Last year, Quibi was eviscerated by the media for its quick flameout.
After raising $2B, the short-form video startup launched and shut down all within 6 months.
Well, last week, another media-related venture saw an even more spectacular blowup:
The teams involved with the Super League plan — primarily from the UK, Spain, and Italy — were some of the world’s most valuable brands (e.g., Manchester United, Real Madrid).
There is an existing European football competition, called the Champions League, but the richest clubs wanted to address 2 issues:
The Super League was projected to bring in ~$5B a year in broadcasting rights vs. only $3B for the 2018-19 Champions League season, per The Economist.
The proposed Super League arrangement is actually similar to how American sports are structured (i.e., teams don’t get demoted for poor performance).
By guaranteeing a spot in the top league, team values benefit. Case in point: 43 of the 50 most valuable sports teams are based in the US.
Star players and team managers weren’t informed about the plan.
Fans of excluded clubs were upset for obvious reasons, but even fans of the Super League participants saw it as a cynical cash grab.
The billionaire owner of Real Madrid maintains that the Super League will proceed in some form. Meanwhile, UK sports minister Oliver Dowden says he will use every tool at his disposal to block the Super League.
“Owners should remember that they are only custodians of their clubs,” Dowden said. “They forget fans at their own perils.”