Black,
but only two of the head coaches now currently here in January of 2023 are Black, and of course,
none of the owners are. This is very emblematic in many ways of America as it was many, many years ago, sort of painfully
still in front of us today.
Yeah.
I mean, gosh, we've told so many stories now on Acquired where, you know, in the research
and then telling them like, wow, this is the story of America.
I have never felt more that way than I feel about this story in the NFL with all the greatness and all
of the not-so-greatness that we're going to get into. Yes. Whether pro football is your favorite
pastime or you think it's a societal ill, there is no denying the incredible role that it plays
in all of our lives today. Now, listeners, just like our NBA episode a couple of years ago,
this is an episode on the business of football. It's not specifically
about things I learned reviewing game film or the merits of the I-formation. Today,
we're talking about the business. But we do have some sports thank yous to say one
to great friend of the show, former U.S. Representative Anthony Gonzalez, who caught
touchdown passes for the Colts from Peyton Manning, who we also have
to thank because Peyton's places on ESPN Plus is awesome. Highly, highly recommend. He's so good.
Yeah, it was great. I think I watched 20 episodes of that.
And we also have a big thank you to Michael McCambridge, author of America's Game,
which provided much of the research for this episode. And it's just like
the definitive biography-style history of the NFL. Okay, listeners, now is a great time to tell you
about longtime friend of the show, ServiceNow. Yes, as you know, ServiceNow is the AI platform
for business transformation. And they have some new news to share. ServiceNow is introducing AI agents. So only the ServiceNow platform puts AI agents to work across every
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So learn how you can put AI agents to work for your people by clicking the link in the
show notes or going to servicenow.com slash AI dash agents.
Well, after you finish this episode, come discuss it with the other 14,000
smart, curious, kind members of the Acquired Slack at acquired.fm slash slack. And listeners,
this is not investment advice. David and I may have investments in the companies we discuss.
All right, David, take us in. Where are we starting? All right. We start on November 6th, 1869, on the campus of Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Just a very short New Jersey transit train ride up from Princeton, New Jersey, as I know well from my time there, where indeed a group of about 25 or so Princeton students
were up at Rutgers to visit a similarly sized group of Rutgers students. And what were they
there for? They were there to play a game of football. Now, what was football in 1869?
This is not someone dropping back in the pocket and throwing a 70-yard bomb.
No, no, no, no.
It was essentially what today is classified as mob football, quote-unquote, or medieval football.
This had been played for centuries at this point in England. And basically the only goal of the game
was for one side to get a ball
to a certain spot on the other side.
And that was it.
There were no rules.
Any number of people could participate on either side.
You could do anything up to and including
maiming and killing people on the other side or your own,
which happened quite frequently.
I mean, keep in mind, this is four years after the end of the Civil War.
Yes. So now why were these two groups of Princeton and Rutgers students so interested in playing this game?
This terribly violent game.
Well, back in England, it was quite popular among public school students.
Now, public schools in England are like private schools in America.
These are like the elite training institutions for wealthy landed gentry in England.
And they were starting to adapt it into an actual sport.
And so like any sort of stepchild nation, these American college kids were kind of trying to keep up with the social elite back in the mother country to kick the ball through the opponent's goal for which he received one point.
Okay, so it's soccer with 25 people on a team.
Yes, but that was the start of what would become intercollegiate American football. And
this becomes, just like back in England, wildly popular. And over the next five to 10 years,
it gets more and more codified and formalized amongst the Ivy League.
It kind of comes to be seen as this integral part of the college experience.
And it kind of becomes this character-building experience.
It's also still wildly dangerous.
There are deaths, serious injuries,
very, very common through this period,
the first kind of 50 years of football.
Finally, 1905, there are 19 fatalities
in intercollegiate football in the US
and a serious injury at Harvard
to one Theodore Roosevelt Jr.,
son of sitting president Theodore Roosevelt.
So this is a major event. After that happens, Teddy Roosevelt calls a summit of all the major
colleges and universities in New York City and says he's going to outlaw the game in the U.S.
unless they adopt major changes to make the game safer.
And you also have to imagine, of course, it hits close to home for him with his son, but
he's sort of viewing this as, hey, the people that are best and brightest are playing this
game that is actually hurting the nation. We are cutting down people in their prime,
and we kind of have to do something about that.
Yeah. And it's a fine line, right? Like, I think the violence is a critical part of this sort of rite of passage. And Teddy Roosevelt probably kind of
likes it because this is a training ground for future governmental and military leaders of
America. So I had no idea until doing the research. This summit that Teddy Roosevelt calls,
and then he basically tells all the presidents of the universities, like,
you guys got to figure this out or I'm going to outlaw this.
In response, they create the NCAA. That is the beginning of the NCAA.
Oh, I didn't realize that.
Yeah. It was to regulate and codify and make the game of collegiate American football safer.
Huh. Yeah. Crazy, right? So following that,
this new institution that becomes the NCAA, they institute the creation of a neutral zone.
They abolish the use of wedge formations where you would pile up as many people as possible behind
somebody who was carrying the ball to push them forward. And apparently that's how most of the
deaths and serious injuries happen.
So they do make the sport safer. I mean, there's still like a lot of injuries. There's not a lot
of protective padding being worn here. And a lot of this predates even leather helmets.
People are just playing this in regular clothes. Yes. But they also make a change to the rules
after this summit that would become the defining element of American football
and fully differentiate it from soccer and rugby, which rugby itself came from soccer. Rugby is the
set of soccer rules that the English public school rugby used, hence why it's called rugby.
And this rule that the NCAA institutes is legalizing the forward pass.
In 1905.
And that becomes, obviously, a defining characteristic of football.
And to underscore how much this changed things, football was exclusively a violent, dirty game to this point in history, American football.
But when we think about American football today, you're watching Monday Night Football
and the beautiful popping color and all the lights and all the slow-mo.
There's a beauty to the game.
There's a romanticism.
There's a moment where you hold your breath.
The world seems to move slowly.
It's a ballet. This introduced
what would become the counterbalancing force to the incredible violence of football, which is the
true beauty of watching it. Yeah, the beauty and the strategic element too. The offensive playbook,
the defensive coverages, the audibles. There's no way a casual fan can understand all of it. And yet, the ballet,
as you say, is mesmerizing to watch. Collegiate American football just becomes wildly, wildly
popular. It still is to this day. It is a huge part of the American sports landscape, and it was
even more so then. All right. So the NCAA is formed. We've now got the forward pass. So modern football, does that lead to the NFL? is a American collegiate experience that these elite young men go through this dangerous kind
of warlike activity. There's this very sacred element to it. So much so that while in the early
1900s, some professional teams do start to pop up around the country. These are teams, not leagues.
So these are barnstorming teams that would go
around like there's no organized schedule of play. But they're viewed not only just as second rate
to the college game, they're like dirty. Why are you taking this esteemed thing that our best and
brightest participate in and turning it into this entertainment act? Yeah, it's even more than that.
Many people, especially the elite,
viewed professional football as actually immoral
because it was profaning this thing with money.
The gripe that they had against it was the money.
It wasn't the game.
It wasn't how the game was played.
It was the same game,
often the same people who played in college.
Oh, I see.
Like it's supposed to be amateur.
It's supposed to be amateur. This should not be a professional activity. This is a rite of passage
for young men. So, to the teens and 20s, like, that was very much the attitude. Now, that is not
to say that professional football didn't exist. Or like the same period, bootlegging alcohol. Oh,
alcohol is illegal, except for it's this massive industry that lots of people are participating in. Yes. It's not like demand for professional sports
in cities and professional spectator sports didn't exist. Look at baseball as exhibit A.
Michael McCambridge has a great quote in The Beginning of America's Game where he says,
to say that baseball was the number one sport in America is to imply a hierarchy
where none existed. Baseball towered above the sporting landscape like a colossus, the unquestioned
national pastime, the only game that mattered. Most fans had come to accept baseball's primacy
as something imbutable, as much a part of the natural order of things as air and water. Of
course, this is the era of the New York
Yankees and Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig and all these storied parts of American history. Baseball is
very much a professional sport played for money where the goal of teams is to make money and the
business model is they sell admission to the games. So it's not like professional sports were all looked down upon. Not at all. It was that football was this very special thing.
Yes.
So into this dynamic environment,
in 1920 enters the American Professional Football Conference,
soon in a few years to be renamed the National Football League.
Finally, we get to the founding of the NFL and started on August 20th, 1920, when the heads of several of these
barnstorming quasi-professional football teams in the Midwest meet at the Jordan and Hupmobile
Auto Showroom in Canton, Ohio. Now, the driving force behind this meeting being called
is one George Hallis.
And he is currently in Decatur, Illinois,
where he is an employee of the A.E. Staley Start Company.
And his main duty is to organize and coach
and be the star player for the company football team.
Which of course is called the Staley's.
Yes.
The sponsorship is so deeply rooted in the NFL
that the very first team was actually named the sponsor.
They weren't even sponsors.
It was the employees of the company who played for the team.
Now, Halas sort of had a mandate to go out and recruit employees who
happen to be good football players. That's how you kind of got around the professionalism of this.
Like, oh, no, no, this is like a company amateur football team. We're just tapping to pay these
people. So these folks that come together at George Hallis' instigation, they have a goal.
They want to legitimize professional football in the eyes
of Americans. And they not only have a goal, at this meeting, they develop a plan for doing so.
They think they can really separate the pro game from the college game, make it a legitimate thing
that America is going to tolerate. And they have three parts to the plan. One,
they are not going to sign any current college players.
There's going to be a strict, strict demarcation between the college game and the pro game.
They will not try and get any current college players to come play for a pro team, which
would happen under assumed names.
You could imagine these college kids, they want to make money.
This is so ingrained in the NFL that it is basically still true 103 years later.
Here we are in 2023.
You still can't go to the NFL out of high school.
You can only go with the junior year of your graduating class from college.
You can go one year early.
In 100 years, that's the one concession that's been made.
So, point one, they're not going to raid the college game. Point two, they're going to
endeavor to play the game at a high ethical and rules-based standard. This was sort of the lesser
knock against pro football of like, well, this is like a bunch of ruffians and barely disguised
excuse to beat up on each other. Yeah, not to mention these teams that are coming together. Some were independent,
some were part of the Ohio League, some were part of the New York Pro Football League. So there are
sort of slightly different rule books and slightly different customs that are going on. And this is
the idea that, no, we need to unify these things to set an expectation for fans. Yep. Standardize what the game is. Yes.
And then number three, perhaps the most important, they're going to make Jim Thorpe the president of
the league. These guys are smart. Now, many of you probably know who Jim Thorpe was, but
Jim was at that point in time, the leader of the Canton Bulldogs, one of the teams that was
strategically included in this
discussion, and the meeting happened at the Canton Auto Showroom probably because of this,
Jim Thorpe was the GOAT. He was the greatest athlete that had ever lived to that point in time.
Which is not to say like if you put him through the NFL Combine today, he would win. It's sort
of handicapped with all of what we knew about modern sports science of his day.
The distance between Jim Thorpe as an athlete
and any other athlete in the world at that point in time
was greater than I think that distance has ever been since.
So Jim Thorpe was a Native American
who was part of the Sac and Fox Nation
and ended up playing college football
at a small school called the Carlisle Indian Industrial School,
which happened to be coached by a guy named Pop Warner.
Who, of course, is the person that all of the youth football leagues
are named after today, Pop Warner League.
He and Pop led this small, tiny Carlisle Indian
Industrial School to a national championship while he was playing there against all these
big Ivy League powerhouses and Ohio State and others. Which, by the way, that was a huge moment
of these all-white Ivy League schools think they're better than everyone else. And Carlisle
was really a reformation school and how to assimilate into white culture. And so it was this
incredible moment of saying, okay, well, as a little bit of a protest, we're going to literally
become the best and then beat you at your own game. Well, and the deep, deep irony given what
was about to happen with professional sports and the NFL becoming completely white. The first star
player, the whole basis of the league, the first president of the league was a person of color.
In addition to playing professional football, the thing that is just unbelievable about Jim Thorpe,
he won two gold medals in the 1912 Summer Olympics in Sweden, in the pentathlon and the decathlon.
He had never competed in the decathlon before.
Oh my God.
The first time that he competed in the decathlon was in the 1912 Summer Olympics,
and he won the gold medal.
Wild. Wasn't he also an outfielder with the New York Giants?
Yeah, he played in the major leagues, like Deion Sanders, Bo Jackson. He did all of that
and basketball and won gold medals. Wild. So back to the 1912 Olympics,
when he won these gold medals, King Gustav of Sweden was presenting him with the medals famously.
And as he's presenting them to Jim says, you, sir, are the greatest athlete in the world.
To which Jim Thorpe famously replies, thanks, King.
I think that needs to be our next acquired merch t-shirt. Thanks, King.
Yes, absolutely.
So this new league, proto-NFL, formed in 1920 with 14 teams and about as much instant legitimacy as
you could get from Jim Thorpe being the president and the figurehead. They pretty
quickly become the biggest professional football league in America. There's not a lot of stiff
competition. And they consolidated the smaller leagues to create this in the Midwest. Yes. But
that said, the 20s and really the 30s too, it's kind of hard scrabble. It's an uphill battle, shall we say.
Oh yeah. If you look at the, what is it, 15 teams or so that existed in 1920, there are three
franchises that endured out of all of those. The rest of them, the Columbus Panhandles,
the Akron Pros, the Chicago Tigers all went under. And the only ones that stayed the test of time are the
Decatur Stalys, the Racine Cardinals, and one we have not talked about yet, the Green Bay Packers.
Indeed. And the Decatur Stalys would become the Bears, Chicago Bears.
The Bears. Yes, they became the Chicago Stalys and then at some point adopted a proper name and
became the Bears, actually named after the Cubs. That's right, because they played in Wrigley Field
and Bears are bigger than Cubs. Yep. So it was an uphill battle for a couple reasons. One,
even despite all their efforts, the stigma of professional football really does not wear off, especially in the 20s. So after the NFL is formed
and starts getting publicity in 1922, then Michigan, sorry, Ben, Michigan, then Michigan
head football coach Fielding Yost gives a very widely reported speech in New York City where
he's talking about the new league. And he says that, quote, pro football robs the great American game of many of its greatest character building qualities.
The ideals of generous service, loyalty, sacrifice, and wholehearted devotion to a cause
are all taken away. The game is robbed of the exhilarating inspiration of achievement
merely for achievement's sake. Now, of course, he's partisan because he's a college football coach,
but this really was still
a lot of the prevailing sentiment.
The other problems the NFL face
are most of these teams are based
in kind of small towns.
They're not in big cities.
100% of these teams either fold
or move to larger cities,
except for the Packers.
They're the only small market team that stood the test of time. Yeah, there was no TV. There was no internet.
The market size was not unconstrained for these teams. The market size was quite constrained.
They were filling a niche and a demand for football in these towns, but they weren't
going to make that much money. And they're massively loss-making. I mean, these teams
last two to five years, and there's another 15 teams that are formed between the Chicago Bears, and eventually the New York Giants are formed around 1925 that stand the test of time. So it's amazing all these teams that spin up and spin down within five years of them end up shutting down. Well, that was mostly due to the depression in
the 30s and the Dust Bowl. It just became completely non-viable economically for small
town teams to survive except for Green Bay. And they all end up moving to the big city where
they're very much playing second fiddle to the baseball teams. Yeah. And most of these don't
even end up moving. They just end up closing their doors. The other important thing, though, to say about the NFL during this time before World
War II is that in the beginning, there was Jim Thorpe, who was the first president of
the league.
He's a figurehead.
He's only president for a year.
And then they bring on a real administrator.
But, you know, obviously, he was Native American.
He wasn't a white person.
There were several black
players in the league at that point in time and it was like not a big deal in fact the first NFL
champions in that first season the Akron pros the star player and the head coach was a man named
Fritz Pollard who was black wait he's the star player and the head coach. I love that. Unfortunately, in the mid-30s, supposedly after
George Preston Marshall comes into the league as owner of the Boston Braves that became the
Boston Redskins and then moved to Washington, D.C., at his behest, they adopt the same policy
as Major League Baseball and completely kick blacks out of the league. And it wouldn't be until after
World War II. And for the Redskins, not until 1961. The Redskins commensurate with keeping that
name for as long as they did. They were very, very, very late to integrate the team. I think
they had some really big fan base in the South, and there weren't a lot of NFL teams at that point
in the South. And so it was both because of NFL teams at that point in the South.
And so it was both because he was racist and also because he realized he would probably lose a lot of his fan base who were also racist by integrating his team, which is like a horrible thing that it
was a strategic advantage for him to get that fan base by having a exclusively white team. So all this would continue kind of status quo,
the league barely creeping along until after World War II, when both America and the NFL
would change forever and pretty radically. So after the war, when all the troops come home and there's the GI Bill, there's this
new middle class in America that didn't go to these elite private school Ivy League institutions
or even the Ohio States of the world or the Carlisle Indian colleges. And they're coming
home from the war. They don't have college educations, they may be now getting them through the GI Bill, but they have jobs, they have disposable income, they increasingly have radios and soon-to-be
television sets. They want entertainment. You have people coming home, you have people
looking for jobs, you have people with lots of free time, And you sort of have this opportunity to be a new thing in America that
people do with their time and dollars. And keep in mind, every owner's experience to this point
is subsidizing losses. If you're bringing on other people to try and be co-owners of a team with you,
or you're deciding that your family is going to sort of carry the weight the whole time,
or that your company is going to carry the weight of the team. You're just subsidizing losses. So every single person involved in pro football ownership at this
point is not even lip service for the love of the game, purely just for the love of the game.
But now, interestingly, there's a business opportunity.
Yeah. And all these American GIs coming home from the war and their families,
they don't have the same hangups and preoccupations about the college football game that the elite did before the war. So there is
this big opportunity now after the war for professional football in the NFL to become a
much bigger thing. And they probably would not have realized it, except their hand was forced,
as we will see a couple times here throughout the
episode. In 1944, right before the end of the war, a lot of people could see this opportunity.
Football was a very compelling game. The NFL was only in, what, I think, eight cities at that point
in time. To really realize it, you had to expand. You had to be in a lot more cities. And there were
wealthy business people in cities all across America, East Coast, Midwest, the South,
Florida, who wanted to add teams and come into the NFL, but the NFL owners weren't interested
in expansion. Right. And those eight teams, the Cardinals, of course, they're in Arizona today.
You got the Chicago Bears, you got the Green Bay Packers, the New York Giants, the Detroit Lions, the Boston Redskins had since moved to Washington.
You've got the Philadelphia Eagles, the Pittsburgh Steelers, and at this point,
and this is crucial, the Cleveland Rams. Yes, the Cleveland Rams. At that point in time,
owned by the forward-thinking Dan Reeves.
Yes. And this is the first Cleveland team that did not shut down, but instead moved.
So the other potential ownership groups in other cities across America that wanted football
leagues, at a certain point, come 1944, they were just like, well, to hell with you, NFL.
We'll go start our own league. So a new professional league gets founded,
the All-America Football Conference in 1944.
The AAFC.
And it's got some pretty serious firepower.
It's organized by one of the country's
preeminent sports journalists based in Chicago.
It's backed by some high power ownership groups,
including the famous Hollywood actor,
Don Amici in Los Angeles,
wealthy businessmen in San Francisco,
New York, Chicago, Miami.
The NFL is in some of them, but should be in all of them. And almost like the NFL had its ace up
its sleeve with Jim Thorpe at its founding, the AAFC has its own ace, which is that they have reached a deal with the legendary Ohio State coach,
Paul Brown, when he's coming home from the war from his service, that he is not going to go
back to the college game. He's going to come coach the new AAFC Cleveland franchise named
after him, the Cleveland Browns. Yes, the man who transformed football, Paul Brown.
And this is the very first time in sort of the modern NFL era
where you have this real threat of two professional football teams
that people really want to see in the very same city,
the Cleveland Rams and the soon-to-be Cleveland Browns in the AIFC.
Yes, and in a head-to-head war between those two franchises,
the writing is on the wall of who's going to win,
and it's not going to be the Rams.
Now, Dan Reeves had bought the Rams in 1941,
even before any of this was on the table.
He didn't really want to be in Cleveland anyway.
He saw this opportunity, too,
thought that the NFL should be on the West Coast and should be
truly national. And he wanted to move the Rams to Los Angeles. But the NFL owners, by the bylaws,
you had to have 100% unanimous approval of all the owners to move a team. And they didn't want
to move the team. And it makes a lot of sense. These teams have lost money forever. It's like,
we're just on the precipice of having a real business here. Don't make us figure out how to get these other seven teams
to LA once every, whatever it is, six or seven games. So now the war's ending, the AAFC and the
Browns are coming in, and then the dagger comes right before the 1946 NFL annual meetings in January. Dan Topping, who owned the NFL's Brooklyn Dodgers
and also the New York Yankees, the baseball team. So like the highest profile wealthiest owner in
the NFL defects to the AAFC. So there's major crisis. Yep. First thing they do in the January 1946 annual meeting
is they boot out the then commissioner that they had hired, Elmer Layden, who was a college
football star, but not an effective wartime administrator for the NFL. So the owners,
they're like, okay, to lead this fight, we can't have somebody from the outside.
We need to draft one of our own from the ownership group here in the owners, they're like, okay, to lead this fight, we can't have somebody from the outside. We need to draft one of our own from the ownership group here in the inside,
who's going to be able to marshal everybody together and lead a coordinated response
to this existential threat. They install Burt Bell, who is the owner of the Philadelphia Eagles,
as the new commissioner of the NFL. And he's tasked immediately with drafting a competitive response
to the AAFC. And they decided it needs to be three things. One, they need to go meet the AAFC
where they are, which means where the new America is post-World War II, which means
being nationwide and the West Coast and going to California. Two, the NFL, if they're
going to win, they need to put out a superior product, a better game on the field than the AAFC.
And then three, for the first time, they need to do a better job than the AAFC, or at least as good
a job at actually telling America about it. They have to go proselytize. They have to go win
fans and win consumers' hearts and minds. So fronts one and three are basically all handled
by Dan and the Rams. So immediately after Bell comes in as commissioner, he orchestrates approval
for the Rams to move out to California. And it's a good thing they did because when play eventually starts in
the 1946 season, the new Browns in Cleveland for their very first home game draw 60,000 fans,
which is the same or more than the Rams did for the entire season the year before.
Yeah, Paul Brown was quite the anticipated figure in Cleveland.
He had coached at Massillon High School in Canton. He had coached at Ohio State. He had coached one
of the Navy teams. And he was sort of known for knowing how to whip a football team into shape,
who would have to know the intellectual side of the game as inside and out as the physical
part of the game. It was a huge part of his strategy to make people memorize the playbook
and take written tests. And if they failed these written tests about the plays, about the rules,
about Paul's strategy, he'd kick them off the team, no matter how good they were.
And it's the first time someone really looked at the game and said, sure, it's a game, but actually this could be a science. He was almost like the first
money baller. One of the first innovations he did was he was one of the first coaches to really
review film and recognize patterns in plays and statistically manually tally, here's what we have
to do against this team and that team, and here's what worked for us last year, and here's what
didn't work for us this year. Paul Brown was the first modern, not just football coach, but I think
sports coach period in America. And you know, every human is flawed, so we shouldn't make him
out to be the messiah or something, but he was basically the first coach to start racial
integration of the team and recognize that if we have the best players, then we're going to win,
so we just need to do whatever it takes to get the best players on our team. The other thing that he did, he employed an entire staff of assistant coaches year round. I think it was
six people in addition to him. No other team did that. There were not full-time offensive
coordinators and defensive coordinators. And I'm not sure he yet established them as that,
but it really was saying, look, we're going to be a team of coaches that coaches a team of players.
And on the racial integration front, so one, the AAFC was going to be an integrated league from the beginning.
That's counter-positioning right there. and especially the Redskins didn't have a lot of interest in doing so, but moving the Rams to LA
forces the league to integrate because the LA Coliseum, where the Rams want to play,
is a publicly owned building and it's controlled then as now by the LA Coliseum Commission.
And when Reeves and the Rams come out to petition their case that they should come be allowed to play in the Coliseum. Well, the commission says, okay, we'll let you play here, but we're not going
to allow any segregated home teams to use our stadium as their home stadium. So you're going
to have to integrate the team. And this is where the public relations aspect of the Rams becomes clutch. The Rams were so good at PR. So A, they agree right
away. B, not only that, they say, great, we'll sign Kenny Washington, who before the war had
been a hero in Los Angeles. He was a huge UCLA star for the UCLA football team. This was a huge PR coup for the Los Angeles area and for the
Rams. And all this was helped out by a savvy young intern for the Rams at their new headquarters in
Los Angeles, one young Pete Roselle, who helps craft a lot of this strategy. But put a pin in
Pete Roselle for the moment. So for a quick review of where
we are right now, you've got the NFL. It's an eight-team league. The Rams have just moved
from Cleveland to LA. And then you've got this AFC that's starting to play. What year do they
actually start? 1946, same year that the Rams moved to California. And the roster of AAFC teams is the Cleveland Browns that we've talked about,
the New York Yankees football team, the Brooklyn Dodgers football team.
Which defected from the NFL.
Yes. The Buffalo Bisons, the Miami Seahawks, which is interesting. That has nothing to do
with the Seattle Seahawks. They just re reuse the same name. The San Francisco 49ers, the Los Angeles Dons. So you've got two LA teams. Now you've got
an AAFC team and a NFL team and the Chicago Rockets. Yep. The Dons in LA were named after
the main owner, Don Amici, the movie star. Ah. Yep. So you've got the NFL and you've got the upstart AAFC that would only last four years,
but would change the game quite a bit.
And by forcing this competition, they forced the NFL to do a bunch of things that really
was in the NFL's best interest, but they wouldn't have done absent competition.
And this is the first time where we really learned the lesson.
The football that people will watch is the most entertaining
game. Yes, because this is something that would not be obvious, I think, for running this experiment.
What is the most entertaining game? It's the most competitive game on the field. And for all that
we were just lauding Paul Brown and he's legendary, the teams he coached,
he was too good. His teams were too good. So the Browns end up winning all four AAFC
championships. They only lose four games in four years and the game becomes boring.
There's no drama. It's a foregone conclusion that the Browns are going to win. If your team
is playing the Browns, the Browns do great at home, but when they're on the road, they're like,
well, the fans are like, why am I even going to go?
Right. Watch my team get destroyed by the Browns? Why would I want to do that?
By the way, those words have never come out of my mouth before, growing up a modern Browns fan.
Well, the current Browns are not the same Browns as the old Browns.
They actually are the same. Importantly, the franchise and records
stayed with Cleveland. The Baltimore Ravens are a brand new team that started in the 90s,
not a relocated Cleveland team, despite the fact that they took the whole front office and team
and ownership. That's some serious rewriting of history there by the NFL. Yes. So to your point,
the NFL learns this lesson here of, oh oh my gosh we've been sort of fortunate that
this didn't happen in our league but it's really nothing intentional that we did there's nothing
structural that we did to ensure there was no cleveland browns in our league it sort of
accidentally happened and by observing the counter example of boring football where there's one
dominant team it kind of has to become a core tenet of our league now
to fight these other guys of enough equality between teams that it is always very competitive.
And this is still critical today, but it's even more important back then because
there was radio, but there wasn't really TV yet. Even though we're in the post-World War II era,
these first few years, five years after the
war, the install base of TV was just starting to roll out across America. So this is still an
in-person game. And so the business model of professional sports was ticket sales, in-person
attendance at the games. So I don't think the AAFC model of the browns being dominant would work ever but at
least today you could watch the games on tv they'd be like oh i'm always gonna see a show
when the browns are playing that wasn't the case back then you had to get butts in seats that was
the only way you were gonna make money this becomes a feedback loop if you don't make money
as a team you can't afford to put a quality level of play on the
field, which further tips the competitive dynamic out of balance. Totally. And if you have a league
that figures out how to make sure that it's always competitive, and when I say always competitive,
what that translates into from a business perspective is, let's say every stadium has
40,000 seats and you have eight teams, that means you have the capability
to sell 160,000 seats every weekend. And your goal is to sell 160,000 tickets every single weekend.
And so what you basically need is to make sure that it's always a great game to come watch.
And to your point that the business model is around the gate or ticket sales rather than TV. That actually stayed the case until 1977.
That was the first year that the NFL made more money from television revenue than from ticket
sales. That is a full 30 years later than the time period we are talking about here.
I didn't realize it was that long.
Yeah.
Because television is going to come in a big way in a short number of years here.
But back to Burt Bell, the newly drafted commissioner of the NFL, this is his great insight that he realizes as he's marshalling the NFL owners in the battle against the AAFC.
He adopts this as his mantra that literally, I mean, they made a movie with this title.
On any given Sunday, any team in the league should be able to beat any other team. And he pushes this through with
the owners and gets them all to agree to this of like, hey, the only way we're going to survive
and prosper is if we agree that none of our teams can get so dominant that we end up with a Cleveland
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in the show notes. Our huge thanks to Huntress. All right, so David, Burt Bell, the new commissioner
of the NFL, adopts this mindset of we have to keep the game competitive always. What do they do structurally?
Any given Sunday.
So Bert and the NFL do two things.
First, pretty immediately after he starts,
he completely overhauls the way the schedule works.
So in the past, the schedule would be just like,
yeah, whatever, we're all gonna play each other in random order.
He realizes that the schedule
is actually an incredibly important strategic lever. And he looks at the results from last
year's season and arranges the schedule such that the weaker teams from last year play the other
weaker teams for the first half of the season, and the stronger teams from the previous season
play the other stronger teams for the first half of the season. and the stronger teams from the previous season play the other
stronger teams for the first half of the season. So that way, he can come as close as possible to
guaranteeing that roughly everybody's going to have statistically a relatively even 50-50 record
going into the midway point in the season. So there's going to be drama about who's going to
end up winning, even though the actual level of talent might diverge quite a bit within the league. Yeah. Even if you're a great team, if you've only faced great teams
for your first several games, you're going to be a little banged up coming into the second
half of the season. And the NFL still does this to this day. I didn't realize that. Yeah. This
is like a kind of critical sleight of hand in making the whole thing work. But this is kind
of like camouflaging. If there is a
competitive balance problem underlying everything, this is only camouflaging it. How do you fix it?
Well, there's no free agency at this point. No, there isn't. And that's important because
there's no way to just go sign a veteran player whose contract with another team is up to make
your team better. You need to get brand new rookies into the league. It's pretty ridiculous.
There actually wasn't a concept of free agency at all until 1993 in the NFL.
I know, which is ridiculous. And even then, only free agency with a salary cap,
which when it was announced, Michael Irvin, the Dallas Cowboys wide receiver famously said,
free agency with a salary cap is not free agency, but we digress. And so the NFL and Burt
come up with the idea of having a draft of college players and not just any draft, but a draft in
reverse order of where you ended up in the standings in the previous season so that the
worst teams in the league get the first picks for the next season's draft. And also in doing the draft, we just continue to see over and over and over again,
the pro game having reverence for the college game because America has reverence for the college
game. It's this idea that we will watch the college football game very carefully, and then
we will create a day where on that day, that is when we will be eligible to go and pull the people out
of that game and into our league. And it's incredible the artifice that grows up around
this. Oh, 50 million people watch this thing today. I mean, we were watching YouTube videos
and research of like Taylor Swift was at the NFL draft a few years ago when it was in Nashville.
Like it's a huge event. It was actually the first big coup for ESPN when ESPN started in 1979 and 1980 was televising the NFL draft.
So these two elements, stacking the schedule and then the reverse order amateur draft,
formed the nucleus of Burt Bell and the NFL strategy that it's had ever since,
which comes down to league first. League first, team second. And some might say players third,
if at all. Yeah. And there is a structural thing that they did too, which was to create a shared
pool of ticket revenue. 60% of that revenue I get to keep because I'm the home team. And at this
point in history, super early on, it was that the other 40% would go to the visitors. Over time,
the league would evolve a structural thing so that 40% went into a shared pool that got divided among everyone else to sort
of lean in harder to this shared mindset. And this is sort of before the TV revenues that are shared
today. So David, maybe this is a time to talk about television's impact on the NFL.
So as we said, the AAFC only operates for four years.
This plays out. The Browns are too dominant. The AAFC folds after four years. Only three teams of
the AFCs come over to the NFL. The Browns, the 49ers, and the Baltimore Colts. Who are, of course,
now the Indianapolis Colts. Here we are now. It's the dawn of the 50s. And Ben, just like you said, the television installed base is here. It's coming. So TV set sales in America in 1946, the first year after the war, were 7,000 TV sets sold in America. In 1947, there were 14,000 TV sets sold, so the market doubled. In 1948, there were 172,000 television sets sold and it only grew exponentially from
there. Oh, I love that you looked this up. By this point in the early fifties, there are 25
million homes in America with a television set. Man, did history turn on a knife point.
For the NFL's sake, from their perspective, like, thank God, A, the AAFC went into business and
forced the NFL into a competitive response to expand, to change the game, and to start to
discover and understand this league-first mentality. And then also, thank God they beat them
by the end of the 40s and the beginning of the 50s, because now the NFL is the only game in town
for professional football in America. And they're the only national league right as TVs are showing
up. And really, actually, they're the only game in town for national sports television programming,
period. Because there are other sports, most notably baseball, as we've been talking about.
But baseball, if anything,
they were a victim of their own success
because it was the dominant professional sport.
They made so much better attendance numbers.
They had all the games, 162.
The gate, the ticket sales
were so important to baseball
that with the admin of television,
the baseball owners thought television was bad
and they end up fighting it. Well, so did the football owners for a while.
Well, so did the football owners, but they had a lot less to lose.
Well, yeah, because pro football is still an underdog sport here. Even in the early 50s,
they're up and coming. They're trying to get more people to go to games.
And baseball generates a ton of stadium revenue from filling their 40,000-person stadiums. Indeed. Baseball had a lot to lose.
And to be fair to all of them, in the early days, and I think for a long time,
local market home television airing of home games absolutely depressed in-person attendance.
Totally. When the very first NFL TV deals were signed, and of course, these were individual
local deals signed by team ownership and their local television broadcasting affiliate. It wasn't
with CBS broadly. It was with whatever your local TV station is. They would black out all the home
games because they would say, we need to fill this stadium. Because until 1977, the stadium, the gate was actually the biggest form of revenue. And so why on earth
would we cannibalize our experience when someone could just watch it from home? Absolutely not.
It would later take a presidential order from Richard Nixon to end the home blackouts. And
even then, only if the home games were sold out would the blackout be lifted. It
wasn't until after September 11th that blackouts were lifted, even if the home game wasn't sold
out. And then they reinstated it, and now it's not the case anymore. But it's a mess. But Ben,
as you say, in the 50s, these early television experiments are being run with sports. And it is
pretty bad. So the LA Rams, they do an individual deal in 1950 with the
Admiral Television Company to broadcast the Rams home games. I think home and away games.
But they put a clause in the deal because they'd seen what had happened with baseball
that Admiral would guarantee revenue back to the Rams for any loss in attendance. And this is a really bad deal
for Admiral because attendance declines 50%, 5-0. Which is crazy. Like for how bad the broadcasts
were, the fact that that is a suitable replacement to going to the game. I mean, they would put like
one camera up on the 50 yard line and they wouldn't do like any microphones and they would
just be like, all right, this is the game. And maybe they'd have some commentators.
Oh, and it was in black and white on a tiny screen. Like, yeah, all of these things,
but the industry was new. Everybody was figuring everything out. The TV set manufacturers,
the networks, the content, the sports leagues. One of the big marketing messages was the game
comes to you. You don't have to leave.
Buy this appliance, put it in your home, and it's like a magical window,
like you have a seat at the game. And it really did depress attendance. A saying ends up being
developed in baseball that sadly for baseball, they stuck to for a very, very long time,
that radio wets the appetite, television satiates it. It's a new
revenue stream, but it's hurting the golden goose of ticket sales. And all the way through the 50s,
it wouldn't really be a particularly large revenue line. But as it did start to grow,
at first, they weren't really listening to the hard-won lesson against the AAFC that it needs
to be league first. And so everyone's negotiating individually. It ended up being the case that the
New York Giants were making $200,000, and this is in 1959 on their TV deal. The Packers were making
zero. I think the Packers were making 5K. They did have a TV deal, but I think it was $5,000.
This is the thing. Football, even amongst the individual teams,
kept experimenting through the early 50s, whereas baseball basically shut it down and turned away
from TV. And one of the things that they figure out is, oh, television broadcasts depress the gate
at home, but there's strong demand in local markets to see the team's away games when they're traveling.
And so for the first few years, that's the main model of television broadcasts of the NFL is just showing away games.
But there's like a lot of demand for that.
And it's funny because now we refer to this as a blackout.
But at the time, because they were only selling to local affiliates, it's not that it was a blackout.
It's that your local TV
station only had the contract to broadcast the away games. There was nobody within your antenna's
reach that was broadcasting that game when it was at home. So this becomes a pretty meaningful
revenue stream, even though, as you say, it would be a long time before TV would surpass the gate
in revenue streams for the NFL. By the end of the 50s, the league as a whole, with all
the 12 separate contracts, was making over a million dollars in TV revenue annually, whereas
at the beginning of the decade, it was less than $100,000. And it also becomes clear that certain football games, there's like a really big audience on TV for them.
And in particular, the 1958 NFL championship game, known as the quote, greatest game ever played between the Giants and the Colts,
led by Johnny Unitas, a sudden death overtime dramatic win by Johnny U and the Colts,
garners 45 million TV viewers across the country,
including President Eisenhower. So was this a national broadcast?
National broadcast of the NFL championship game that year.
Importantly, this is not the Super Bowl. David and I aren't being coy by not calling it that,
like that is not what this was. And we're still missing about half the teams that will end up competing for the Super
Bowl. Right. But 45 million viewers, this was unprecedented. There is a huge opportunity for
professional football and television. Yes. Which, once again, thefl was not the one to totally recognize which it is amazing i mean
competition does create the best product and the nfl time and time again has had their hand forced
and then reacted really well to a new upstart totally so in this case as the 50s draw to a close, once again, just like towards the end of World War II and the end of the we don't really want to expand. pie. I think they sort of recognize that
there could be more money made if you have more cities. But it was more that the NFL owners at
this point are a tight-knit fraternity of people who all think the same way, who respect the game,
largely who owned the teams when they were massively loss-making. And so they kind of
don't want to let anyone into their club, even if it would be good for business. And the NFL,
as we know it today, is a business. You better believe it. But at that point in history,
it was really like each of these teams are kind of on their own island. They're deeply competitive
against other players. They don't think of those people as fellow
employees of the league it's more like we each have our own club but the owners of each club
sort of have this thing with each other this fraternal bond they're willing to submit to this
league first mindset because they know it's good for all of them but that doesn't mean that they
want to expand things or change things no they did they did not. And David, I am excited we are finally here.
The birth of the American Football League.
The AFL.
Yes, their competition with the NFL and really the era of national TV contracts.
This is the story of how the NFL became the league that we know today.
Let's go.
So the story goes that one of the potential new professional football team
investors, a gentleman named Lamar Hunt, who was a young heir to a very large Dallas, Texas oil
fortune, kept trying to talk to Burt Bell, the NFL, do anything he could to get an expansion team
or buy the Cardinals. He just wants to own a football team. Yep. So story goes, he's flying back from seeing
the Cardinals and having been rebuffed. And he has a eureka moment on the plane. He's been hearing
that there are all these other people who want to buy the Cardinals too and get in line and
this person in this city and that person in that city. And Lamar says, wait a minute,
I don't need the NFL. I don't need the Cardinals.
I've got a list of all these other wealthy people who also want to have professional football teams.
Why don't I call them and we'll start our own league?
Yes. And thus begins the most successful attempt to challenge the NFL.
By far. So in August 1959, he and several other owners form the American Football League
with six teams, soon to become eight, the Dallas Texans, Boston Patriots, Buffalo Bills, Houston
Oilers, Miami Dolphins, New York Titans, soon to be changed to the New York Jets, the Denver Broncos,
the LA Chargers, and the Oakland Raiders. You've probably heard of most of those teams.
Yes, this one ended very differently than the AAFC did.
Very, very differently. So at first, Bell and the NFL are like, okay, they're sort of friendly.
Well, maybe, you know, better to have good relations with Lamar and the new AFL.
Because they're kind of doubtful that it's
going to happen. They also don't want to say anything in the press that makes them
look arrogant. They're sort of trying to be pretend supportive until it's legit threatening.
Yep. But then still in 1959, right after the new AFL announces that they're going to
start their league and commence operations. Burt Bell dies suddenly.
And so once again, just like back with the AAFC, the league is in crisis and forced to act.
And unlike the AAFC, things are going to be a little different this time because of the television aspect.
Yes. And this is all being led by, you mentioned Lamar Hunt,
who was the Dallas Texans owner. People might know them better as the Kansas City Chiefs today.
Yes. So Hunt, unlike the AAFC owners, he's been studying the NFL. He knows about the league first mentality he's also been studying baseball he's been meeting
with baseball owners including branch ricky of brooklyn dodgers and jackie robinson fame
who at that point in time was out of major league baseball and was trying to start a third
independent league independent baseball league a third independent baseball league yes with some Independent Baseball League. A third Independent Baseball League, yes. With some pretty radical ideas,
really borrowing from the NFL and the league-first mentality,
he wanted to embrace television in this new baseball league
and have a radical solution where all the clubs in the league
would share all of the revenue from a television deal.
Pretty crazy.
So Lamar Hunt and the new American Football League, the AFL,
they take this cast aside idea from baseball and they totally run with it. Hunt says,
we'll just centrally negotiate one national television contract for the entire AFL and then
we'll split the revenue completely equally amongst all the teams. This is like the epitome of the league first mentality.
It'll be great for us and it'll help us compete with the NFL.
And in some ways, it's easy for the upstart to do this in counter position because they
have no existing TV contracts, but they do kind of get laughed out of the room.
They go to the TV networks with this and each of the TV networks are like, oh, cool idea. But like,
who cares about your league? No one's going to watch this. So we hear your pitch. We understand
that this is very innovative and breakthrough and very different than what the different NFL
teams are doing. And we don't really care that much. And the two major networks at the time,
CBS and NBC, had deals with NFL teams.
The likelihood that they would be that receptive to this in the first place is low.
But there was another relatively upstart, counter-positioned TV network out there, ABC.
And they were the perfect match.
So Hunt goes to ABC and they find a young executive there.
ABC doesn't even have a sports division
at this point in time,
but a young executive within ABC
named Rune Arledge.
This is probably the fourth episode
we've talked about Rune Arledge on.
What a legend.
So Rune would ultimately become
Bob Iger's mentor,
and Bob Iger would rise through the
ABC Sports ranks in the beginning of his career before taking over Cap Cities and then obviously
all of Disney. So this is Rune's big opportunity. He sees, it's obvious at this point in time in
the late 50s that nationally televised football games, there's demand for it. There's a huge
opportunity. This is actually shocking. Like I know to everyone right now, we're like, well, of course.
But it used to be the case that Sunday afternoons kind of had a hole in their schedule. CBS had no
good programming. And so that's why they would originally agree to like, sure, we'll broadcast
some NFL games. But no one expected the American public in their living rooms to take to football as an event, as an entertainment form delivered over the air to the living room the way that it did. And so the NFL sort of rebranded Sundays in America and turned it into a completely different way that people spend their time. And that was shocking. Well, and with those early NFL deals,
it was like those were individual deals that teams made with networks and local stations.
So it was like a local thing. It wasn't football Sunday. It wasn't a national event. Right. This
was the first nationwide network wide contract. The networks now had signal that people did want to behave in this way and
they could feel safe sort of signing business deals and pursuing this because even though it
wasn't what they expected, turns out there is demand for this product. Yeah, so this was Rune
Arledge's and ABC's first huge contribution to pro football in America and the televising of sports.
So ABC signs a league-wide five-year TV rights deal with the American Football League
for $8.5 million over five years.
It was by far, far the single biggest sports rights TV deal
in history at the time.
$1.3 million to the league per year.
And that was before the league had played a single game.
This is all before the league launches.
So here we are now in January 1960, back to the NFL.
They don't have a commissioner.
They're upstart rivals, the AFL, who haven't
played a game yet. They have a multi-million dollar contract. An eight and a half million
dollar five-year TV deal with a national network that the NFL doesn't have. This is a real
existential crisis. And unlike last time where they're like, great we'll just draft one of our own burt bell
owner the philadelphia eagles to come in and lead us through this they can't agree on a new
commissioner so it takes 11 days and 23 separate votes of the nfl ownership groups in a total
knockdown drag out negotiation There's multiple camps backing
multiple candidates. Yeah, the NFL has just gotten too big. Each of the owners has too many of their
own interests to argue for. They're in dire need of something or someone to unify them.
Indeed. By the end of the process, none of the original candidates are still in it.
Right. So in some ways, it's a tough position to
be in because all the most qualified people are out. So you kind of have to pick someone that
nobody hates, but probably won't be very good. By day eight or nine, that's sort of the position
that everyone feels like they're in is, oh, crap. Well, we got to pick someone we can agree on,
but that's not going to be the best person for this job, unfortunately.
But fortunately for the NFL, they were very, very, very wrong about that.
Lucky. Better to be lucky than good.
Yes. They choose as the compromise dark horse candidate, 33-year-old third-year general manager of the Los Angeles Rams, former public relations intern, Compton College graduate
Pete Rozelle, to be the new young commissioner of this league in crisis.
And create the NFL that we know today.
And it was totally brilliant. I mean, A, Roselle grows into this just incredible leader, visionary, who does so many things
that we're going to enumerate now for the league, for the game, for television, for
America.
But it was so not the owner's intention.
But they had to go to this compromise candidate and this young person who most people hadn't
heard of.
Anybody else they were considering would have been of a different generation, wouldn't have understood the new America in the late 50s and early 60s.
Like, these were all old folks who were running the league at this point in time.
But Pete, nobody better embodied everything about America in the 50s and 60s.
Like, young families, suburbs, West Coast, Los Angeles, television, PR, advertising.
Yes. Coming out of the PR background was the perfect positioning for him because he knew that
every foot that we have to put forward has to be really polished. We got to stop doing things that
are confusing or cannibalizing each other or send mixed messaging or perhaps put a bad taste in Americans' mouth.
And we need to figure out the very best media strategy, the very best strategy to make it so
all the newspapers and all the TV stations talk about us all the time. The NFL and our teams and
our players need to be on the lips of Americans as much as possible. And just as a small short track record of what Rozelle had done before becoming commissioner
as GM of the Rams for only two or three years, the Rams were not a successful team on the field,
even during his tenure, but he makes them into the most profitable team in the league.
They actually start making a lot of money because he gets it, right? They're in the second biggest
TV market in america
in la a very wide geographically spread out market where people want to watch football games on tv
he sets up the first in-house kind of institutionalized merchandise store for the
rams he opens up a rams merchandise store he partners with roy ro Inc. The actor Roy Rogers had like a white label merchandise brand to bring actual high quality
branded Rams, jerseys, hats, mugs, etc.
That becomes a huge revenue line for the Rams that nobody else has.
So he's got the right background here.
And he comes in.
This is pretty crazy.
This is a very volatile, charged situation with a lot of elder and opinionated folks around the league that he's going to have to deal with. And within a year, expansion plan for the NFL to meet the AFL. Remember, one of the big reasons
why Hunt and the AFL owners started the league in the first place is they wanted to bring
pro football to more cities. The NFL was dragging its feet. Just like back with the AAFC now,
they realized they got to go meet the enemy on the field where they are.
So the original plan is to expand to both Dallas and
Houston immediately to meet the AFL there in Texas. The Houston franchise, I think, ends up
becoming the Minnesota franchise instead, but they do go to Dallas with the Cowboys immediately.
Oh, and meet Lamar Hunt head-to-head right on his own turf. I mean, he's leading the AFL effort
and the idea of you're just going to open up shop and say,
we're going to give away the franchise to a new owner of the Cowboys right here in your backyard.
Yep. Right down the street. Speaking of proximity and right down the street,
the next move that Rozelle makes, remember he's from LA. He gets the importance of media,
advertising, everything. He knows he can't run the NFL out of Los Angeles. But at this point in time, the league offices were in Philadelphia because Burt
Bell was in Philadelphia and he had been the owner of the Eagles. He's like, Philadelphia
is not the place where we can run the modern NFL. And Burt ran it a very idiosyncratic way too. I
mean, he had obviously no computer system, but but he did all of his business by phone calls. It was post-it notes and phone calls is how the
NFL ran. Just not a professional organization. Oh yeah. Famously, the stacked scheduling,
he would do it with dominoes on his kitchen table. So Rozelle's like, no, this is not going to work.
We're going to move league headquarters to New York, to Manhattan, to Midtown, first to Rockefeller Center, and then to Park Avenue, where the league is, I believe, to this day.
We need to be right there next to the television industry, next to the media industry, and just as important, next to the advertising industry.
These are relationships we got to cultivate with Madison Avenue.
After he moves the headquarters to New York,
Rozelle contracts the Elias Sports Bureau,
which did professional statistics
for Major League Baseball.
The NFL up to this point
didn't have professional statistics arms
that would distribute game stats and box scores
out to all the newspapers across
the country. The only way anybody's going to write about us and give us space on the sports page is
if we make their job easy and put the stats right in their hands every day. Speaking of writing
about the NFL and publishing, the other thing that Roselle knows is, especially with a game like the
NFL, which is a weekly drama, it's not just about like baseball with getting the daily box scores in the newspaper.
You also got to create human stories and arcs and mythology around the game. And so he intentionally
cultivates a tight relationship with Time Inc. and specifically Sports Illustrated. And over the course of the 60s, Sports Illustrated
really becomes the major advocate for the new modern game of football and the NFL. So much so
that in 1963, just three short years later, the magazine Sports Illustrated names Pete Rosell
its Sportsman of the Year, the first ever non-athlete that it had
ever named Sportsman of the Year. Think about that, the commissioner of the league being named
Sportsman of the Year by Sports Illustrated. That is just a huge mindset shift. We should also say
the end of the 50s, beginning of the 60s, baseball is still a dominant sport in the U.S.
The dominant football franchises are college football franchises.
The NFL is still an underdog, and now they're being challenged by this new upstart. So they're
sort of squeezed in the middle where people don't care enough yet, but they also have a competitive
threat. And so Roselle is having to do some innovative things. David, didn't he hire writers
in-house at the NFL to craft the storylines and then send those to all the reporters who were too busy to actually go to NFL games because they didn't respect the NFL enough?
But maybe if we send them the stories, then they'll tweak them a little bit and publish them.
Famously, he did this starting back when he was with the Rams, even when he was a PR intern there.
He would just write the stories for the reporters,
which one, ensured that they would actually get in the papers, but two, he could control and craft
the narrative. Man, you can totally still see this to this day in the NFL, this ethos. It was
so important and strategically advantaged for them and helped them get where they are. But like,
the NFL keeps such a tight grip on the narrative.
Oh, dude, the sideline reporters aren't allowed to talk to anyone. It's kind of silly that we have sideline reporters today. I mean, just an illustrative example of how tight the NFL
controls the media relationships they have. And all this starts with Rozelle. One other
thing that he does immediately after taking over and moving headquarters to New York
that would end up paying huge, huge, huge dividends is he also starts cultivating
political relationships and influence, specifically with the Kennedy family,
both John and Bobby, who were big football fans.
Yes. So this is a perfect lead-in to what happens in 1961
right after Rozelle is on the job
that would change the face of football forever.
So it's obvious to Rozelle,
once the AFL signs their big deal with ABC,
that that's the path forward.
Their $1.3 million a year deal with ABC.
And importantly, the league-wide revenue-sharing national deal with the national network.
Now, this is not how the NFL operates at this point.
Nope.
Rozelle, within the space of a year, corrals all the NFL owners and gets them to realize
that the NFL has to do the same thing.
They have to give up their individual TV rights
to their individual teams. They have to pull together. This is a continuation of the league
first mentality and they have to fight the AFL. So finally, after wrangling and politicking with
the ownership group. And the reason there's politicking is because Cleveland, Pittsburgh,
and Baltimore actually will end up losing money in the short term on this
because Roselle is pitching on, I'm going to go negotiate us a big group deal.
And they're all three saying, we already have very good deals locally.
We're very popular teams.
We're in great football cities.
No, but ultimately they do say yes.
And it really like speaks to the thing that has made the NFL successful, which is
saying no to growing my slice of the pie to grow the greater pie.
So once he gets authority, Rozelle goes and negotiates with CBS, which was the dominant
network, both in the country and had the majority of the individual team NFL deals. He negotiates a two-year deal with CBS
at $4.65 million in rights per year to be shared equally among the teams.
Over 3x the AFL deal.
A huge shot across the bow to the AFL. Fortunately and unfortunately, they immediately encounter
political pressure in response to this. This triggers, I believe, I guess, the Department
of Justice to start an antitrust violation process against the NFL. This is like a potentially clear
use of monopoly power in bargaining. Well, this is the very first question where you say, well, what is a monopoly
and what is antitrust and what is the NFL and what are the teams? And in this situation...
Is the NFL the business or are the teams the business? If the teams are the business,
then yes, this is antitrust. If the NFL is the business...
No, this is one entity acting on behalf of itself. There's no collusion.
There's no monopoly. Plus, you know, in this particular situation, they actually are in a
competitive landscape against the AFL. So there's strong argument to be made that this is not
antitrust. That argument does not carry the day. No. So pretty immediately, the courts strike down this deal.
And there's about, I think, a one to two month period where it's all in limbo.
And this is where the Kennedy relationships come in clutch for Rozelle and the NFL.
So both the president and Bobby Kennedy in Congress whip up enough support to pass through new congressional
legislation. A new congressional act specifically to advantage the NFL.
And to allow for national sports contracts on a league-wide basis. It's called the Sports
Broadcasting Act. It ends up getting passed towards the end of 1961. The day after the bill is passed and signed by John F. Kennedy
in the White House, he literally hosts a party at the White House for the NFL,
which just tells you everything you need to know right there. Pete Rozelle, all the owners,
they are invited to the White House to celebrate this new antitrust exemption that has been passed
through Congress to allow them to negotiate this landmark deal because the president wants to watch
his football. It's that, but Rozelle also makes the strong case that this is good for America,
for a game that is growing in popularity and a game that unites communities. They're really starting to lean
into this idea that this brings a lot of people together in a city. It is a shining example of
teamwork and a shining example of hard work and celebrating sportsmanship. And this is a great
thing that we should spread to more of America and make it easier for more people to consume.
They're starting to make arguments about the economy around, you know, it's good for people to have gathering points,
both at stadiums, but around stadiums with hotels for people to throw parties at their houses.
All of this is goodness. And if you like the American economy, you should let us have a
national TV contract for the NFL. Yep. And at this point in time, I think a lot of those arguments hold water.
Yep. This actually was driving a lot of commerce for the nation. Totally. A fun aside, I did the
math on that $4.65 million per year deal. That value of that contract would grow 2,500x over the next 62 years.
Wow. Did you look at what it would be inflation adjusted?
Yes. Inflation adjusted, it's about 250x.
Still pretty good. So on the back of this landmark TV deal,
Rozelle does two other really brilliant things for the NFL in the next year.
First comes as kind of another accident. So the league every year sold the rights to the NFL
championship game, sold the rights to make a movie out of it. And they were always like kind of bland. Yeah, they were kind
of hokey, like a really rudimentary highlight reel type thing. In 1962, they get a bid for the
rights. The bidding is a sealed auction. They get a bid that comes in from a guy named Ed Sable,
who was a suburban dad in Philadelphia who liked to make home movies, particularly home movies of his son
Steve's high school football games. This guy, Ed, bids on the rights to make the NFL championship
movie for 1962. So the bids are unsealed and Ed had done a little homework. He found out that the
company that had won the past few years only paid $2,500 for the rights. So he's like, well, I can bid 5K.
He bids $5,000. He wins the auction. And Rozelle's like, uh, who is this guy? Like,
with no experience, what's happening? So Rozelle goes to visit him. And Ed pitches Pete on doing something completely revolutionary for the 1962 championship.
He wants to make it like an actual movie, not a hokey sports movie, a real movie with montages, with cuts, with professional Hollywood quality cinematography.
Slow motion, voiceover. Everything. Sideline cameras.
Really a passion project to make this an incredible piece of content.
Roselle's kind of like, well, I mean, that sounds great.
I don't know if you can do it, but it's like, what have I got to lose?
So he lets Sable go with it.
And the movie he makes totally revolutionizes sports video content.
I think this is another thing that we just take for granted today.
It's like air and water that sports content, sports video,
is not just like a fixed camera at the 50-yard line that pans back and forth.
Not only does this film get great acclaim,
but it's a revolution to go and create recordings of sports not to be broadcast.
The broadcasters weren't recording tapes of everything they ever broadcast.
So there's a lot of baseball games and stuff that have been lost to history
because there was no recording of it made.
Meanwhile, the NFL, for this championship game and for other things that Ed Sable and his crew
would film after this, it is high-quality film, not videotape recording, not over-the-air broadcast,
film stock recording from a bunch of different angles, and some at high frame rate cameras,
and some at 24 frames per second cameras, So you get this smooth, beautiful slow motion. It provides this
unbelievable archive of the game for which other sports have no archive.
Yeah. Well, and that's just the video aspect to it. But there's also something that Sable gets
intuitively. It's the same thing that Roselle gets, the narrative. It's not just about showing
what happened. It's about telling a story. And it just completely meshes with Roselle's philosophy
and what's going to carry the NFL into what it becomes today, which is that we can't just show
these games. We have to tell a story. This has to be drama. This has to be made-for-TV content.
And it has to be super polished, and it has to be super controlled. And Ed Sable's little outfit
that would become NFL Films is the ultimate embodiment of Roselle's mindset. I don't think
Roselle could have created this on his own, but when you watch anything from NFL Films,
it has Pete Roselle's personality oozing all over it in terms of what we are creating is entertainment and polish.
So for two years, Ed and his son Steve would come on board and work with him and eventually take over NFL films.
They do the championship game. And then in 1965, Ed comes to Pete with the idea of like,
hey, let's make this a core in-house division of the NFL. And they start NFL films.
Yeah. You should buy my little film company.
What a radical idea. The NFL should become a movie producer. This is huge. Remember,
there's no ESPN. There's not going to be an ESPN for 15 years.
All of this content that we're just bombarded with today, it all starts
here with the Sables and with NFL films. Yeah. There's a couple of interesting things to note
too. Once Roselle Green lights NFL films, he basically says, okay, there's a lot of people
in my organization that might want to do something with this at some point. But like many successful acquisitions we've covered on this show, he says, we want to be hands
off. I just don't want your P&L to ever go negative. So you can run as a break-even business
as long as you're fulfilling the mission of promoting the very best of the NFL and helping
to create lore and story. And they build this completely full-fledged film studio that is actually the customer who buys the most film from Kodak other than the U.S. Army in the entire country. Super high-volume film studio because they start sending full film crews to every single NFL game every single week. And it's this unbelievable operation to then overnight mail
or drive themselves back all this footage to start editing it right away so that they can use it for
what we will talk about soon, but for many purposes.
But this is what's so amazing. They did all this as this investment, as a labor of love and passion
on the Sable's part. on rozelle's part though the motivation
as you're saying it's not about making money it's about raising the stature of the league yes about
putting the most highest gloss sheen on the product that we are producing and the product is
the game on the field they couldn't even foresee how important this would become
that we'll put a slight pin on and come back to in just a minute.
The other thing that Rozelle does in the next couple of years
is the merch idea,
the store that he was doing back with the Rams.
He brings that in-house on a league-wide basis
and starts NFL Enterprises.
Again, totally radically.
He goes to all the owners, all the teams and says,
whatever you're doing on merch,
whatever you're doing on branded opportunities, you are no longer doing that individually. We're going to bring it centrally, collectively, in-house under NFL Enterprises. We're going to standardize the merch, the jer's all about the relationship with the fans. It's like a funnel. Bring them in from TV, get them to the game, get them to buy merch. They're just deepening the relationship.
They have to have a great experience. They can't get some shoddy pennant from the Giants that looks
like X and somebody else gets something from the Cardinals that looks like Y. It's got to all be
the same. And you got to remember the way that the nfl is structured
rozelle is not their boss in fact he works for the owners so they're all making money and he's
going to them saying hey just like tv i want you to give up the rights to make money on your own
even though some of you are doing a pretty good job at it and we're going to do this thing as a
league and we're going to cut it equally so i don't care if your team's bad and their team's good. All the revenues can be equal, just like TV. And he's so good at playing the politician with the owners that they keep agreeing to give up revenue generating parts of their P&L for the league to take over on their behalf. Yeah. I mean, let's take the Browns and Packers. How many pennants do you think the Browns sold in the city of Cleveland with as big and storied
as the Browns are versus the Packers in a town like Green Bay? What is Green Bay? It's something
like the 200th largest media market in the United States. And they've got this NFL team.
And what Roselle is saying is just like TV, I don't care how much merchandise you sell,
the Packers are getting the same check from enterprises as the Browns are.
Yep. We should probably take a 60-second aside, but the unique structure of the Packers is totally
amazing. They are owned by a publicly owned nonprofit corporation. And so what that means is
rather than one individual who could just decide to
uproot the team and leave them, the ownership of the team lies in this entity that is theoretically
a publicly owned entity. Anytime they want to raise money, they go and sell more shares,
more stock in the Green Bay Packers. And there's hundreds of thousands of people who have bought
this stock. So there's this very distributed ownership group of the Packers. Not with any
expectation of financial return, literally just so they very distributed ownership group of the Packers. Not with any expectation of financial return, literally just so they can
hold a piece of the Packers.
Or control, because nobody can own more than a certain number of shares.
But this mechanism has kept the Packers in Green Bay, even while capitalist forces and
individual whims of billionaires have moved many other teams around.
Yeah, it's such an amazing little quirk and so fun. Have you ever been to Lambeau Field?
I have not. I really want to.
I went once, not for a game, but I was at a wedding in Green Bay. And I was like,
oh my gosh, I got to go see the field. And so I took a run. Green Bay is this very quaint little,
little town in Wisconsin. And there's this giant NFL stadium in the middle of it.
It's wild. And for a lot of the analysis we'll do later, the data comes from the Green Bay
Packers annual report because no other team publishes their P&L, but the Packers do.
Okay. So the last thing Roselle does in this miracle run in his first couple of years
as commissioner is he creates the Pro Football
Hall of Fame in Canton in 1963. So cool. I've never been. We got to go. We should do an
acquired field trip. We should. That would be fun. So there's this amazing flywheel. It really is
like the Disney story that he gets. I don't think he thought about it in flywheel terms, but the
most important thing, everything he's doing is through the lens of how do we raise the stature of the league?
Not a team, but the league, the NFL as a league. How do we add higher gloss sheen to the product?
To the shield, one might say.
Exactly. Exactly. And his logic is doing that will attract more fan interest and deeper fan interest.
And the more and deeper fan interest that you attract, the more TV dollars you're going to make.
And this is revolutionary too. Back in the day, you were limited to the number of seats you had
in your stadium. So if you're like a major league baseball team in a major market where you're
selling out your stadium, there's not a strong incentive to keep adding sheen to the product.
You're at maximum revenue capacity.
Right.
But with the NFL and now with the new TV model, there is no ceiling to revenue capacity.
Yep. TV dollars, more TV dollars shared evenly amongst all the teams raises the level of play equally
amongst the teams. As the overall level of play goes up, as long as the competitive balance stays
intact, well, that improves the product, which then adds more sheen, which then drives more fan
interest, and it becomes this amazing flywheel. And literally,
I mean, there's so much more to the story. So many twists and turns we'll tell, but that's
the core of it. That idea is what leads to what's the current annual national revenue for the NFL,
like 10 billion, 11 billion? That comes through shared agreements is 11 billion dollars. And then
there's another six or so that comes from local revenue that teams
individually generate. Yep. That's per year. Right. Just to be clear, that is per year.
It is this flywheel that makes the NFL teams collectively worth something like $140 billion
today. So remember that initial landmark deal that they got the antitrust exemption from Congress for in
1961? For the 1962 season, that was two years. The AFL is locked up for five years.
The NFL gets to renegotiate every two years. All this stuff has happened in the previous two years.
Rozelle opens up the bidding to all three networks, of course. CBS wins again. Some would argue that it was a rigged bid and Rozelle was tipping off his counterparts at 4.6 two years earlier. So every single team in the league
now gets $1 million before the season even starts. A cool 3x from the last deal he negotiated two
years before. Pretty freaking incredible. And also just says so much about to the point with
the Kennedys and politics about the commerce that the NFL was driving. The TV networks were getting a great deal here. These were landmark contracts, but the
attention, the viewership that the games got, and then the advertising units that were sold,
and then the ultimate products that were moved as a result of those ad units, this was a steal.
And you could argue that the TV networks were getting
a great deal for many, many, many more years. And I think at the end, I want to discuss,
are they getting a good deal today? But everyone was getting a pretty good deal here because the
fan base was growing so much more quickly and the number of viewers was growing so much more quickly
than these deals could get renegotiated. Well, it just takes time for people to realize the power of a new medium for
the monetization side to grow as the engagement side grows. Okay. So Rozelle, unbelievable.
First five years in office. Literally cannot imagine executing better. the NFL going from major crisis, death of its owner commissioner,
Burt Bell, to the place it's in in the mid-60s. Incredible. What about the AFL? We haven't talked
about them in a while. What happened to them? Well, here's what's funny. They're doing pretty
great too. Unlike before the war and before television, if this had played out and something similar did with the AAFC,
the AAFC was dead at this point, four or five years in. The AFL would have been dead too,
but they're thriving. And it's all because of television. Even though the NFL is doing great,
there's still a lot of demand for football on TV. And the AFL, to put a finer point on what you're saying, they had a shoot the moon strategy.
They wanted to come out of the gate with a bang.
It's almost like the SoftBank or Tiger Global analogy where they wanted to burn real hot
and under the right circumstances, have that go really well for them.
And they had the exact right circumstances.
It was the boom of TV in America. So they could do things like go sign Joe Namath for the Jets to a gigantic
contract and just have New York and half of America fall in love with him and turn him into
a superstar that benefited the league. The Jets in the AFL, formerly the Titans. They're owned by Sonny Werblin,
who almost nobody will know that name, but he was one of the co-heads of MCA, the big agency.
As discussed on our interview with Michael Ovitz.
Indeed, indeed. So just like Roselle gets what's going on in the NFL side,
Sonny, even though he's not as much of a clear leader,
he's the media guy for the AFL and he totally gets it too. So Sonny sees the big second NFL
deal come across in 1964. So all the other AFL owners are like despairing. The NFL just got this
huge deal. How are we ever going to compete? They're going to have so much more money. We'll never be able to sign any players. This is the end. Sonny's like, oh,
no, no, no, no. We're going to be just fine. We're going to be great because the NFL did this deal
with CBS. Well, there are two other networks out there. There's ABC, who the AFL has the current
deal with, and then there's also NBC. And so there are two bidders out there. There's ABC, who the AFL has the current deal with,
and then there's also NBC. And so there are two bidders out there who are going to be very, very, very sad that they just lost out on the most compelling content on television,
professional football, and who's there to give it to them? The AFL.
Yep. We'll take second place when there's a bunch of sad people willing to throw
money at second place. And throw a lot of money. So the very next week after Rozelle and CBS
announced their deal, the AFL and NBC announced that they've just signed a new five-year $37.5
million deal. So bigger overall dollar number for a longer number of years.
Even though it's like less than half the per year amount.
Yeah, it's less than half. It's $7.5 million per year. But by this point in time, the NFL has 14
teams. The AFL still only has eight. So on a per team basis, it's pretty close. It's not as much
as the NFL, but for a five-year-old
upstart league, this is a big success. So just like you were saying, right on the heels of that,
Sonny and the Jets, they know what to do with that money. They turn around and they give a
huge chunk of it to Broadway Joe Namath. And probably a lot of listeners are going to know
the name Joe Namath,
maybe familiar with him a little bit. I honestly, I only knew it because I saw him on a Brady Bunch
episode. On a Brady Bunch episode? It's not like I was alive during when that was airing,
but there's a very famous episode of the Brady Bunch that I watched because it's like this
cultural touchpoint where Joe Namath was so big that he actually appeared
on a Brady Bunch episode. And that's super unusual for a sports star in that day. I mean,
he was such a heartthrob. Dude, I mean, he had his own talk show. It's not just that he was on
the Brady Bunch. So everything we were talking about a minute ago with NFL films and Roselle
and all the brilliance there and how it was so important in this realization that football and the NFL would be made for TV. Joe Namath was the first modern cultural celebrity
athlete. The only thing that was closer to him, probably bigger, was Muhammad Ali. He transcended
sports. He transcended football. He's also a heartthrob. There's like millions of teenage
women in America throwing themselves. That's exactly what I was going to say. He's also a heartthrob. There's like millions of teenage women in America
like throwing themselves.
That's exactly what I was gonna say.
He was the first professional athlete
that appealed equally to men, women, and children.
That's a great point.
Before him, there was nobody like that.
So he comes and he's playing in New York, right?
In the biggest market, the brightest lights,
right there with the TV industry, right there with the advertising industry. He knew exactly how to play it. He wore
white cleats. Everybody else wore black high tops. Famously, he wore a mink coat on the sidelines.
Just like amazing, amazing. He starred in movies in the off season. There were other NFL superstars
before him and even NFL superstars that had gone
on to movie careers. But just on a broad cultural basis across all demographics, Broadway Joe was it.
Well, continuing that thread from earlier where I was talking about how CBS had this like hole
in their schedule and everyone was skeptical that sports would fill it. Everyone thought sports were
like a very male thing. And especially as sort of brutish of
a sport as football, they didn't think it would do well, certainly not in primetime, but not even
sort of in the Sunday afternoon slot, because, you know, it's just going to attract the husbands
to come and watch it. And it doesn't have a family appeal. And Joe Namath is like the first
big example where everyone realized, oh, football
totally can be for everyone. Continuing that thread from earlier, where I was talking about
how CBS had this like hole in their schedule and everyone was skeptical that sports would fill it,
everyone thought sports were a very male thing, and especially sort of a brutish of a sport as
football. Certainly not in prime time, not even Sunday afternoon slot, because, you know, it's going
to attract the husbands.
And Joe Namath is the first big example where everyone realized, oh, football totally can
be for everyone.
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So the name of signing is the first big post-TV money contract signing in the AFL-NFL war.
But it starts a whole wave now of competition between the two leagues to go sign all the
college superstars coming out for the next year.
So it gets pretty crazy. At one point,
the NFL starts what they refer to as a codename as a babysitting program. This is literally a
kidnapping program where they will send agents to colleges and to top college athletes who are
seniors about to graduate and literally keep them out of the hands
of AFL teams, not allow them to sign contracts and pressure them into signing with the NFL first.
They just put them up in hotel rooms and they don't tell anyone where they took them. So nobody
can tell the AFL team rep, this is where you can find the star. It's just like you got him captive
till you sign him. The interesting thing too is that the leagues aren't respecting each other's drafts. So it doesn't matter if you
draft someone in your league, I'm signing him to a contract in mine and that contract is valid in
the United States. I don't care what your draft says. This is the battlefront. It's with rookies
and the draft. What they don't do yet is start signing each other's players. That's like hitting the nuclear button option.
Right. And at this point in time, by the beginning of 1966, the NFL, and in particular the owners
group in the NFL, realizes that, hey, the AFL isn't going away.
And this is not going to be like last time.
We're going to have to play ball with these guys, literally.
And it begins a super delicate dance of, they're my sworn enemy.
But there's some owners who see the writing on the wall very early and
say, we're going to have to combine these. And it's probably not actually legal for us to combine
them. But we're going to kill each other if we both keep going. So what do we do? And so it begins
this multi-tiered negotiation where certain people at the top don't know they're negotiating.
Meanwhile, certain owners are forming side
deals with other people who own teams in the other league. It's this fascinating spy game.
Oh, this is so fun. We got to tell the story. What happens next is like a mafia movie. It's
like a Godfather film. So a few of the most influential owners come to Roselle in 1966,
and they say, the way things are going with the AFL, we're not going
to beat them. This draft situation with the rookies is out of control. The contracts we're
paying, we're losing too much money. This is going to kill the league if we keep the war going.
We've got to get to a truce, which that means we're going to have to merge. So we're going to
direct you, Roselle, to go start merger negotiations with the AFL. Rozelle doesn't want to do it.
He thinks they can win. He wants to fight. But he's like, okay, I work for you. He's the company
man. One of his superpowers, the way he's able to achieve all of this is he really is good at
pleasing everybody, finding solutions that work for everyone. And so he says,
okay, I'll move forward. So he drafts the Cowboys
GM in Texas, in Dallas, a guy named Tex Schramm to secretly open negotiations with Lamar Hunt.
Lamar at this point has moved the Texans to Kansas City where they've become the chiefs,
but they have a working relationship. Also, how great is it that the first Cowboys owner
is named Tex? I know. So great. He was the GM. I don't think he was the principal owner,
but I think he had an ownership stake. So Tex approaches Lamar in early 1966,
says, hey, I'm the emissary of the NFL. Roselle sent me. I'm here to talk merger,
but we got to keep this under wraps because before it gets out, then like all hell's going to break loose. And oh, by the way, the number one sticking point
for the NFL that he tells Lamar upfront, they will not consider a deal otherwise,
is that Rozelle remains commissioner of the combined league. So Hunt's like,
I think we can work together. So they start working, discussing. There are no notes. There's
no written notes. It's just like them chatting with each other for a couple months. As they start, the other owners don't know about
it. Which is hard because when you're not the designated representative, you can't say,
I'm coming to you with something I know will work. You're saying, hey, enemy, I know you can't know
for sure that I can get this done, but you have to trust me enough that I'm pretty sure
I know my fellow owners enough that they would agree to this.
So if you and I can kind of get close to agreeing to something,
then I can take it to them.
But this is all subject to them blowing it up.
Yes, very delicate situation.
Now you might ask,
why on the NFL side are Roselle and Schramm not going to their counterparts on the AFL side? They're going right to the owners, to Lamar. Well, there's a weak, lame duck commissioner at the AFL, a guy named Joe Foss. And especially as the war and the TV money start escalating between the leagues, the AFL owners, he doesn't have their respect. They don't
trust that he can be the general to lead them to war against the NFL. So right as the negotiations
start happening at the AFL annual meetings, the owners fire Joe. So the commissioner's out on the
AFL side. They decide, just like the NFL did with the AAFC, hey, we're about to go to war.
Things are getting serious with the NFL.
We need somebody who's going to kick some ass for us.
They draft fellow owner, head coach, GM of the Oakland Raiders,
Al Davis, to become the new commissioner of the AFL.
All right, so now we've got this cast of characters
to pay attention to.
On the NFL side, there's the commissioner, Pete Rozelle,
and Dallas Cowboys GM, Tex Schramm.
And on the AFL side, there's new commissioner
and Raiders owner, Al Davis,
and the Chiefs owner, Lamar Hunt.
And Lamar Hunt, of course, was the guy
who started the whole AFL in the first
place. And Al Davis, legendary. There's a quote about him in America's Game.
Outside of Oakland, it was not certain where Al Davis would finish in a popularity contest
among sharks, the mumps, the income tax, and himself. If the voters were the other
American League football coaches, Davis would probably be third, edging out the income tax
in a thriller. He is the epitome of a mafia don. You can't trust Al Davis any further than you can
throw him. And he is the perfect new head of the AFL in this war.
And basically the head just to go beat him up in negotiation. I mean, at this point,
it's like, hey, we fired our guy. We understand we're in a negotiation.
Just go get the best deal you can. And if you have to piss everyone off such that you have
no working relationship with the rest of the owners, Al Davis is the kind of guy that's like, oh, I'm totally up for that. That's fine if for the next
30 years, everyone that I have to work with hates me. They don't let him know about the merger
negotiations. They don't actually want him to negotiate. They just want him to start a war
and improve their negotiating leverage. I see. And literally one of the most incredible
unforced errors of all time,
the NFL fires the first shot in the new war
as soon as Davis takes over.
So in May 1966, the Giants in the NFL
break the gentleman's agreement.
They go over and they poach a veteran
from the Bills in the AFL.
A kicker. Literally, a kicker.
They start a war over a kicker.
And it makes sense it's the Giants because they're the most harmed here.
I mean, they have, in their own city, the Jets with Joe Namath.
Once this happens, though, the other NFL owners are just apoplectic
at Giants owner Wellington Mara.
They're like, you're throwing
this all away over a kicker. So the owner of the Colts, the quote that is attributed to him,
God damn it, Mara, if you wanted a kicker, why didn't you just ask me? I'd have given you one.
So any of the 30 million Americans who play fantasy football can relate to this situation. So Davis gets the news that
the gentleman's agreement has been broken and the kicker has been signed. The kicker signing heard
around the world while he happens to be literally in the middle of meeting with the bill's owner.
Supposedly Davis, he just sits there in his chair and he leans back and he smiles and he says,
well, we just got our merger. And the bill's owner is like, what are you talking about? And Davis
says, because now we're going to go out and sign all of their players and we will destroy them.
And they will come begging to the table. Some Dr. Evil shit right there.
Totally. That night, the New York Times asks Davis for his comment on all this, which, by the way, you couldn't design better drama, especially during the NFL offseason to keep America interested in football. Amazing. The New York Times asks Davis to comment, and he responds, quote, this is something I've been aware of, and I anticipated the probability, but you don't make threats at a time like this. Our answer will be an action.
This is not the time to speak. Ooh, I want to steal that word for a word for something in the future. So great. So his first reaction, like any true mafia Don, is he doesn't really want to go
into all out war because he knows that's going to end badly for both sides. He wants to send
a targeted message,
like the equivalent of a fish wrapped and delivered on the doorstep.
Or a horse's head in your bed.
Exactly.
The horse's head that he decides to send
is he is going to target Rozelle's old team, the Rams,
and he's going to sign their quarterback away.
We just went from a kicker to a quarterback.
That escalated quickly. Well, you got to escalate. You're going to sign their quarterback away. We just went from a kicker to a quarterback. That escalated quickly.
Well, you got to escalate.
You're going to send a message.
You're going to come at the king.
You best not miss.
Yes.
So within three days, the Raiders have signed away
veteran star quarterback for the Rams, Roman Gabriel.
And this is where, again, the NFL makes another tactical error.
They don't respond to that.
They don't come to the table.
Nothing happens.
So a few days after that, Davis does unleash all-out war.
Talk about antitrust violations.
He literally directs the GMs of all the AFL teams to go out and sign all of the quarterbacks in the NFL.
Which to do this is an economically negative move.
Of course, which is why he didn't want to do it.
They're already making the maximum amount you should be willing to pay them
for what they're bringing to your team, or likely close to it.
And you're going to have to pay them a lot more to switch leagues.
So Lamar Hunt, of course, gets word of what's going on. And meanwhile,
he's in secret negotiations with Tex and Roselle for a merger. And Hunt, like Roselle, is a very
diplomatic man. He would never do anything like this. He doesn't think this way.
And he gets word from the Oilers, from their GM, that Davis just instructed him to go sign the 49ers quarterback. And Hunt is
talking to the Oilers like, no, no, no, no. This is too far. Stand down. I'm canceling Davis's
orders. Don't go do this. The Oilers GM gets off the phone with Hunt, calls up Al Davis and says,
hey, Lamar just called me, heard about what we're doing. He told me to stop.
Davis supposedly sits there for a second and asks, did you give Lamar your word
that you wouldn't do it? The Oilers GM says, yes. Davis sits there again, thinks about it,
and says, fuck it, sign him anyway. So they do. The Oilers go sign the 49ers quarterback. And that is what makes it all work.
So Davis hangs up with the Oilers, calls Hunt, and he's like, you dumbass. Why on earth would
you stop me from doing this? I know you're working on a merger. I am your best weapon that you have.
I am giving you leverage. Of course I need to do this. And Lamar's like, oh, yeah, okay,
go ahead. Right. I'm not being incendiary against you. This is a weapon for you. Yes. I may be a
thug, but I am your thug in this case. So within a couple of days, it's all over. On Wednesday,
June 8th, 1966, the merger agreement gets announced in a press release. Unlike with the AAFC,
this is a true merger. All of the AFL teams will join all of the NFL teams. Together,
they promise to add at least four totally new teams and cities.
Right. So there's 24 combined teams, and they promise to expand to 28 over the
next three, four years. Yep. They announced that because of the separate TV contracts on the AFL
and the NFL side, they will not begin a joint season immediately. They'll let the new AFL TV
contract play out, which will go through the 1969 season. The first fully combined season will be in 1970. But in the interim,
they will start hosting a new pro football world championship game between the winners of the two
leagues starting in the 1966 season. And boy, that would be a super event for television.
This officially called AFC-NFC World Championship game sounds like a doozy.
Sounds pretty cool to watch.
Some other points to the deal.
There will be a single common college draft starting immediately.
No more of these separate drafts.
No more babysitting.
No more ridiculous contracts, which, of course, talk about antitrust and player treatment. The players hate this, of course. Roselle will remain the commissioner, and Al Davis is going to go back to running the Raiders, which Davis is fine
with. That's all he really wanted anyway. Not announced, but included, this, I believe, only
came out much, much later. The AFL franchises did collectively pay the NFL owners
$18 million to join the league. Over a 20-year period.
Yes. This though was an enormous victory for the AFL for two reasons. One, the NFL obviously had, A, the larger TV contracts.
So that's just like found money right there.
B, they had all the apparatus.
They had NFL films, NFL enterprises, et cetera, everything.
And by the way, immediately, even before they combined the leagues officially in 1970,
they form AFL films for that three-year gap. Oh, I didn't know that.
And NFL films hires twice as many people, and they go film every single AFL gamems for that three-year gap. Oh, I didn't know that. And NFL Films hires twice as many people,
and they go film every single AFL game, too, starting immediately.
So those are both in themselves huge reasons
why paying only $18 million was a win for the AFL.
The even bigger reason, when the negotiation started
between Schramm and Lamar,
the NFL's initial asking price was $50 million per team
from the AFL as franchise fees. So to go from $50 million per team to $18 million total,
paid over 20 years, all thanks to Al Davis. The AFL owners owed Al Davis a big glass of champagne, shall we say.
That's an incredible leverage shift over the course of the negotiations.
And it happened in like a couple of months.
Yeah.
There are some other interesting deal points too.
One of them is that the 18 million actually didn't go to all the NFL teams.
They went to the Giants and the 49ers because those were the two teams most affected
by now having another NFL team in their city. Interesting. That makes a lot of sense.
And I'm pretty sure of that. If anybody listening to this knows that for sure, I know that was
floated. I don't know if that ended up being in the final deal points, but it's basically an
indemnity that I think is how it got written down that because the existence of this merger now causes one of the league ownership rules to be in violation, which is no two teams can be in the same media market. think the Giants actually got more because Joe Namath was the other one in their city. And so
what you also start to see because of this deal is the real modernization of the NFL.
They decided that anyone with less than a 50,000 seat stadium needs to change that. They said that
for what football has become after this merger, modern NFL in America, that's not a suitable
place to play football anymore. And so you either need
to build a new stadium or expand your stadium. And then the other final thing that is a consolation
prize for the AFL is that they actually got to bring their records over, whereas the AAFC,
I don't think they did. I don't think those counted as NFL records. I did find, this is linked in the
show notes in our sources, I kept reading about
the NFL records and the NFL rule book. And I was like, does this exist or is this like theoretical?
Every year, the NFL publishes a 1,000-page PDF of all of the historical everything,
all the scores, all the games. Oh, that's awesome.
It being in PDF form makes it pretty useless, but I assume it's a PDF of a physical book that exists with all the records in it.
I would assume somewhere through NFL Enterprises you can probably buy a pigskin-bound version of that.
Yes. So, this announcement in June of 66, you would sort of think, okay, this now just clears the way.
The next few decades are just
laid out in front of us. There's one league, there's no real competitors. What could possibly
challenge football? And the answer is yet again, the law of the land in the United States.
So in October, Congress actually passed a law to allow this merger and grant yet another antitrust exemption. This time,
Lyndon Johnson signed it into law. And you might say, well, why did they need another one? Well,
the merger of two completely different organizations that were competitors,
that's kind of a different thing than allowing one ownership group or one trade organization
to negotiate on behalf of a bunch
of sort of member teams. So this actually is a different antitrust issue. Right. It's actual
monopoly versus collusion. The first one was collusion, right? This is creating a monopoly.
And so Rizal and the NFL are calling on all the favors they can get, but the bill that will allow them to do this is stuck in committee. And so here's the paragraph out of America's Game. Roselle, seeking a way to break the logjam, called his friend David Dixon. And so he eventually finds his way to the House Majority Leader Hale Boggs,
who is an old fraternity brother of Dixon's at Tulane.
And he said, I can find the votes for this.
And this is how the New Orleans Saints came to exist.
Yes.
And there was basically a quid pro quo where Boggs said that he would pass this law and allow this merger to happen.
Whip up the support. Whip up the votes.
Yes. If there was an implicit promise that Louisiana would get a NFL team,
I'm going to quote this again. Walking up the stairs of the rotunda when the vote looked like
a sure thing, Rizal was ever his usual humble self.
Congressman Boggs, I don't know how I can ever thank you enough for this. This is a terrific
thing you've done. What do you mean you don't know how to thank me? He said, New Orleans gets
an immediate franchise in the NFL. And Rozelle says, I'm going to do everything I can to make
that happen. At that, Boggs stopped and turned on his heels, heading back into the committee room. Well, we could always call off the vote while you... Rizal took two giant strides
after Boggs, turned around him gently and said, it's a deal, Congressman. You'll get your franchise.
Amazing.
So it's like how many presidents and how many congressmen and how many... The NFL requires
this perfect storm of post-war America, technology, the growth of television, all these innovations, all this flywheel, and also the repetitive cooperation of the U.S. government. merger is approved. Remember, it won't actually happen until 1970, but we're now in the 1966
season. There's this little matter of the world championship game, this super matter. And this is,
again, credit to Roselle and I think his counterparts, you know, like Sonny in the AFL,
saw that this was an incredible opportunity.
There had never been anything like this before. This is the wholesale invention of a new major
sporting event for the first time within the TV era. Nothing like this had ever happened.
The World Series was created way before the TV era.
Totally. And you mentioned before during the Johnny Unitas game, the greatest game ever played,
that that drew 40 million people.
And that was much earlier in the TVification of America.
It wasn't really the NFL that we know.
There's all these other teams.
There's all these other markets.
So if we can sort of tailor make a game for national television as this entertainment
event, it can be much, much more significant.
Not only that, these guys are smart. They're smart business people. They're smart media people.
Even though the TV contracts are already in place on the NFL and the AFL side for their
respective seasons, including their respective championship games, this is a new game. There's
no contract in place yet for this. So they re-bid it, the rights to this world championship game,
to all the networks. And CBS and NBC are living because they've already got the rights to the
respective leagues. They thought they both had a championship game, but it turns out they both had a semifinal.
So what ends up happening? They both feel like they can't bear to not win the rights to broadcast this new game. They each end up paying $1 million for the rights to both broadcast it. So this game
now is going to be broadcast to the nation on both CBS and NBC.
And in addition to them each spending a million dollars for the rights to this one game,
they also both pledge to spend $1 million each in promoting it in the lead up to the game.
This is unprecedented.
There's never been anything like this in media history.
This ended up actually having a 79% share of
American TV, whatever Nielsen measures. So it's the share of all the TVs that are turned on at
this point because it was on two networks. Incredible. It ended up being watched live
by over 65 million people. Super Bowl I at the LA Coliseum. You can't call it that, David. This
is the AFL-NFL World Championship game.
I apologize.
The World Championship game at the LA Coliseum.
And in like such a perfect symbol of the new world order, the new media landscape,
largest television event in history, unprecedented, groundbreaking, live in the stadium. The LA Coliseum is pretty
big. It seats about 95,000 people. Only 63,000 people showed up live. There was only two-thirds
attendance live at the game, and it didn't matter at all. When I tweeted about Super Bowl I,
some pictures from it the other day, and I didn't realize, you can see there's an area that stands where people aren't sitting.
I assumed it was too late or too early. That's like during the game, they didn't fill it.
That's during the game.
Wow.
They didn't fill the stadium and everybody got rich anyway.
Okay, so a few things leading up to this. Again, like, God, they're so good,
Roselle and football at this time. They're just architecting all of this live.
So they know this is an incredible opportunity. Nothing has ever happened like this before.
During the age of TV, they're creating a television event, whole cloth. So they'll
totally lean into it. Media week. That is a deliberate invention by Pete Roselle and the NFL
leading up to the Super Bowl.
All the crazy interviews, everything that happens that we take for granted right now,
like that was intentional.
It was designed.
It was created that way.
The commissioner's press conference the Friday before the Super Bowl.
Yep.
Which is designed to take the pressure off of the coaches and the players who have been
being grilled all week so that they can actually prepare for the game.
And it's about league business. So there's all this news that comes out about the NFL
and how it will be changing for the next year right before the Super Bowl to draw all this
attention to the NFL right before the Super Bowl. And that's just the public-facing stuff.
During the week leading up to the Super Bowl, they host parties, they host events, they host
concerts, they host experiences, not host events, they host concerts,
they host experiences, not for the public, but for their partners, for the TV partners,
for the advertisers, for the press. It's all about adding the gloss and the sheen to the people who
are going to add the gloss and the sheen. Literally, Rozelle's directive to the NFL staff
was he wants every media person and partner leaving the Super Bowl to be saying,
man, this is a lot better than the World Series. It's great. So great. The game itself, the Packers
end up destroying the Chiefs, totally validates all the NFL teams, the game on the field. They
had a huge superiority complex. They were like, the AFL is inferior. They'll never win. How do
we let these bozos in our league?
The next year in Super Bowl II,
the Packers again beat down the Raiders this time.
And if this were a football podcast, we'd be talking about the dynasty of the Packers.
But it is worth saying,
wow, the dominance of the Packers right around this time.
Vince Lombardi winning the first two Super Bowls.
There's a reason it's called the Lombardi Trophy now.
It wasn't for Super Bowl I or II.
And then the one game we will talk about here,
Super Bowl III.
Yes, by this point,
the game is formally called the Super Bowl.
The press had been looking for something to call it.
And, you know, Lamar Hunt, I think,
had been the one who observed his kid
playing with a Wham-O Super Bowl.
And so when the league discussions were sort of going on about it, he proposed Super Bowl,
but Pete Rozelle hated it.
He wasn't serious about it.
Like, I think Lamar was like, oh, it's just kind of a funny placeholder name.
Yeah.
But then it just stuck.
But it came out in some press interview, and then they just ran with it,
and then it was out of the league's control.
Yep.
All right.
So Super Bowl III, the narrative leading into the Super Bowl is
the old NFL, soon to be NFC teams.
That's real football.
That's real football. The AFL, you know, it's fluff. And there's like real bad blood between
the coaches and the players on the field. Super Bowl III, the Colts versus the Jets. The old Colts, Johnny Unitas, a different era,
the 1950s against Broadway Joe Namath and the Jets. And this is still Baltimore Colts, right?
Baltimore Colts, yes. In the lead up to the game, the Colts are 19-point favorites
heading into the game. Nobody thinks the AFL can compete. They've
been destroyed the last two years. And then during the media week, this is the reason we're talking
about this sporting event here in the midst of this business podcast. It's just like, oh my gosh,
you can't design this any better. Broadway Joe guarantees an AFL victory during media week, during a press conference. You can't
make for better TV drama than that. There is this very famous photograph that we'll link to in the
show notes of Broadway Joe at the pool during media week with a playbook in his lap where he's
in, wherever he's, the sex symbol, he's know, swim trunks. And there's just all these pressing cameras and all these women like gathered around him,
staring at him. And it was a moment like it was all over the news, all over television,
all week. Like what a incredible media event. And then during the game, Joe delivers on his guarantee, huge upset, beats the Colts, the first AFL victory over the NFL.
At the after party, Carol Rosenblum, the Colts owner, is totally desolate. He comes up to Rozelle,
he's sobbing, and Rozelle's like, just like so many conversations here, he's like, oh, no, no,
don't worry. This is the best thing that has ever happened to the game and to us. And he's so right. That seems like one of the obvious playbook themes
here is every time you think you just got beat by some other football team or entity or personality,
it ends up being so good to raise the profile for the game that everybody wins. It turns out
the answer is most of the time, everybody just keeps winning. Yep. As long as there is drama, as long as there is competition,
everybody wins. Yep. I mean, this is the great paradox of the NFL. Everything is about the game
on the field, and nothing is about the game on the field at the same time. What it is about is
making sure the game on the field is compelling. Whoever wins, they all win.
Well, and this is kind of the debate today between the new group of owners and the old
group of owners. The original owners are so steadfast in this is about football,
and we make a great entertainment product, but there's football at the core.
And the thing that they're all a little bit nervous about with the new group of owners who
are so excited about building these unbelievable businesses and taking on more and more sponsorships and sponsoring team jerseys and on-field sponsorships and building the spectacle around every game. Like, are we not a football product anymore? Are we some kind of entertainment franchise
that has lost its way?
And I think that's the interesting dichotomy
between owners these days.
Yeah.
How far is too far?
But at this point in time,
they are nowhere near too far.
Yes.
Lean way into it.
The next year, the Chiefs beat the Vikings
and the pre-merger Super Bowl series ends tied two to two,
two victories for the NFL, two victories for the AFL. Again, could not be better for pro football
and the newly combined NFL because that leads right into the first joint fully integrated
TV negotiations for the 1970 season.
This feels like it's going to be a big package.
Oh boy, the network's going to have to pay up.
And pay up they do.
They decide to keep both CBS and NBC essentially with their same packages,
CBS airing the NFC games and NBC airing the AFC games. There is some realignment at the
conferences. So some of the NFL teams go over to the AFC. The combined contract value, it is now a
four-year contract, combined contract value of $156 million. That is $40 million per year.
That's a lot of money. And this is where the genius starts of the NFL realizing we
don't have to just sign one contract. And for anybody who's looked at the contracts today,
there's a lot of contracts. And there's pretty much not a TV distribution company that is not
distributing some little shard of what the NFL has carved up. But them realizing here in 1970,
we don't just have
one deal to sign. We have an AFC package and an NFC package. And we might actually be able to
invent some more here too. Yes. So David, take us to Monday night. Oh, let's go to Monday night.
So they got CBS, they've got NBC. Remember ABC? ABC's been out in the cold for several years now since the AFL
signed their second deal with NBC. Which is a real shame because you've got Rune Arledge there.
He's a visionary. This is still before ESPN, right? Still before ESPN. Well, well before ESPN. 10
years. So yeah, that's still far off in the future. But ABC is clearly interested in sports. Yes, clearly interested in something.
So Roselle and Rooney start chatting.
Roselle has always, supposedly always, had the inkling that football and the NFL would do really well in a primetime slot.
But this is crazy. Like you were talking about a little while ago,
Sundays were perfect for football, Sunday afternoons,
because the networks didn't have anything else to air.
The accepted thinking at the time was like,
oh, sports are perfect for Sunday afternoons,
but like the core business of the television networks.
Right.
Sports is not primetime.
Is showing shows and news and entertainment in primetime, and that is not sports.
That appeals to the widest range of people,
and that we still don't know for sure that the NFL is that.
You know, it's very telling that all of these networks had separate sports divisions,
and that ABC didn't even have one until they got the first AFL deal.
It was a separate thing.
And just to keep tracking our baseball versus football comparison, this moment in 1970 is right around the time where the NFL is eclipsing
baseball to become America's favorite sport. It's been slowly gaining ground over the last 30 years,
and the merger plus the creation of the Super Bowl really puts the NFL here squarely in the lead,
making it the perfect candidate for this sports primetime experiment.
Indeed. So Roselle is like, this can work. And Rune Arledge is like, yeah, I think this can work.
So they brainstorm and together come up with the idea for one single game every week
with incredibly high production values broadcast in prime time in the evening
on Monday nights after the full slate has concluded on Sunday. And oh my gosh, so many
advantages to this. On the Sunday games, there always have been so many games that happen on
Sunday. You can't watch them all all at once. They're all happening concurrently. You're seeing
different games in different markets. There's not a national event to watch because the way the local
affiliate works, it's still at this point in time where you can't watch a home game at home. So
whatever is on TV in your city is wherever your team is playing if they're playing an away game
and no NFL on Sunday if your team is playing a home game. Either you're going
to the NFL game on Sunday or it's a non-event for you that week. Right. And that's on the viewer
side. But from the production standpoint for CBS and NBC, they're sending each of them like five,
six, seven TV crews out all across the country. Their resources
are getting totally diluted every Sunday. They can't put all their effort into one primetime game.
And the broadcasts other than the Super Bowl, and honestly, even kind of the Super Bowl at this
point in time, are pretty bad. We talked earlier about they got better and they learned. They
didn't learn much. They were still referred to around this period of time, 1970, as football in a cathedral.
You had no fun camera angles.
You probably had three, maybe four cameras in the entire broadcast.
And most of it really is just that 50-yard camera that sort of zooms in and out.
And the announcers are kind of relying on the fact that you're watching the game.
So they're not really commentating that much. They would just sort of help you know that there's audio associated with the broadcast you're watching. Yeah. I mean, step back and think
about the last NFL game you watched. The transitions between the camera angles, the music,
the sound effects, the microphones, the analysis, the sideline reporting.
The lower thirds.
The graphics. None of this existed.
The notion that there's play-by-play in color. This idea that there should always be someone
talking, saying something interesting while you're watching a game.
Yes. So this whole vision for Monday Night Football that Rune Arledge and ABC
can make happen
for the NFL
and new meteorites
for the NFL to sell
more revenue.
They've got it all ironed out,
all the details.
And right before
they're about to sign a deal,
Roselle's like,
oh yeah,
by the way,
we have these partnerships
with CBS and NBC.
We got to offer this
to our partners first. Which, you know, Roselle, he has this reputation and history treats him as like a
incredibly kind, incredibly accommodating. And I'm sure that's true. But he had a little bit
Al Davis in him too. He knew exactly what he was doing here. He knew that there was no way
that NBC and CBS were going to take this package. Yep. He just wanted a stalk doing here. He knew that there was no way that NBC and CBS were going
to take this package. Yep. He just wanted a stalking horse. He's like, I don't want to
leave any money on the table with this. Whatever we're signing here, they have to fear that we're
going to walk. Totally. You know, Rune, of course, freaks out. This is his baby. This is his career
within ABC. He's been pre-selling this to his bosses. So he looks bad if they lose this now. So they come in with an over-the-top deal.
ABC gets exclusive rights to Monday Night Football
for a new deal, new product, $8.5 million per season.
And the other deal was...
The other deal was $40 per season for essentially 15x more content, I think.
Right. Each TV network is paying about 20 to have either the AFC package or the NFC package
on Sundays. And ABC is coming in and now spending eight and a half just for one game on Monday
nights. And you might say, whoa, that's terrible. They're way overpaying for the amount of
content that is. But actually, what you want to be paying for is the smallest amount of content
possible that gets distributed to the widest audience possible. So you actually should be
willing to pay up to 20 million as long as the aggregate number of viewers that you get on that
day is the same.
Because if I'm ABC, I'm like, wow, those guys, that really sucks for them having to produce four or five, six different games. I only have to produce one and it's nationally broadcast
across all my affiliates. This is amazing. We are going to go hard on costs on the production side
to make it the most dazzling possible experience.
And we're going to make it back. Boy, did they ever. The first Monday Night Football game that airs that season is watched by 60 million U.S. households. That is like literally Super
Bowl level. I mean, Super Bowl I was 65. They invented a holiday out of nowhere,
and it's every week. They totally invented a weekly holiday. It's
amazing. CBS and NBC must have been pissed. Seriously. Because it's also, you know,
they signed the contract thinking we, between the two of us, we basically have a lock on all
the football. And then they invented more football. Exactly. And for the NFL, the newly
combined NFL, they invented more football. They invented revenue.
Amazing.
And by this point, the NFL's starting to wake up to this idea that, you know, they're still
not willing to play with the blackouts at all.
But maybe people watching on TV can be better than people coming into the stadiums.
Maybe there's enough money in this that for us to be nationally broadcast on a Monday
night, I still think it was blacked out in the home market, but they recognize the value of everyone
else watching and how that's even more important than the stadium itself.
Okay, so I made a list of things that Monday Night Football invented that was not a part
of your typical football NFL broadcast before Monday Night Football. And it is astonishing.
This is everything that you expect in every NFL and frankly, every college game that you watch now.
And it was brand new for Monday Night Football. And in fact, was Monday Night Football exclusive
for 20 or 30 years in a lot of the cases. But the overriding idea that we are going to cover
a football game like show business. This is not a
sport we're broadcasting. This is showbiz, and we will make you feel like that. So what are we going
to do? We're going to put cameras at field level. We're going to put cameras on people's shoulder,
and they're actually going to get to sort of run around and get up close footage of people while
they're celebrating touchdown dances or when they're running back in from the sideline. We're going to put cameras on the 20-yard lines in addition to
the 50-yard line so that we can get a straight-down view when they're in the red zone.
It's not just sort of this weird sort of from-the-side angle on touchdowns. We're going
to get great footage head-on during touchdowns. Instead of two commentators, we're going to have
a three-man booth, and there's going to be real action-oriented commentarys. Instead of two commentators, we're gonna have a three-man booth,
and there's gonna be real action-oriented commentary there. And of course, we can't
talk about Monday Night Football without Howard Cosell and his unbelievably unique style of
narrating and really injecting himself into the story of the broadcast rather than just being a sort of opinionless third-party observer. He created
a little bit of a foil to play off of for the other commentators where there was real relationship
and you were tuning in not just to watch whatever the football was, but to watch these announcers
who you sort of got to know over time and really observe their charisma with each other about the
game. That's exactly what I was going to say. It's the same dynamic with podcasts now. It's like
they became your friends in the booth.
Right. It's not just that you're listening to business stories. It's that you're hanging out
with David and I while we talk about business stories. It's one of the first examples ever
of realizing the power of that. They went from the four cameras that typically would cover a
Sunday broadcast to nine cameras
and then eventually up to 17 cameras.
They invented the parabolic microphone coverage that you always see on the sideline, those
sort of clear plastic microphones that are aimed at gathering the sound from on the field.
They had 40 engineers.
They had 20 production people.
They invented these split screens so you could watch two cameras concurrently cover the game. They had on-field interviews, shots of cheerleaders to add a little bit of a
sex appeal to the game for the first time. And they also used green screens, which is so funny
to watch some of these early... I guess they didn't have room in the booth, according to the
Peyton's Places ESPN video that we watched about this where for the three-man
booth they needed more space than they had in the press box so they ended up putting them like
out in the hallway and built a little custom room to do this in but the background wasn't good so
they put in a green screen and then they would put another camera in the press box and so they
would superimpose that the field was right behind them, but it actually wasn't. And it's so obvious watching it today.
They're like floating on the stadium. It's hilarious.
Yes.
But this is revolutionary stuff.
Yes. And there was one other really, really big innovation. And this was a thing that would go on
to be the predecessor for ESPN as a network, for SportsCenter as a program, and it would create
billions and billions of dollars of enterprise value, and that is replays. Yeah, the highlights.
Before we talk highlights, did you say the theme song too? No. Yeah, I thought actually that's where
you were going with ESPN. I mean, the theme songs, like, there were no theme songs before this.
Right. This notion you're actually tuning into a program that has an associated pump-up song
that is built for that franchise is unique. Okay, so let's talk about highlights. So,
how could you have possibly watched highlights before Monday Night Football? Well, the games
were on Sundays, and that was really the only football that was on all week. We didn't have the internet,
there wasn't ESPN, there wasn't SportsCenter, so there really was no place to go and watch
highlights. Now, football and all sports are unbelievably highlightable events that if you
string together a bunch of the very best plays, it's really, really interesting and really
entertaining, especially if they're covered by great cameras. Now, compare this to baseball, where not only
was there no place to go watch them, but there was no one capturing the footage to even highlight it.
But NFL has NFL films, and using high-quality cameras and film stock, they are capturing great camera angles of every game.
And so between Sunday and Monday, the NFL Films team would go and take all of the footage from
the game the previous day, cut up a highlight reel, and as soon as possible, get that to whatever
city the Monday Night Football broadcast was happening in so that they could play it at
halftime. And Howard Cosell could give his
commentary, often having never seen the footage while the highlight reel is playing in the
background, and really invents this idea of, for the first time, we're going to watch highlights
of yesterday's games. I got to imagine the highlight reel was literally being slid into the
machine as they were getting ready to broadcast it. Because think about the logistics in that.
You get the film stock back from all the games
all around the country, back to NFL films.
They produce the highlight reel.
They get that finished reel
back to the Monday Night Football location,
which is another location somewhere around the country.
Totally.
All within 24 hours.
It's really amazing.
There is one interesting piece of legacy out of all of this.
One of my favorite things in preparing for this episode is discovering all the pieces
of the modern deals that are in place that have been lawyered to high heaven that have
their origin in some interesting logistical piece of how the league used to work. I think the way that the rights are cut up today
includes highlights as a part of the Monday Night Football package.
Oh, interesting.
So the way that the rights are sold today, one network gets the AFC on Sunday,
one gets the NFC on Sunday, Amazon now has Thursday night football. ABC, ESPN, Disney
has Monday night football. And then of course there's NFL Sunday ticket, which is another
completely different set of rights. I think the way that ESPN has the rights to all the NFL footage
for SportsCenter is because it is bundled into the rights for Monday Night Football because that is the origin
of highlights. No way. Oh, that's super cool. Yeah. Because I saw a few times in different
legal blogs trying to dissect exactly how the rights package worked, they kept saying Monday
Night Football and highlights. And I was like, oh. and that's probably also why ESPN is so invested in
keeping the Monday Night Football package because it gives them so much of the value that they get
out of SportsCenter. Oh, yeah. There's so much more value in that specifically for Disney and ESPN
versus any other bidder. Yes. Interesting. And if any listeners know this for a fact or have any more color on
this, I would appreciate it. Acquiredfm at gmail.com. Oh, yeah. God, I can't believe we're
only up to 1970. I know. Well, the good news is this is the good news. Yeah. Yes. You can't get
any better from this. I mean, this is now the fully formed entertainment product of the NFL.
And they add stuff like Sunday Ticket and Thursday Night
Football and everything else over the years. But the trajectory is set. There's some ups and downs
in the 70s, but it's basically just like gonzo for the NFL. There's one more presidential
intervention in 1973. Nixon really, really, really likes watching the Redskins, but he's
sick of taking the helicopter to Camp David to watch their away
games, which he actually was doing, which is unbelievable. He was a nut. Nixon literally
phoned in a play for a Redskins playoff game from the White House. Maybe he should have been paying
more attention to foreign policy and things like that. Nixon was a nut in many ways. Yes. But Camp
David is sufficiently 75 miles away. By the way,
there was this whole cottage industry that sprouted up of hotels that were outside of the 75
mile radius, and there were buses. So people would go to these hotels and they would get
rooms for the day to go watch the games. This dynamic formed like plot lines on sitcoms in
the 70s and the 80s. I think the Bob Newhart show, this was like a plot line of like,
they go to a hotel to watch the King. I've heard about this. Yeah. It was a thing.
So Nixon calls Pete Rozelle personally, the president, the sitting president of the United
States, and says, hey, we're in the playoffs this year. I think it would be a good idea for
you to air playoff games. Not every game, but playoff games locally. And Pete Rozelle,
even in 1973, is pretty dug in on this issue that it's a bad thing and it's cannibalizing to our
most important thing, our gate revenue, if we do that. So he says no to the sitting president.
And so then Nixon goes to Congress and says, will you please draft legislation,
which got known as the blackout ban. And so because Roselle denied the president, there is actually legislation that was passed in order to
force the NFL's hand in broadcasting away games locally. And what's so cool, there's an amazing
Peyton's Places episode on this because Nixon recorded everything in the White House. They're
the White House tapes, the Watergate tapes, all that stuff. This is on tape. Nixon's conversations directing his staff and Congress to appease his whims with the
NFL, which was good for the country. It's all on tape. It's an amazing episode. It was wild. And
this is one of the things that Rozelle got super wrong. The right thing was as soon as possible,
the NFL to get as much distribution as possible because the TV rights would become the most important revenue line,
but also the thing that most fueled the flywheel,
that more people watching the games is better
for everything, for continued fandom.
It's like how Disney wants you to consume the content
so that you go to the parks and you buy the merch.
So the Disney Plus came out as a very cheap option.
It was one of his few strategic flaws, I i think was gating the content for too long yep and i don't know if this
is directly related but i think so much of the 70s and the 80s and the 90s were also about just
like the continued growth trajectory of the incredible marriage of the nfl and television
and the money just keeps getting bigger and and the stage keeps getting larger, and the viewership goes up,
and you know, all the things. Yeah. And this is probably worth saying that we aren't going to go
blow by blow on the NFL timeline past 1970, the way we did during the Roselle era. There's a bunch
of stuff to skip, like the USFL and all the teams moving cities and Deflategate, to focus really on the
strategic moments that created the conditions of the NFL's business today. Yep, all of those great
stories, but like you say, don't really contribute strategically to where the NFL is today. So
probably the biggest impact decision that happens during the time may be related to like this continued focus on the
gate. The league first mentality kind of gets broken or diluted with the stadiums that you
referred to along the way, because as all the teams start moving into the bigger stadiums,
they start building amenities into the stadiums and the stadium experience totally changes, which it needed to as television became primacy. There had to be a
reason to go to the stadium. Stadiums become all about the luxury boxes, the suites, the experiences,
the corporate partners, the advertising, the drink sponsors, all of this stuff. And that becomes huge
money for the NFL, but it's not shared money. It's all local money.
Yes, this is my biggest criticism. The thing that got them here, this league first mentality,
is eroding because of the way that the revenue splits are happening. So you look at the local
stadium sponsorships, you look at every stadium is
dedicating more and more real estate to luxury suites. A lot of the local merchandise sold in
the stadiums is local revenue. And so the teams are making more and more money locally. And I mean,
more money overall, so it's all good. But a greater percentage
is coming from things the teams are doing on their own. And you got to wonder if that individualistic
I'm Jerry Jones and the Cowboys deserve all the revenue mindset will be the thing that eventually
kind of causes them to get unseated in some way. And you know, I think the thing that keeps the
competitive balance in place, even as revenue diverges,
is the salary cap.
Yeah, this is a great place to talk about that. Let's go to 1993 and talk about the first time free agency and the salary cap comes
into the NFL, how that's computed and how that impacts the sort of leverage going forward.
Okay, so 1993 rolls around.
The league has been negotiating with the Players Association for a while, I think since the 60s, in various collective bargaining agreements. But the 1993 one the NFL. And I think this actually does get legally struck down. It's not literally called the Roselle Rule, but, you know, he was commissioner and he sort of stood by it. And it basically prohibited free agency. another team, the team that they were going to would have to reimburse the team that they were
leaving for a negotiated amount. And so it added a lot of friction to signing a new player. So it
had two practical effects. It hurt the player's ability to earn the most money, and it decreased
the likelihood that a player would move teams. Right. I think, importantly, the compensation afforded to the team that was
losing the player wasn't just economic, too, right? Like, draft picks could be involved.
Yes, that's right. And so the NFL didn't really have free agency for a while. And in 1993,
players finally got it, at least as long as a player had been in the league for four years.
In exchange, there was a salary cap put in. So this was the league saying, okay, fine,
but we're going to make sure that I'm pretty sure it was capped at some fixed percentage
of the amount of revenue that the league generates. So that today is actually a pretty high number. It's
48.8% or something like that. So players are effectively a partner in the league because
the league's success ends up being their success, not necessarily evenly distributed among all
players by any means, in fact, quite the opposite. But at least players are virtually guaranteed in whole to make close
to half of the league's overall revenue. But how does that work with local and national revenue?
Well, since it is based on the total revenue, if a team makes a whole bunch of local revenue
and the salary cap is the same between them and another team that doesn't make a lot of
local revenue from a fancy stadium, they're going to have no problem making the obligation that they
have to pay the players close to 50% because it's a fixed amount and they make a bunch of gravy
locally on top of that amount. And you're saying that that fixed amount is a league-wide aggregate,
including all the local revenue from all of the teams.
So this potentially could create a big imbalance.
Right. It's okay as long as the local revenue doesn't become too big of a part.
But at some point, you have to imagine that what is 48.8% of league average could be 90%
of what I make as a team in a small market with a crappy stadium. And then because I have to pay
players so much, there's no way I can pay for other stuff. And so my coaching gets hurt or
the production for fans gets hurt or something that makes me a less competitive team, even if
the players on the field are paid just as much as the players on the field from other teams.
Yep. And importantly, this collective bargaining agreement
and the advent of this form of free agency for the NFL, I think was the first CBA that Pete
Rizal's successor, Paul Tagliabue, negotiated. So it really was a new era for the NFL. Yes.
And it's interesting because I think in 93, when the salary cap first
came out, it was just of the shared revenue. But now that in the more recent agreements,
it includes all league revenue and local revenue is actually growing as a portion of the overall
revenue for the top teams. Unshared revenue for teams grew from 12% in 1994 to 21% in 2003 and is over 30% today.
So there's definitely a meaningful and ever-growing part of NFL team revenue that really does come from just the team itself and what it can do in its local market, not from that sort of locked brotherhood of we're all in it together league revenue.
Yeah. It is a serious threat to this magical flywheel that has made the NFL function and succeed well beyond any other sport on a revenue basis in the world. Even though football and the
NFL is not the most popular sport in the world. It is by far the highest monetized
and largest sport by revenue.
I think, actually,
I don't know if we said this up front,
I'm pretty sure the NFL
is the largest single media business in the world.
Not an aggregate diversified media business,
but if you consider the league as a single property,
then I think it is the largest
individual single property in the world.
It's a good question. The comps would probably be like Marvel or Lucasfilm.
Yep. I looked at that bigger than Marvel, bigger than Lucasfilm.
Really?
Yep.
Because the NFL does $18 billion a year in revenue right now,
which is expected to grow to $25 billion by 2027.
Yep. I believe Marvel's not anywhere near that.
Wow. Yeah, that's wild's not anywhere near that. Wow.
Yeah, that's wild.
Because it's an annual basis.
That's every year.
I mean, this TV contract
that they just signed,
the 10-year deal,
is for $112 billion
across all these entities.
Just wild.
And just to share
what that specifically looks like,
CBS broadcasts
a Sunday afternoon package for $1.85 billion a year.
Fox has a Sunday afternoon package for $2 billion a year. They invented a new SKU,
the Sunday night package, and they invented this a while ago, but NBC has that for $1.7 billion a
year. Disney owns Monday Night Football, as we mentioned, for $2.55. It is a single game per week,
and it's the most expensive package. It's incredible. Amazon has Thursday Night Football
for $1.3 billion a year. And of course, then we just got the news last month that DirecTV has
lost NFL Sunday Ticket, and that is moving to YouTube TV. NFL Sunday Ticket is also a genius
move because you're reselling the same content you've already sold. It's the same content.
It's the content that is exclusive to CBS, Fox, NBC that those networks produce. I'm pretty sure
it's even like their cameras, their on-air talent, all that. But the NFL, it has the exclusive right to bundle all that together
and sell it as a package directly to a consumer if you want access to all the games. If you don't
just want the ones that are on TV near you, if you want the ability to watch any game at any time.
And it is incredible to me that that is worth $2 billion, given the NFL is actually not doing
the work to produce it. The people who are doing the work to produce it are the people who are paying for the privilege to cover those games.
Amazing. And then there's more now, and let's catch us up to the present day.
There's revenue from the NFL Films Division. I think it's probably a couple hundred million
dollars I would expect at this point in time. There's other licensing rights particularly video games and madden so i don't think it's public but
it was reported that the latest madden licensing deal with ea was a total of 1.6 billion dollars
for a five-year rights wow which man remember that episode we did with trip on ea back in the
day was so fun and talking about the origins of Madden. That's a $300 million a year deal. So that's like a sixth of what one of these channels pays to broadcast the actual NFL. That's what EA pays to just license the use of the player names and team logos and all that.
Yep.
Oh, I assume player names is actually licensed from the Players Association separately. It's all single negotiated.
I believe it's reported that I think $600 million of the $1.6 million goes to the players.
Then there's fantasy, both betting and non-betting.
Yeah, and this is a good point to fully bring us to today.
I think it is totally reasonable to say that the things that powered the rise of the NFL
were national TV, post-war prosperity, the rise of the middle class, the Madison Avenue explosion, and the
league-first mentality. But all of this is in the 50s, 60s, and 70s. The thing that powered the NFL
to be such a dominant force in society today is fantasy football and sports betting. So let's talk
about fantasy first. Great. There's like 30 or 40 million people a year
in the United States that play fantasy football, thus making it the way that the centerpiece of
conversation with their closest friends and families and co-workers, which means you have
to watch football in order to have those conversations with the people that are closest to you in your life. Fantasy is such a great example of driving and adding to the Roselle flywheel. Better products,
deepened fan engagement, more viewership, more advertising, which really now translates to more
revenue opportunities because there's revenue opportunities from fantasy. Sunday Ticket,
that whole package basically was to cater to two
audiences. One, bars and restaurants who want to be able to show multiple games within their
establishment. But two, and even bigger, the fantasy crowd, they're going to be willing to
pay a lot of money to see all the games live. And then that feeds back into the product and
the flywheel spins. And of course, then there's sports betting, which is now becoming legalized in lots of states,
but has been a force for a long time.
Of course, you could bet legally in Las Vegas,
but obviously tons of people have bookies
that can just place bets for them
no matter where they lived.
And I'm shocked, shocked to find gambling
going on in this establishment.
So shocked.
I don't know, it's very similar to how we mentioned
prohibition earlier. Despite alcohol being illegal, there was plenty of it to be found.
And in this example, when you've got money riding on a game, you are absolutely going to tune in.
I looked it up just to put a number on this. The current estimates are that 46 million Americans,
or 18% of betting age US adults, bet on the NFL this year,
and that number continues to grow. That's just this year?
Yeah. Wow. People bet on the NFL more than any other sport in the U.S. Variety reports 81%
of sports bettors bet on NFL games versus just over 50% for the NBA and 44% for Major League Baseball. Interestingly,
the NFL doesn't generate meaningful revenue from betting yet, though I am sure they will in the
future. Yeah, you can probably bet on that. Hey-oh. Hey-oh. So I guess it's worth pausing
to understand the shape of the NFL's business today and how the revenue breaks down. So on average, about two
thirds of any given team's revenue comes from shared national revenue that we talked about.
The remaining one third comes from the local revenue. But again, this is just on average.
So some teams are very good at the local revenue, like the Dallas Cowboys, and some teams are very
bad at this, like the Bills or the Lions. And I have some numbers to
put that in perspective. This past year, each team got right around $350 million from the shared
league revenue. But that extra local revenue obviously can cause a gigantic swing in the
team's total revenue. And Forbes has an estimate that the Cowboys made over a billion dollars last year, whereas the Lions only made $450 million.
So not really much on top of the shared revenue from the league.
Wow. So much for the league first mentality from Jerry Jones there.
Right? So it's also useful, I think, to slice it a different way,
rather than just the shared versus local. Here is how the NFL team revenue
breaks down purely by product. So this is essentially answering the question, how does
the NFL make money? So 61% comes from media. Most of that is the TV from the shared league revenue.
10% comes from general seating, which is regular plastic seats. Another 10% comes from premium seating.
That's for the proletariat.
Yes. The premium seating that we mentioned is the suites and all that stuff. That's a big
growing revenue line for the people with nice stadiums.
And most of that is corporate, right?
I think so. That's my best guess. It's super different city to city. This is probably the
most variable. 10% comes from sponsorship and advertising.
And then about 9% is other, which I'm guessing is where NFL films and a lot of that stuff
sort of lies.
Maybe the Madden deal is in there.
I don't know if it'd be there in media.
Yeah.
So that's the shape of the NFL as a business today.
So before we kind of finish that out and get into analyzing the business,
I mentioned the complicated relationship that people have with football. In the 2000s,
it became clear as day that CTE is very real and caused by playing football and causes shorter lifespans and immense physical harm to players. And CTE, as many of
you know, is chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which is a terrible brain condition that develops
from the many repeated sub-concussive hits to the head. And the symptoms are devastating.
Mental, emotional, suicides, everything.
I mean, the NFL settled a billion-dollar lawsuit to pay out victims and families of CTE.
Yeah.
You know, it's even worse than that.
There's a bunch of dimensions here.
I played football all growing up, middle school, high school, college.
You know, my feeling, and this was in the 90s and early 2000s, my feeling on the matter was
I'm for sure risking my body by playing, but the risk calculation on my mind was all short-term.
I could tear an ACL, sure. I could break my arm, sure. I could get a concussion, sure. But in my
mind, those were all the same things. There was no broader understanding among general football population, or there's been a bunch of research
on this, or the NFL players themselves, that there was real long-term mental emotional
risk to playing the game. And then here's what's really bad is the NFL knew it and they covered it
up. So the NFL started doing research into long-term effects of concussions
and other head trauma from playing football in the 90s. And then they sat on the data for a long
time. And then when they did release it, they claimed that there was absolutely no provable
link, no evidence at all, that head injuries from playing football led to long-term damage.
The NFL didn't acknowledge that until 2016.
Super bad. I mean, there's the Will Smith movie concussion about it.
We don't need to go into a bunch of the specifics, but I think like
from the acquired standpoint and the NFL audience standpoint,
this was a major, major trust-breaking moment.
I feel guilty enjoying football.
I think a lot of people do.
I don't know that that's a super widespread.
That's probably a West Coast, you live in a city,
you read about a lot of this stuff type thing.
But certainly it affected it enough for LeBron James to say,
I don't want my son playing football.
I mean, that was a huge cultural moment.
One, there's the direct impact like you're talking about.
And I think you're right.
That's probably limited in the broader landscape of the American media diet.
But the second order effects are pretty large from this.
One is what you said about parents allowing and wanting their children to play football.
Certainly, the statistics are down.
Now, youth football remains robust.
College football remains robust. I don. Now youth football remains robust. College football
remains robust. I don't think youth football remains robust. From 2010 to 12, it declined
5% per year. A lot of the data is showing that continued. Interestingly, all youth sports are
down. I don't think football is down much more than other youth sports, but video games, social
media, phones. And the pandemic too. Yes Yes. Youth sports are, like, way down.
So all the feeder systems for all pro sports
will be dramatically less 20 years from now than they are now.
And, come on, football is going to bear the worst of that.
Yep, totally.
But I think the real risk,
and this is starting to be shown out in the data,
is how are future generations going to view the NFL and football? And if you look at the
data, U.S. adults as a whole, 33% say the NFL is their favorite professional sports league. And
that's down like maybe a little bit. And I think basketball is at like 11%, which is where I got
the 3x stat for Americans prefer to basketball. Yep. Soccer's grown a lot. Baseball's declined significantly in the past couple generations. But if you look at Gen Z, only 23% of Gen Z say that the NFL is
their favorite professional sport. So 10 points less than the broader population. And basketball
in Gen Z is 19%, right there pretty close to football. From a revenue perspective, the NFL today makes twice as much as basketball, but that's a pretty damning trend looking at where Gen Z's interests lie.
Yeah. We can talk much more about the broader context of the NFL and analysis, but this whole
thing was just bad, period, for the NFL. How do you bury these studies and how do you deny
the existence of these things when people
in your organization have been hired to commission this research and then you're burying it for
decades? And it's your players. It is your product on the field. The betrayal of trust happened on
so many dimensions. But also the timing of this was really bad. This came out at the dawn of the
social media era. Had this happened during, say, you 60s, 70s, 80s, of course,
what it actually was would be just as bad, but the Rozelle NFL approach controlled the narrative
would have worked so much better. We would not be talking about this in the same way,
but it came out at the dawn of the social media era, and that really was botched by the NFL.
Yeah, that's a great point. It's like the old playbook sort of didn't work anymore
in the social media era. It's also interesting to note who wasn't producing content about
concussions. I mean, this Will Smith movie came out that I don't think was through the media
channels of any of the NFL's partners. I think the NFL wields a lot of influence
and saying, oh, you may not be a part of the networks that get our broadcast in the next
generation. I don't think this is true, but there was accusations that the NFL created a crappy
Monday night football schedule a few years ago to get back at some of the ESPN commentators for
the way that they sort of were critical of the NFL some of the ESPN commentators for the way that they
sort of were critical of the NFL. And then ESPN ended up actually firing those people,
and they said it was for unrelated reasons. But I think the NFL wields a lot of influence over
their broadcast partners and thus over how the NFL is talked about.
A, of course they do. B, that's bad in and of itself. C, again, the timing on this,
I don't think the NFL understood or was prepared for, that strategy would have worked really well 30 years ago.
But in the social media era where individuals have Twitter accounts and players have Twitter
accounts and all of those fired reporters have Twitter accounts, a lot harder to control the
narrative. Yep. Speaking of hard to control the narrative, let's talk about blackballing Colin Kaepernick. And I think an interesting place to start is the
job of the commissioner. So the commissioner is not the president or CEO of football with any
obligation to customers the way the CEO would, or a purview over high-ranking executives
that they can order to do things. The owners are not their executives, and the commissioner's
obligation is not to the fans. The commissioner is hired to do one job, and that job is speak for
and do things that are in the best interests of the owners as a whole.
And so if the most powerful owners want something, that is what the commissioner does.
That is what the message is from the NFL. The NFL itself is a very thin layer on top of a whole
bunch of teams that are their own very large businesses. In fact, a lot of hay was made about the NFL switching in
2015 from a nonprofit to a for-profit. The NFL has very little net income. Who cares what its
tax filing status is? It all gets distributed out to the teams. Right. The teams are their own
taxpaying entities and their own businesses. And so Roger Goodell makes $40 plus million a year
to do what the owners
want and they hire him to do that and they will fire him if he doesn't do that.
Oh, man, there are these great quotes in America's Game where the owners are talking about Pete
Rozelle with the representative of the players at the time they're negotiating contracts and
the players are complaining that Pete Rozelle isn't being neutral in these negotiations. The owners are like, of course he's neutral. We pay him damn well to be
neutral. So yeah, the commissioner of the NFL is like the ultimate in shareholder responsibility.
In fact, shareholder responsibility is his only responsibility.
Yeah, he is acting as directed by the owners, which we should say that direction by the owners
includes the two most important powers granted to the NFL front office by the owners. One,
negotiating their revenue share deal with the Players Association, which is the collective
bargaining agreement that we mentioned with the salary cap. And two, their deal with the TV
networks. And of course, this is their largest expense on the player side
and their largest revenue stream on the TV deal side.
But back to Colin Kaepernick.
Yeah.
So in the good old days of football,
it was a bunch of reasonably young enterprising owners
who loved football and owned teams.
It wasn't clear if they were going to be good businesses or not,
but they were super competitive.
The league as itself and thus all the owners
were cowboys trying to make it for themselves in the world
and feel the thrill of willing something into existence.
And those people all got old and didn't want to change at all.
Now, most of those people are dead
and it's their descendants who are also old who own these teams. Yes. all got old and didn't want to change at all. Now, most of those people are dead,
and it's their descendants who are also old who own these teams.
Yes.
And so now there's these very interesting artifacts
of the league being grown up,
old and stodgy, the incumbent,
something like that,
when they were once a startup,
especially when it comes to just acknowledging
that a guy can protest the national anthem.
Yep.
I do think when that happened in 2016,
it was a lot more of a radical act
than it might seem today.
And there were a lot of people at the time
who were deeply offended by it.
He was using the NFL's platform
to sort of make a very personal argument.
And there were a lot of people in the NFL
who understood why he was doing it
because 70% of the NFL is Black. So there was a lot going on here.
Right. And we should say what actually happened, Kaepernick in 2016 took a knee during the
national anthem to protest police brutality and racial inequality in the US. After that season,
he was a free agent, zero teams signed him. And of course, he had some disappointing seasons and
injuries. But the NFL never explicitly said
that all the owners colluded and agreed nobody should hire him for taking a knee.
But let's be real here. The NFL blackballed Colin Kaepernick after this, 100%.
Oh, Kaepernick filed a grievance and eventually reached a confidential settlement with the NFL.
I mean, the whole macro thing here is very strange of the owners to let this seemingly
minor thing turn into the gigantic media mess the way that they did.
Yeah. And I think the interesting thing for the purposes of our discussion here about this,
I don't think this ever would have happened or happened in the same way in the NBA. The NBA
embraced both social media and the strategy of letting players have their own platforms,
be their own voices, and promote the league through that. And the NFL was the opposite of
that. They were the command and the control. We own the message. Players do not have a voice.
And there was no clearer example of this. I mean, to your point earlier, 70% of the players are black. The players
are the core product on the field. They're effectively your partners. They make 48.8%
of whatever the league makes. Which makes them effectively an equity partner. Oh yeah, in the
very same way that Warren Buffett always refers to the government as our large, silent shareholders.
But bottom line, the NFL wildly mishandled this,
let it get completely out of hand. This is the way that we know of Colin Kaepernick now. He's
sort of like an icon for this thing. So, I mean, if what the NFL wanted to do was not amplify his
protest by blackballing him and making him not able to play, it totally blew up in their face,
and he became a national headline
for months and months and months.
Right, which is emblematic of the NFL
not understanding the social media era.
Yep.
So, all this to say,
it was very compelling for David, you and I,
to spend a bunch of time talking about the NFL
up through 1980 and the Roselle era,
but the Paul Tagliabue era and the
Roger Goodell era, I mean, revenues have gone up, team values have gone up, games have gone from
standard def to HD to 4K, but you're not particularly more inspired about what the NFL has done
in all these years. And it's sort of no wonder we wanted to spend less time on it because it seems like it's just one train wreck after another in terms of mishandling situations.
I don't know. It's certainly the end of the hero's journey sort of happened at the end of
the Roselle era. And it won't hurt their business for a long time. That's the interesting thing.
I think this is a good point to transition into analysis. And why don't we do playbook and then
do power? One that just really strikes me through all this is the Lindy effect. Despite everything you just said, football is bigger than it ever has been.
$12 billion a year in revenue from the TV deals alone.
A huge amount of revenue and now diversified those revenue sources. It's not just old line broadcast networks trying to hang on
that are paying them this money. No, it's Google and Amazon that are paying them this money.
They're paying, what, close to $4 billion a year from the biggest tech companies in the world.
Yeah. The NFL is going to be just fine. And that revenue is almost assuredly going to grow
at a very healthy clip. So even despite all this, people love their football. I still love
watching football. Totally. Me too. I felt it was important to open the episode with that.
I feel like I'm a slight apologist for still loving football as much as I do.
I was getting ready to tweet that, wow, Super Bowl I looked really fun thing. And I was like,
I wonder if I'm going to take heat for people being like, huh, I wonder if I think less of Ben now because he really likes football. And that's probably overly sensitive. But the fact that the thought existed is not good for the NFL long term. And I know that I represent a more left-leaning group of people, which would cause me to ask that question to myself that most people wouldn't even cross their radar, but not good long-term that that thought
occurred. Two things. One, I mean, again, that just reinforces the power of the Lindy effect to me.
The NFL is just fine and is going to be just fine for a very, very long time. Now, I do think the
younger generations thing is a real risk. And I think related to that is one, basketball definitely
won the social media era in a way, not to as big a degree as the NFL won the TV era, but basketball's on the rise. And related to that is number two, the NFL has never figured out international. Many fits and starts.
Have you read about these home marketing agreements?
No. It's really weird. The NFL now, because there's zero international
interest in the NFL, like zero. They go play these other games in other countries, and the people who
watch them are people from the US who fly to go watch their favorite team play in somewhere exotic.
I mean, for God's sakes, baseball has a robust international presence.
Right. And as we talked about on our NBA episode, I mean, basketball's entire future growth and current sort of groundswell of popularity is young people and international.
Oh, it's the second most popular sport in the world and growing very, very rapidly. shut that down, couldn't get the owners to care about it. This whole marketing agreement thing that they're doing is saying that teams have an exclusive right versus other NFL teams
to market in certain countries. Oh, no way. I didn't see this.
I think it's like the Cowboys can advertise the Cowboys in Mexico. It's that sort of thing
because they want to try to build affinity for teams where there's like some theoretical mapping
to that country based on ethnic groups in the area or proximity. It's a very odd
sort of fool's errand at international expansion. That does not seem like a sound international
strategy to me. No. And the question kind of becomes, how can the NFL continue to grow? Or can it? Because the average number of people who watch any given NFL game, pick your metric. Is it the average Monday night football game? Is it the average kickoff game of the season? Is it the average Super Bowl? It's like up and down over the last 20 years. It's amazing that it's as high as it is when people don't watch
anything else on TV, but I honestly, I'm having a hard time understanding how they grow the fanbase.
Well, clearly, the flywheel is no longer spinning faster. It is still operating very efficiently,
but the core to growing the original NFL flywheel is increasing fan reach and engagement.
And that's no longer happening.
Right.
And then you have this interesting question of, is college football starting to pay players
competitive to the NFL or additive?
Because college football has fueled the growth of the NFL.
I mean, think about it this way.
The NBA and Major League Baseball teams have to pay to operate farm teams that no one wants to
watch or play in. And the NFL gets all the benefit of all the development of all of these players
in their college years for free. They benefit from the storylines around them too.
So when someone comes into Major League Baseball
and gets promoted out of the minors,
everyone's like, who cares?
I have no idea who that person is.
Whereas the Heisman Trophy winner
who you know about what their childhood was like
comes out of NCAA football out of the-
Right, the storylines are fully baked and ready to go.
Yeah.
College football has been the best thing to ever happen to the NFL for basically its whole existence. Right. The storylines are fully baked and ready to go. Yeah. College football has been the best thing to ever happen to the NFL
for basically its whole existence.
Right. It was the worst thing for the first 20 years, and then it was the best thing.
Good point. Yeah. I think the biggest players getting paid in the NCAA right now with the
sort of weird way that the booster stuff works is like $2 million. They're not competing for talent,
and I don't think the NFL will start trying to not competing for talent. And I don't think the
NFL will start trying to sign earlier college players. So I don't think they'll be competing
directly or in the same order of magnitude. The revenue that big colleges make and that
these conferences make isn't NFL size, but these are huge deals. So the NFL for comparison
has a $12 billion aggregate set of media rights that it sells. The Big Ten deal is a billion
dollars a year. They just signed a seven-year deal at a billion dollars a year, which is twice
their previous deal from 2016. Ends up somewhere in the neighborhood of $100 million a year going
to each school. The SEC deal is kind of a bargain. It's $300 million a year with ESPN.
I don't understand how the whole SEC is worth only $300 million a
year when the NFL is worth $12 billion. But that, I don't know, just kind of feels like poor
negotiating. All this to say, the business of college football is still much, much smaller
than the NFL. But it'll be really interesting to see sort of how it, as players start to get
paid more, where it finds its footing in the landscape and if it changes at all from where
it is today. Okay, so that's college football football a thing in playbook here that i think is interesting
to talk about is the relationship that the nfl has with its players as a supplier and with the
networks as a customer so it got itself into this trap for a while where it was negotiating with the
networks. And so it would sign a big deal to get a bunch of revenue and then would quickly have
negotiation coming up with the players. And they seem to have switched to this thing now where they
sign a collective bargaining agreement for a decade with the players. I think they did that in 2020, that lasts through 2030. And then in 2022, that's when they renegotiated the 10-year rights for media.
So they seem to have switched to this, which is a good business decision, probably doesn't bode
well for the players. But before anyone knows what the big new revenue contract looks like,
they go and they lock in all the pricing on their suppliers.
Now, granted, it's a rev share. It's a percentage basis. Yeah, right. So in that respect, it's fair.
But it is quite clever to have gotten off the tick tock cycle of, you know, having the players
have a bunch of leverage after seeing what the media deal looks like. And doing it in this order.
Yep. The other thing that I've been sort of charting is the media deals go up dramatically in value,
but the average viewers kind of stays the same.
Like in 2002, the kickoff game had about 20 million people watch and it rose and it was
in the mid twenties and then it dipped back down below 20.
And last year, about 20 million people watched the kickoff game.
So we're in about two decades of audience stagnation.
Yeah. So why is it that the media rights are worth so much more when the number of audience
impressions stays the same? I'm curious where your head is on that. I have some theories,
but on a CPM basis, it seems like the advertisers are all just paying more money now, or at least the
TV networks believe that they can make more money from something, and so they're willing to pay more
for the rights? That's a great question. So without having thought about it too much, my first instinct
is to say I think it's scarcity value, in that I don't think there's, in the modern media world,
anywhere else except live football
where you can hit a huge amount of people all at once across demographics. Yep. I think that's
definitely part of it. Another argument would be, well, they're finding a way to put more ad slots
into the same amount of media, but that's not true. They've actually held flat or in some cases even
decreased the number of commercials over the last 15 years in NFL broadcasts. So you're thinking,
okay, the audience size is about the same. The number of ad slots is about the same.
So what else could be going on here? I think part of it is you're right is that the networks are
quickly getting into a place where they're like, we don't really
have any other content that people want to watch. So we kind of need this no matter what. And that
advantage is the NFL and the negotiation where they come in and they say, look, I know you used
to be super profitable on buying these rights from us. And then your business on the back end
was selling all these advertisements against it. We think you should just compete against each other until your margins are zero and we're
going to accrue all the profit pool now because there's basically nothing else that you'll put
on that people want to watch. I think that's probably right. Both in that over time,
regardless of what happened with the media landscape, the NFL would probably be able to
run that strategy and capture more of the profit pool because there's four major competitors now
with Fox on the customer side. For those networks, for the last decade, run the counterfactual of
the networks no longer had football. They don't exist anymore. This has been life support for
them for a decade.
So here's the interesting thing is you might say like, well, if the margins are razor thin,
they need a ton of volume because effectively what is happening here is the profit is getting reallocated to a different part of the supply chain. There's no more value in distribution
and all the value is accruing to the content creator. You could make an analogy to
the airline industry where no one was willing to pay for a better experience on a flight.
All the margin got competed away between all the airlines. So all the airlines had to merge
because you had to have massive, massive scale. That's also what happened to these
media companies that are distributing the content. I mean, AT&T slash DirecTV, NBC slash Universal,
the companies that are buying the rights are massive combinations that can actually afford
to generate any margin. And I didn't dive in to look at like, and I'm not sure you actually could
isolate this, of what are the unit economics of buying NFL rights and then selling a bunch of
ads against them. But I have to imagine they're much worse than they used to be.
They have to be. I mean, with these numbers, there's no way that they can't ever road it.
And it's pretty genius that the NFL doesn't do this themselves, that they rely on broadcast
partners, because they've basically observed that they can get
all these people to do all this work and pay them all this guaranteed money.
And the NFL still gets to keep all the profits.
Right.
And they can resell it like six times over.
Right.
The NFL doesn't have to film the games other than NFL films.
They don't have to, you know, have the broadcast trucks.
They don't have to have the relationship with the consumer and do all the direct marketing to the consumer to onboard to
their direct video platform. They don't have to sell the ads to the advertisers. They somehow
have outsourced and commoditized all of that. And I think they get to keep the vast majority
of the profits and will continue to shift that balance in their favor. This is probably a good
time to bring up the Amazon deal
that we've referred to with Thursday Night Football.
And news is coming out, this is the first season
that Amazon is the exclusive destination
for Thursday Night Football, right?
Correct.
Yeah, they used to air Thursday Night Football
also on Fox and on the NFL Network,
which is the NFL's own channel
to do mostly non-game programming,
but some experimental stuff themselves like Red Zone and alternate game broadcasts.
But Thursday night is just Amazon now.
And news is coming out now right at the end of the season that
from an economics perspective for Amazon and an ad basis, it vastly underperformed expectations.
Yeah. So then Amazon is having to do make goods with the advertisers because Amazon wasn't able
to get enough people to watch the streams. Because frankly, I think a lot of people want
to watch the NFL on TV. And it's kind of complicated to figure out how to stream it
and watch it through Amazon. And I know it can just happen on my little set-top box and my Apple
TV, install the app and this, that, and the other thing. But you know what's easier for most people?
Turning on Channel 3. So it's totally fascinating watching the balance of
power in the value chain. You might think, huh, well, is the packaging component that the NFL does,
the packaging of the talent and the coaches and creating the storylines actually where all the
value lies. It's interesting to me that the players, the NFLPA has managed to negotiate for half the revenue. Good on the Players Association
for getting that big a piece of the pie because they've actually done a pretty good job of
managing to shift some of the value from the NFL even further upstream to the NFL suppliers rather
than letting it all sort of collect in the packaging component that the NFL even further upstream to the NFL suppliers rather than letting it all sort of collect in the
packaging component that the NFL has. Yep. Doing this whole episode has made me
really realize that there is a huge amount of value add that the NFL and their partners bring
to the product beyond the players. Now, nobody should ever shed a tear for the NFL and
the owners at the expense of the players ever. But if you were to make an argument that the players
are everything, they are the product, the game on the field that they play is the product full stop,
they should get much more. I don't think that's a fair argument. They play a football game,
but the NFL's product is sports entertainment.
Yes. Completely agree with that. There's so many here that we've talked about. It's just the NFL's sort of for the greater good mindset, getting them to where they are today. It's
going to be so hard for them to keep taking advantage of that going forward. There is a
interesting one, which is on a revenue basis, you know, it's an $18 billion a year
revenue business. The NFL actually owns way more mindshare than its revenue would illustrate.
A strange statement to make is the NFL is an oddly small business for how large a role it
plays in our lives. And to contextualize who else makes $18 billion in revenue, General Mills, Adobe, and Halliburton.
The NFL's share of lips is way higher
than any of those companies' products.
Well, General Mills is a really interesting one.
How much of General Mills' business is generated
by advertising time on NFL games?
Yeah, that's a great point.
I'm sure a very large percentage.
Yeah.
I continue to think that networks
are just on this treadmill
where they're just going to keep paying
more and more and more for NFL rights
until it is actually non-economic
for them to do so.
But then they'll be in so deep
that it's pretty hard to recover from that.
Yeah.
I've got one more playbook theme that I want to throw in. Buying any professional sports
franchise 10 to 15 years ago was an incredible trade for two reasons.
By the way, just to add some numbers to it, the average NFL team value,
1.2 billion in 2012. So that's a decade ago, average $1.2 billion. And today is about $4.5
billion for the average NFL team. We're not talking Cowboys. We're not talking Giants,
if those were to change hands. Yeah. We were texting with our friend Andrew Marks,
the lead up to preparing for this episode. He made the point, those are based on Forbes valuations.
You can't trust those valuations. I think any actual trade would have to be higher than that. The reason number one is
just scarcity value. There are a finite number of these things and they're not making more.
And there are a lot of people that want to own them for a lot of reasons, not all of which are
economic. Yep. So that's one. And that's never going to change. The owning an NFL team, it's like a grown-up NFT.
It is the ultimate NFT.
If you are a gajillionaire and you want to flex on other gajillionaires,
this is a way that at least is very likely to have a lot of durable value
for you to get to keep doing that, regardless of its underlying cash flows.
That is a net present happiness value positive trade for a lot of billionaires.
But I will say, when you have something that increases in value because of social
signaling and desirability and not tied to underlying cash flows,
that is a potential sign of a valuation bubble.
No.
Not always. There's luxury watches that have kept their value for centuries,
but it should make you wonder. I mean, team values have ballooned to the point where there are very,
very few people who can buy one today. Yep. Which means that a change in sentiment among that very narrow market will have a huge impact. Totally. But for now, I think the valuations
are probably safe. Ooh. All right. We'll have to see in a few years.
I think they've reached a plateau.
I don't think we're going anywhere north of
eight, nine billion in the near future.
Oh, I agree.
I just don't think you're going to see these things.
You don't think they're going to deflate?
No, they're not going to trade at fire sale prices.
Yeah.
And we should say too,
all this is using a combination of estimated data from Forbes,
but also the Green Bay Packers annual reports. The average revenue multiple in 2012 of a team
went from about 4x to about 8x between 2012 and 2022.
Wow. So yeah, multiple expansion along with the rest of the market.
But I think this is going to be more durable.
Potentially justified by the fact that most people don't actually own these things for
their cash generating characteristics anyway. It's a very fancy gem. Yep, totally. Okay, so that's one.
But then two, the more applicable lesson, I think, for most people listening, although maybe we've
got some people listening who could buy an NFL team. That'd be cool. Include us in the ownership
group. If so, give us a shout. Acquiredfm at gmail.com. Point number two is, I think there was a narrative around cord cutting
10 years ago that was linear broadcast television is dead,
live sports, and especially football are the last bastion,
but who knows how long this will last.
And I think that was only half the picture.
I think what I, at least a lot of people didn't see back then
is that these leagues, the
NFL especially, are going to be totally fine in a post-linear TV era. And no further proof is needed
than Amazon and Google are the latest people to pay boatloads of money to the NFL. Yep, the NFL
will make the transition to digital distribution. And it's
pretty amazing that they didn't need to build it themselves. MLB did the whole BAM tech thing.
The NFL has built basically no technology, basically no distribution, and basically no
direct relationship with the audience. And they'll still be fine. They'll still be fine.
They outsourced all the hard parts. And they also completely whiffed on strategy for the social media era.
But they're still fine.
Yeah, it is wild.
We talked about this a lot on the NBA episode.
But just to recap here, because the story hasn't really changed.
LeBron has well over 100 million social media followers.
Instagram alone. And the two largest NFL players by social media following
are OBJ and Tom Brady, both of which are in the low teens. So like a 10x difference.
Is that interesting that people don't want to follow NFL stars the way they want to follow
NBA stars on social media? I think if I remember it, the core thesis of our NBA episode is what
they got so right through the social media era was give the players the voice, give the players
the platform. The individual person is the hero on social media. And that's so antithetical.
And the NFL is take away the player's voice, control the message.
And that's also reflective of the sports themselves, right? Like basketball is a team sport, but like on the spectrum of individual to team, like football is 100% on
the side of team. And then there's just obvious stuff too, like NFL players wear helmets,
basketball players don't wear a helmet, you know, like that's little stuff, but it doesn't matter
as a business. NFL's fine. They're totally fine. Yep. While we're contrasting leagues,
there's this pretty interesting thing that I've been thinking about, which is this cooperative
capitalist communism thing that the NFL did. It was really good at creating parity among teams
to be the most competitive, but let's take it to the level of the players. Interestingly enough,
the NFL has been the best of any of the leagues at creating the narrowest band of player compensation in the same philosophy that they applied to the league
competition.
Now, of course, it is nowhere near equal pay among players.
And like, yes, it's a bummer that while Aaron Rodgers makes $50 million a year, there's
a long tail of players that only play one to three years making league minimum and then
turn out, which I think is mid-single-digit
millions of lifetime compensation from football. So still, that's good money.
Yeah. Lifetime, though? So players are definitely variably rewarded based on their value to any
given team, but the NBA and the MLB are way less equal than the NFL. The superstars in the NBA,
like LeBron James, including sponsorships, makes $127
million a year. There is no one in the sport of football that comes close. There are three
basketball and three soccer players at the top of the list before any football players. The NFL has
managed to sort of smooth the curve more than other sports have. Well, I think this is also
related to the social media thing. And really, this is like the
big divergence between the players and the sports and the leagues. NFL is a league. Great. They're
fine. But the players, A, just the direct endorsements. But I think other league players,
and especially the NBA, have been able to build wealth and businesses and revenue streams much better than NFL players because they're the
platform and the audience value accrues to them so much more. Yep, agree. LeBron, I think, is already
a billionaire, and especially once his playing days are over, he will be a multi-multi-multi-billionaire
because of the influence that he has. Apparently, LeBron James has signed some secret deal with Nike for the rest of his lifetime
that's something crazy high that is just not even accounted for in these numbers.
Wow. Well, I think we need to do a Nike episode at some point.
Agree. This is actually a good place to flip to power.
Awesome. For new listeners, this is the section we do an analysis based on
the great book by Hamilton Helmer, where we run through each of his seven powers that a business
could have to earn long-term differential profits versus its competitors. And the seven powers are
counter-positioning, scale economies, switching costs, network economies, process power,
branding, and cornered resource. All right. I think they
definitely have a cornered resource. If you want to watch professional football played by
this set of athletes, they are the only game in town. Yep. They absolutely have a cornered resource.
Yeah. I think this is like maybe the most clear corner coordinate resource that we've ever had on the show.
Yep, completely agree. And clearly, this is why the fight with the AFL is worth it. We need the greatest players on earth to play this game, and we can't have them spread across two leagues competing against each other. If we have all the best players, then we get to do all the incredible things that the NFL has gotten to do, like the media rights negotiations. Yep. I think during the Roselle era
and the dawn of the TV era,
I think they were counter-positioned
against Major League Baseball
in that while decline in revenue
from the gate by adding TV
certainly was a hit to them,
it wasn't as much of an existential hit in the way
it was for Major League Baseball. And so the NFL was more able and willing to experiment with the
new business model of TV as the primary revenue source than baseball was able to.
Yeah, certainly. And I think generalizing from that, I agree with even more that this for the
greater good mindset was easier to do when
everyone's individual franchise was smaller. But when you've got these teams that have already
been around for 100 years, like good luck talking them out of a machine that already works well.
There's no way even in 1949 that the Yankees would have agreed to a league first mindset.
Yes.
Let alone today.
Yep.
When they have their own television network, etc.
Yep.
You know, I've been thinking about branding.
I actually don't think this one has branding power
because the definition of branding power
is if somebody offers you the same thing
with a different brand on it, will you pay more?
The thing about getting multiple congressional antitrust exemptions
is that there isn't another game in town. I mean, there's sort of a rebooted XFL, there's sort of a rebooted USFL,
but it's not that people don't care about those because the NFL brand isn't there. People don't
care about them because it's not good football. It all comes back to cornered resource. They have
the players. Right, exactly. You could maybe put the
antitrust exemption, you could kind of shoehorn that into process power. Or a cornered resource.
Yeah, or a cornered resource. Like you said, no new league is going to have that.
It's like totally fascinating that the government thinks it's good enough for the country to issue
an antitrust exemption. It's like, well, having a big popular sports league is good for us. So
let's enable that to be as big as possible.
Oh, man.
Gosh, I just thought about the Kaepernick stuff.
That's got to be playing into the NFL's thought process here, too.
They need to maintain healthy government and relationship, not just government, but
healthy political relationships with the current political party, whatever that is.
Yep, that's a great point.
I think there's definitely scale economies here in the sports entertainment aspect of the product.
Yeah, there's no way you could spend the amount of money it takes
to produce a good NFL game without the audience
that they have to justify that level of cost.
Even a single Sunday game would bankrupt any startup league
to put those kind of production values in.
Right. I think it's about $44 million per game is effectively what the average broadcast partner
is paying the NFL just for like one single game. Yeah. And just for the rights.
Right. If you're the NFL, if you can go make $44 million by making a game happen,
and that doesn't include anything on the field, selling tickets or
that's revenue just from piping that game to a TV network. Or they're not even doing the piping,
allowing a TV network to come on the field. To show up and produce the game. Yeah.
Right. Then you can afford to have a whole bunch of costs to make that experience happen.
Yep. Value creation, value capture. And the way that I want
to do value creation, value capture here is of the value created by the NFL in the world, how
much of it do they capture? There's a thing we didn't talk about, which is taxpayer funded
stadiums. All the research you read about new stadiums that are funded by taxpayers and not
every stadium is funded by taxpayers. Like the new Giants Jets one in New York are funded by taxpayers and not every stadium is funded by taxpayers like the new giants jets one in new york is funded by the team in the nfl whereas like the bills one is going to
be funded by the state of new york largely and every piece of research you read there is like
yeah they're at best break even for communities unless it's part of some like larger economic
redevelopment thing so i think the NFL has, they're now unbelievably
extractive of the networks. They've historically been very extractive of players, but now the
players seem to have a pretty good or at least better deal than they ever had before. And NFL
teams are very extractive of communities in these stadium deals. And I think if you look at the $18 billion a year of revenue, the NFL,
if you include the players, captures as much value as it possibly can. They are unbelievably good
at value capture. I mean, they literally resell the same meteorites like multiple times over.
Yes. Value capture pioneers, I believe, is a phrase that we used on another episode.
Okay, that's got to be another acquired merch store t-shirt.
But it is amazing how much Mindshare the NFL does own, in my opinion, on top of the actual
revenue number. They don't leave a lot of consumer surplus in dollars, but given our earlier
conversation that $18 billion isn't that much revenue compared to other companies we've covered on this show, maybe there is some kind of unquantifiable consumer mindshare that does
exist on top of any of the revenue they generate. I think you could totally make that argument. I
mean, you are making that argument here. It's beyond the scope of this episode. But the number
of sitting U.S. presidents that become deeply enmeshed in the then-current activities of the NFL, it's like almost every single president.
Totally. How can you put a price on the fun of a Super Bowl party or texting about an amazing catch with your dad?
Or, you know, there's all sorts of things that are hard to value.
Well, it's also a little bit similar to the trading value of NFL teams and like what price
would they actually trade at? Even as the NFL has become this incredible business,
they don't trade a rational economic prices because the people buying them are doing their
present happiness value equations, you know, not economic value.
Right. As we talked about, these NFL teams are valued more like
scarce speech front property more so than cash flowing businesses. Right. As we talked about, these NFL teams are valued more like scarce speech front property
more so than cash flowing businesses. Yep. I'd be curious to hear anyone's thought on
if the NFL generates more value than $18 billion a year.
Interestingly, the NFL today is less about sort of what it was in the 40s, 50s, and 60s, this team of guys who really
hates another team and wants to destroy them at all costs. And they're led by this fearless leader
who's probably also their owner and maybe a player on the team. At this point, the players seem to
recognize that they're all basically employees, and the players are more in it together as
co-workers than they are against each other,
even for players who were on opposite teams, the way that before and after a game, they'll come and
hug each other or rekindle a relationship with another player. At the end of the day,
they all work for the owners. And so it's probably a good thing for them to recognize that
now, the real reality on the field. And at least it means they're going to be better
at arguing what's fair for them from a business that demands an immense amount and maybe even
years off their lives for a lot of people. I think this has actually been a great development
for certainly the pro game, but football in general too. For so long, I think it's a hangover
from all the
college stuff that we talked about at the beginning of the episode and like what football
was in this sort of 19th and early 20th century American, like ideal of manhood and character
building. But the opponent was the enemy. This is war. These are bad people that you're fighting
against. Like, no, they are the exact same as you wearing a different uniform.
And I think most of those toxic elements are mostly gone from the game now.
Or not totally gone, but way more diminished versus what they used to be, even when I was growing up.
There is definitely finally an acknowledgement that they are entertainers above all else. There's a good amount of camaraderie among we are here to
put on a show and be in the business that the NFL's business is in. That seemed to be the case
for a couple decades before the players acted like it was the case. And it almost felt like
they were being taken advantage of, which not that they're not being taken advantage of now,
but at least they seem to recognize what's going on. Well, there was a whole institutional complex around it that
started at Pop Warner football and went through high school and went through college of like,
this game is greater than yourself. And this is about an epic struggle, good and bad. And like,
this is just not the case. Yep. I also think it is just terribly tragic reading about the
long-term impacts on some of these players.
One we didn't even talk about is that seven players from the Patriots 2001 championship
have already passed away between the ages of 35 and 50, and 24 total members of that
team are afflicted with symptoms of football brain injuries.
2001 wasn't that long ago.
I remember watching that Super Bowl for the number of people that got
duped into continuing to play football when if they knew the information they probably wouldn't
have is just massively value destructive. This is like I was talking a little bit earlier,
my own experience playing football. If I had known what I know today, I would have made
different decisions for sure. That era of players and before, up until all this news
started coming out and even the veterans at that point in time, you got to feel so bad for those
guys because you didn't know. Now everybody knows. You can have lots of different opinions,
but it's all out in the open. You know what's going on. But yeah, 2001, those guys didn't know.
That's crazy. What did you say? Seven players out of their, what, 53, I think, on an NFL roster?
Have passed away. Yeah.
Have passed away. Wow.
So let's not end on that note. Let's close with what's the bear case and what's the bull case for
the NFL going forward? We've talked about a lot of the bears. The cooperative armor that has got
them here begins to shatter. Youth not playing, player safety issues, the failure of international expansion.
Frankly, for the same multiple, I'd much rather buy an NBA team than an NFL team.
But I'm curious to hear your thoughts on a bull case for the NFL.
My bull case is what I've been saying here for a while now on analysis is the Lindy effect
I kind of think all this is noise from a business standpoint for the NFL and a staying power
standpoint it's not going anywhere it's one of the most incredible cornered resources in the world
it's gonna be completely fine I completely agree with you and it's funny all the negative stuff
we've talked about the NFL will continue to be a ginormous, successful and growing business for a long time, is my opinion. And of course, we haven't even
talked about the sports betting, which is now legal in the United States, which we don't exactly
know the ways that that will occur to the NFL, but you can be very sure the NFL is going to
generate a lot more revenue from legalized sports betting.
Indeed, we shall see on that front.
You know, I just want to say too, like doing this episode, it was really fun.
And just like on a personal note, you know, I've had a, I think, probably similar relationship to
football with you over the years. More complicated too, because, you know,
as we talk about here and I played for many years.
Yeah.
I had, you know, certainly a lot of mixed emotions over the past decade,
including many years where I just stopped watching football altogether.
And it was really fun doing this, re-engaging with the game,
re-engaging with all the content around the game,
all the entertainment content.
It is great.
The NFL puts out great content.
The quality of the play on the field is great.
There are so many problems around
it on so many levels, but it was just really fun to like rekindle a personal relationship with the
game and with the NFL in particular through this episode. So I think the game is going to be fine.
Clearly the business is going to be fine, whatever either of us thinks. But yeah, I'm glad we did
this. It was fun. Yeah. All this to say, can't wait to watch the playoffs. I'm going to have some mixed feelings
and some cognitive dissonance, but no doubt I am so excited to watch the playoffs and the Super Bowl.
Me too. You ready for some football?
I am ready for some football. All right. 10 second carve out on my end. Go watch The Menu.
It was a unbelievably fun movie, beautifully shot. That's
all I have to recommend. David? My carve out was going to be Peyton's Places on ESPN Plus,
which I know we talked about at the top of the episode, but it's so good. Nostalgia,
Lindy effect. It's right there. Go watch it. It's true. All right. With that, after you finish
this episode, come talk about it. There are 14,000 other smart members of the Acquired community at acquired.fm slash slack. We've got a merch store. It's not as good
as the NFL's, but we're working on it. Acquired Enterprises coming soon. Acquired.fm slash store.
And if you're looking for more Acquired between now and our next episode, search Acquired LP
Show in the podcast player of your choice. We just did an awesome interview.
And not that our part of the interview is awesome, but she was awesome with Megan Reynolds from Altimeter on building a capital formation function at an investment firm. With that,
listeners, we'll see you next time. We'll see you next time. Is it you, is it you, is it you who got the truth now?