Sport
FFA knocked back streaming service six years ago – The World Game
Streaming company BarTV Sports has revealed it pitched the idea of a Netflix-style TV streaming service to FFA six years ago, but the governing body declined to pursue the proposal.

The Newcastle-based broadcasting business covers grassroots and lower tier sports competitions as well as the FFA Cup, the W-League, the NPL Capital Football and the NPL Northern NSW Football Federation, in addition to working with the likes of Cricket Australia, Rugby Australia and the AFL to stream leagues.
The idea of FFA launching its own independent over-the-top (OTT) streaming service for football content, with Foxtel cutting back its spend on the A-League, has been gaining traction recently. But Brendan McCormick, owner and co-founder of BarTV Sports, says previously the governing body had its blinkers on over the concept and the quality and cost of the broadcast involved.
The FFA TV thing, we pitched that whole idea to them close to six years ago and it just fell on deaf ears because they were in that process of OK how many cameras is it going to be?, he told The World Game.
Well it can be as many cameras as you can afford, but you cant afford 13 cameras because Fox pays for that through the advertisers. We can do it for next to nothing, but you have to forgo the bells and whistles.
Keep in mind a lot of those FFA Cup matches occur in grounds where they dont even have a grandstand. Were building scafolding the day before, our power is running out of a little petrol generator.
FFA has got those blinkers on – if its not 13 cameras its not a full broadcast. We tried to explain to them, and theyve come around over the years, that all you need is the one camera – the wide shot – especially for football.
If youre watching the Premier League and its a free-flowing game up and down, its that one camera down the pitch. Its not until a whistles blown or a goal is scored that you need those extra cameras where you can show all the different replays.
So thats what we did, we specialise in a one-camera shoot, which made it extremely affordable for that grassroots level. When we went with it for the whole FFA TV concept we didnt call it that, we didnt really have a name for it but the concept itself was actually around the womens game.
Similar to the whole NBA Press Pass, we said why dont you put your womens watches behind a paywall like Cricket Australia? When we said that for the womens game there just wasnt the advertising dollar or more importantly there just wasnt the motivation from the FFA to do that.
I think now its a different ball game. For a while there more people were watching the Matildas than watching the Socceroos.
McCormick believes the environment for streaming is much more fertile now than it was in 2014, and feels Australian football needs its own direct to consumer content service to keep progressing and expanding.
However, he concedes FFA has a battle on its hands in working with the powerful state federations.
I think for the game to continue to grow they have to go down the path of an FFA TV, McCormick said.
There are too many commercial assets within football in the lower tiers. FFA have tried to go top-down, but in going top-down it stops because each of the state federations have the power too look after their own competitions.
AFL goes top-down and it goes all the way to the bottom. Whereas the FFA can only look after FFA Cup, A-League, W-League and then the Socceroos and Matildas. But the federations have some power, so when they weild their bat they just curtail any of the decisions made by FFA.
And football in Australia has always had that mentality of dont tell us what to do. We said to the FFA you need to take control of the NPL because even though you might only get 2000 people to watch one game, but theres 40 games per weekend. Its the collective numbers.
And if you look at the crowds, sometimes youre only getting 16,000 people to a Western Sydney Wanderers game, or 4,000 to a Mariners game, where as you could get 1500 or 1600 people to a single NPL NNSW match.
Apart from Australia, BarTV Sports also operates in New Zealand and Europe, and streams up to 200 matches across different codes every weekend. McCormick believes the advantage that Australian football possesses is the huge amount of content at its disposal, especially in womens football.
Content is king, so if youve got 20 matches with one camera versus two matches of 10 cameras each, youre almost always going to get more eyeballs on the 20 matches, he said.
Thats just the nature of the beast because of that tribal mentality of football in Australia. You can have 6000 fans and followers watching a South Melbourne game versus maybe 7000 fans at the Central Coast Mariners.
I think theres been a lot of fluff involved in Australian sport because of the advertising dollar. I think COVID-19 has exposed how much advertising has been taken out of commercial TV and put into Facebook, YouTube etc.
Being able to having it in-house is going to cut costs but also allow a lot more content to actually be exposed and promoted. The womens game is that wave that can really drive that.
Womens sport is definitely a big area thats just to continue to grow, even with COVID-19 happening. But FFA-wise I think their biggest hurdle is how well the state federations have progressed, versus the FFA putting a leash on them and bringing them under their wing.
But the whole second division, I think promotion and relegation needs to come in. For the A-League to grow that needs to happen.

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