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Tyson Fury-inspired move set to boost Leeds United as £15m off-pitch deal agreed

A landmark EFL business decision which takes a leaf out of Tyson Fury’s camp’s book is set to provide a financial boost for Leeds United.

Fury and Leeds have endured simila𒆙r sporting fates in recent weeks.😼

The West Yorkshire side suffered a 1-0 defeat to Southampton in the Champi🌞onship play-off final at the end of May.

Photo by Jacques Feeney/Offside/Offside via Getty Images
Photo by Jacques Feeney/Offside/Offside via Getty Images

A week earlier, Fury lost by a♓ split decision in the biggest fight of his career, tꦬhe battle with Oleksandr Usyk to become undisputed heavyweight champion of the world in Riyadh.

Interestingly, a call made by the 35-year-old’s representatives ahead of that night mirrors a similar move made by the EFL with regards to broadcast rights.

It’s good news for Leeds in the short term. And it tells us something abo🌺ut the E♌FL’s TV strategy going forward.

EFL agree £15m broadcast deal

recently announced that they had struck a deal with ITV to show a tranche of Championship and League Cup fixtures next season.

Up to 20 live matches will be shown for free on ITV from January 2025 in an ag🍎reement believed to be worth around £15m ).

It will mark the first time in many years that the domestic EFL deal has been split on a non-exclusive basis, with matches sಌhown simultaneously by more than one broadcaster.

Interestingly, this mirrors the approach taken by the money men behind the Fury-Usyk bout in Saudi Arabia, whiꩵch was aired on Sky Sports, DAZN, TNT Sports and Amazon simult🔜aneously.

Several industry expert🌃s, such as Sports Pro Media’ꦦs remarked on the unusual choice to show the fight on a non-exclusive basis.

In the EFL’s case, it means Leeds fans who do not pay for Sky will lik♔ely be able to watch their team in league action on free-to-air television for th🌠e first time in a generation.

A sign of things to come?

The sublicensing agreement may tell us something🗹 about the direction of travel in the sports broadcast market.

In football particularly, there is growing frustration 🍰that supporters of the likes of Leeds are being priced out of both attending and watching live foo꧂tball.

There is a political awareness of this. The Liberal Democrats have even includ🍰ed an increase in free-to-air football part of their manifesto for🥀 the upcoming general election.

It could be that broadcasters are attempting to offset the substantial 🤪costs associated with acquiring exclusive rights.

Alternꦅatively, it may also serve as a strategic branding initiative that, within the context of nine and ten-figure TV deals, offers a favou💃rable, if unquantifiable, return on a relatively small investment.

Leeds to bank modest windfall from new Sky-ITV arrangement

While the cash from the innovative new agreement is dwarfed by the riches that were on offer to Leeds in the Premier League, it still represents a welcome windfall.

The EFL’s deal with Sky, which encompasses over 1,000 matches from next season, is worth♋ £935m over five years.

Leeds are probably the most watched club in the EFL, so will get plenty of additional ‘facility fees’ when their matches are bro♌adcast in addition to a share of the overall pot.

Photo by Catherine Ivill - AMA/Getty Images
Photo by Catherine Ivill – AMA/Getty Images

Whether the ITV-Sky deal will directly bump up that figure and see the likes of Leeds bank a𒉰n additional windfall is unclear.

If it does, 🃏Leeds could trouser a six-figure windfall from the agreement.

In any case, the EFL has said that the deal has bee𒉰n given the green li💛ght by its clubs.

That means that, 𒁃at the very least, the sublicensing deal will have been factored into the £935m headline figure agreed by Sky in May.

And that iᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚn itself will effectively mean that Leeds will feel the benefit regardless of whether it is directly attribuꦗtable to the Sky-ITV deal.