J
Joseph_Gallant
Guest
R.I.P.: New York Giants Owner Wellington Mara; Helped Pave Way For NFL League-Wide TV Deals
Longtime New York Giants owner Wellington Mara is dead at the age of 89.
I am bringing the subject up on this board because in 1962, he and his brother Jack (who were co-owners of the Giants at the time) agreed to equally share network television revenues among all NFL teams, paving the way for the first-ever league-wide regular-season network TV contract with CBS.
Prior to 1962, reach NFL team made it's own deal for television coverage. For the previous seven years, most (but not all) NFL teams had individual deals with CBS. Exceptions included Pittsburgh and the old Baltimore Colts (who had deals with NBC in the very early 1960's); I think the Cleveland Browns also had their own deal with WJW-8 there which had the station syndicating Browns' games on a regional basis.
Being in the number-one market, the Giants probably would have gotten more money for the 1962 season from their own TV deal than the share they eventually got from the league-wide deal with CBS.
With Mara having agreed to the idea, other large market NFL owners (George Halas in Chicago and Carroll Rosembloom in Los Angeles) fell in line.
And with all NFL regular-season and playoff games on national television, total revenues generated by all the teams are pretty much equal, whether in New York or Green Bay. As a result, some smaller market teams like Green Bay in the 1960's (and again in the 1990's) and Pittsburgh in the 1970's were able to win championships and successfully compete against "large market" clubs.
This is a link to a Fox Sports story on Mara.
Longtime New York Giants owner Wellington Mara is dead at the age of 89.
I am bringing the subject up on this board because in 1962, he and his brother Jack (who were co-owners of the Giants at the time) agreed to equally share network television revenues among all NFL teams, paving the way for the first-ever league-wide regular-season network TV contract with CBS.
Prior to 1962, reach NFL team made it's own deal for television coverage. For the previous seven years, most (but not all) NFL teams had individual deals with CBS. Exceptions included Pittsburgh and the old Baltimore Colts (who had deals with NBC in the very early 1960's); I think the Cleveland Browns also had their own deal with WJW-8 there which had the station syndicating Browns' games on a regional basis.
Being in the number-one market, the Giants probably would have gotten more money for the 1962 season from their own TV deal than the share they eventually got from the league-wide deal with CBS.
With Mara having agreed to the idea, other large market NFL owners (George Halas in Chicago and Carroll Rosembloom in Los Angeles) fell in line.
And with all NFL regular-season and playoff games on national television, total revenues generated by all the teams are pretty much equal, whether in New York or Green Bay. As a result, some smaller market teams like Green Bay in the 1960's (and again in the 1990's) and Pittsburgh in the 1970's were able to win championships and successfully compete against "large market" clubs.
This is a link to a Fox Sports story on Mara.