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Buyout Info from Investors Meeting
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<blockquote data-quote="59 Dano" data-source="post: 1040762" data-attributes="member: 23516"><p>It's weird that <strong>any </strong>NFL team would lose money considering the structure of the league. Minus the vig that goes to the league office, NFL merchandise revenue and TV revenue is split evenly among the teams under the revenue sharing plan. Each game's ticket revenue is split with 60% going to the home team and 40% going to the away team. All teams have the same minimum and maximum salary limits. I think each team keeps whatever it earns via concessions deals, box seat sales, and other stadium-specific revenue.</p><p></p><p>A good guess is that the red ink in 2010 is the manifestation of the 20% drop in ticket sales from 2007 to 2009. When you average 15,000 empty seats per game in one of the league's smaller stadium, that adds up to real money after a while.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="59 Dano, post: 1040762, member: 23516"] It's weird that [B]any [/B]NFL team would lose money considering the structure of the league. Minus the vig that goes to the league office, NFL merchandise revenue and TV revenue is split evenly among the teams under the revenue sharing plan. Each game's ticket revenue is split with 60% going to the home team and 40% going to the away team. All teams have the same minimum and maximum salary limits. I think each team keeps whatever it earns via concessions deals, box seat sales, and other stadium-specific revenue. A good guess is that the red ink in 2010 is the manifestation of the 20% drop in ticket sales from 2007 to 2009. When you average 15,000 empty seats per game in one of the league's smaller stadium, that adds up to real money after a while. [/QUOTE]
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