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C7 Sport

C7 Sport was a pay-TV service in Australia, owned and run by Seven Network. The service was carried on the Austar and Optus Vision pay-TV networks between 1995 and 2002. Seven unsuccessfully pursued court action against competitors, seeking damages of $480 million, but lost the case and was described by the judge as exhibiting "more than a hint of hypocrisy" in regard to the issue of price-ramping of broadcast rights.[1]

C7 Sport
C7 Sport Logo
CountryAustralia
Programming
Language(s)English
Picture format576i (SDTV)
Ownership
OwnerSeven West Media
Sister channelsC7 Twelve
C7 Thirteen
History
Launched19 September 1995
Closed7 May 2002
Replaced byFox Sports (Austar)
Fox Footy Channel (Optus)
Former namesSport Australia (September 1995-March 1999)

Early history edit

When Optus Vision launched in 1995, it carried two sports channels: Sports Australia, and Sports AFL (which showed Australian Football League games.) These channels were run by a company called Sports Vision, in which Seven Network was a partner. A third channel, Sports Australia 2, was added during the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, and later used to show additional live programming.

The programming line-up on the Sports Australia service rivalled Fox Sports, with the AFL, NRL premiership, the Australian National Soccer League, the FA Premier League, and Sheffield Shield cricket. At the time, Fox Sports focused on less popular sports.

Seven's involvement edit

In 1997 Sports Vision ran into financial difficulty; Sports Australia struggled to get viewers due to the limited reach of the Optus cable, and aggressive marketing of the Fox Sports service by Foxtel. The company eventually collapsed, but the Seven Network bought the channels and relaunched them on 1 March 1999 under the C7 Sport brand.[2] Sports Australia became "C7 Gold", or "C7 Twelve", after its channel assignment on Optus. Sports Australia 2 became "C7 Blue", or "C7 Thirteen". Sports AFL's programming was carried on the other two channels.

Shortly afterwards, Seven signed a deal with Austar that saw C7 become available to most of regional Australia from April.[3][4] Austar had many more subscribers than Optus at the time. Before the deal, C7 had only been available in the small Optus cabled areas in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane. C7 was never available to the majority of people in the capital cities (except Hobart and Darwin).

Olympics coverage edit

C7 continued to lose programming to Fox Sports; after the Super League war in 1997, C7 no longer had exclusive rights to NRL games, having to share them with Fox, and had totally lost the rights to the FA Premier League.

C7 began negotiations with Foxtel in order to make the channels available to a wider audience, but Foxtel refused to carry them. Foxtel claimed that C7 was an inferior service, for which Seven wanted an exorbitant price. C7 won two Federal Court actions backing their position, but Foxtel claims it acted in accordance with the Court's rulings. Seven won the right to put its programming on Foxtel's analog cable system, including its set-top boxes.

C7 still had the AFL and, crucially, had the rights to the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Two more channels ("C7 Olympic" and "C7 Games") were set up, which would carry non-stop Olympic programming during the Games; the channels being made available to Austar and Optus customers at additional cost.[5] Foxtel and C7 negotiated access to Games content for Foxtel viewers.[6]

C7 was later forced to give refunds to some customers after the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission ruled that they had misrepresented the C7 Olympic service by advertising that the service would carry all Australian men's and women's basketball games.[7]

Litigation edit

Late in 2000, Seven lost the rights to the AFL to a News Corp Australia headed consortium also containing PBL, Nine Network, Network Ten and Telstra. The new rights deal, which started with the 2002 season, saw Nine and Ten carry games on free-to-air, and a new service, Fox Footy Channel, launched on Foxtel.

C7 continued to provide its service to Optus and Austar, but its programming lineup near the end of its run was extremely weak. C7 was reduced to showing XFL games (on several weeks' delay) and live woodchopping in prime time. Optus dropped the channel in late March, replacing it with Fox Sports.[8] Soon after Austar replaced it with the Fox Footy Channel.[9] With no carrier, the channel was officially closed on 7 May.[10]

Later that year, Seven launched what is considered to be the largest-ever media lawsuit in Australia, naming 22 defendants including Nine, Ten, Optus, Austar, the AFL, the NRL, Fox Sports, PBL and Telstra.

Claim edit

Seven's principal claims, relying on anti-competitive provisions in Part IV of the Trade Practices Act, were that:

  • Foxtel denied C7 access to Telstra's cable network and Foxtel's STBs in order to weaken C7's position when negotiating television deals with the AFL and NRL;
  • One or more of the named defendants acted illegally to collude in the marketplace and use their combined market power to prevent competition;
  • Foxtel's owners (Telstra, News Corporation and PBL) signed an agreement in late-1999 to ensure Foxtel gained the AFL and NRL rights.
  • Optus's undertaking to carry Fox Sports was a breach of an 'exclusive' contract it had with Seven for provision of sports programming.

Seven claimed damages of A$480 million (amended from the original A$1.1 billion).[11] Soon after the case began, the suits against Network Ten and the AFL were settled in the Federal Court.

Attempt to harm soccer edit

During the trial it was revealed that C7 had purchased the rights to National Soccer League content with the intention of "suffocating" coverage of the sport to benefit the AFL (i.e., Australian rules football). This was evidenced by an email from C7 to the AFL complaining about the AFL's ingratitude.[12]

Judgment edit

The judgment was handed down on 27 July 2007 and telecast live by the ABC, Sky News (owned in part by the Seven Media Group and PBL), Yahoo7, the Sydney Morning Herald website and ABC Online.

C7 lost the case conclusively on most points with Justice Sackville declaring that, based upon the anti-competitive provisions of the Trade Practices Act upon which Seven relied, the case could not succeed. In a key point, he explained that "the reason is that even if each of the consortium respondents had the objective attributed to it by Seven—that of killing C7—achieving that objective could not have substantially lessened competition in the retail television market."

Justice Sackville labelled Seven as "far from a helpless and innocent victim", being "the author of its own misfortune" and stating "there is more than a hint of hypocrisy in certain of Seven's contentions." He was unable to accept Seven's chairman Kerry Stokes as a reliable witness.[13]

The judge also commented on the hefty financial cost of the case, remarking that "in my view, the expenditure of $200 million and counting on a single piece of litigation is not only extraordinarily wasteful, but borders on the scandalous".[14] The case has continually been labelled by both the legal and media sectors as one of the most extreme examples of "mega-litigation".

Costs hearing edit

In costs documents lodged on 27 August 2007, the NRL, one of the defendants in the case, argued for an indemnity costs order, the actual costs incurred by the parties, to be awarded against Seven, with the figure estimated at approximately $200 million.

On 14 September 2007, Seven agreed to a A$23.5-million costs settlement with News Limited, the Australian Football League, the National Rugby League, Channel Ten and pay-TV group Austar.[15]

Appeal edit

In December 2009, Seven lost an appeal against the court's decision. "The appeal court said the Seven Network had failed to establish that there was any 'anti-competitive purpose' in the business dealings of the respondents in the retail TV market".[16][17]

References edit

  1. ^ Seven Network Limited v News Limited [2007] FCA 1062 at [162] and [393]-[398] per Sackville J (27 July 2007), Federal Court (Australia).
  2. ^ Browne, Ashley (11 March 1999). "Optus Lines Up For Goal". Green Guide. The Age. Melbourne. p. 12. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  3. ^ Wilson, Caroline (13 February 1999). "New Cable Deal A Boost For AFL". Sport. The Age. Melbourne. p. 22. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  4. ^ Joyce, James (26 March 1999). "Tunedin". Friday Guide. Newcastle Herald. p. 6. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  5. ^ Idato, Michael (14 August 2000). "The $55 Question". The Guide. Sydney Morning Herald. p. 2. Retrieved 3 July 2010.
  6. ^ Burke, Finola (10 July 2000). "Foxtel power play for AFL rights". The Australian. p. 35.
  7. ^ Mitchell, Peter (10 March 2001). "Games pay viewers get $20 back". The Daily Telegraph. Sydney, Australia. p. 3.
  8. ^ Maiden, Malcolm (30 March 2002). "Seven And Optus Dispute May End in Legal Channels". Business. The Age. Melbourne. p. 2. Retrieved 3 July 2010.
  9. ^ Schulze, Jane (14 March 2002). "C7 faces kicking in pay-TV maul". The Australian. p. 21.
  10. ^ Hart, Matthew (8 May 2002). "C7 Sport scrapped by Seven". The Courier-Mail. p. 25.
  11. ^ Ryan, Peter. C7 court case gets personal ABC radio PM, 27 September 2005. Retrieved 2 September 2014
  12. ^ Masters, Roy. Free-for-all over pay TV rights revealed Business section, The Age 19 December 2005. Retrieved 2 September 2014
  13. ^ Seven Network Limited v News Limited [2007] FCA 1062 at [393]-[398] per Sackville J (27 July 2007), Federal Court (Australia).
  14. ^ Seven Network Limited v News Limited [2007] FCA 1062 at [10] per Sackville J (27 July 2007), Federal Court (Australia).
  15. ^ Sexton, Elisabeth. Seven and News strike costs deal in C7 case Business section The Sydney Morning Herald, 15 September 2007. Retrieved 2 September 2014
  16. ^ Moran, Susannah.Seven Network loses C7 appeal over pay-TV rights The Australian, 2 December 2009. Retrieved 2 September 2014
  17. ^ Seven Network Limited v News Limited [2009] FCAFC 166 (2 December 2009), Federal Court (Full Court) (Australia).

sport, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2010, learn, when, r. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources C7 Sport news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message C7 Sport was a pay TV service in Australia owned and run by Seven Network The service was carried on the Austar and Optus Vision pay TV networks between 1995 and 2002 Seven unsuccessfully pursued court action against competitors seeking damages of 480 million but lost the case and was described by the judge as exhibiting more than a hint of hypocrisy in regard to the issue of price ramping of broadcast rights 1 C7 SportC7 Sport LogoCountryAustraliaProgrammingLanguage s EnglishPicture format576i SDTV OwnershipOwnerSeven West MediaSister channelsC7 TwelveC7 ThirteenHistoryLaunched19 September 1995Closed7 May 2002Replaced byFox Sports Austar Fox Footy Channel Optus Former namesSport Australia September 1995 March 1999 Contents 1 Early history 2 Seven s involvement 3 Olympics coverage 4 Litigation 4 1 Claim 4 2 Attempt to harm soccer 4 3 Judgment 4 4 Costs hearing 4 5 Appeal 5 ReferencesEarly history editWhen Optus Vision launched in 1995 it carried two sports channels Sports Australia and Sports AFL which showed Australian Football League games These channels were run by a company called Sports Vision in which Seven Network was a partner A third channel Sports Australia 2 was added during the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and later used to show additional live programming The programming line up on the Sports Australia service rivalled Fox Sports with the AFL NRL premiership the Australian National Soccer League the FA Premier League and Sheffield Shield cricket At the time Fox Sports focused on less popular sports Seven s involvement editIn 1997 Sports Vision ran into financial difficulty Sports Australia struggled to get viewers due to the limited reach of the Optus cable and aggressive marketing of the Fox Sports service by Foxtel The company eventually collapsed but the Seven Network bought the channels and relaunched them on 1 March 1999 under the C7 Sport brand 2 Sports Australia became C7 Gold or C7 Twelve after its channel assignment on Optus Sports Australia 2 became C7 Blue or C7 Thirteen Sports AFL s programming was carried on the other two channels Shortly afterwards Seven signed a deal with Austar that saw C7 become available to most of regional Australia from April 3 4 Austar had many more subscribers than Optus at the time Before the deal C7 had only been available in the small Optus cabled areas in Sydney Melbourne and Brisbane C7 was never available to the majority of people in the capital cities except Hobart and Darwin Olympics coverage editC7 continued to lose programming to Fox Sports after the Super League war in 1997 C7 no longer had exclusive rights to NRL games having to share them with Fox and had totally lost the rights to the FA Premier League C7 began negotiations with Foxtel in order to make the channels available to a wider audience but Foxtel refused to carry them Foxtel claimed that C7 was an inferior service for which Seven wanted an exorbitant price C7 won two Federal Court actions backing their position but Foxtel claims it acted in accordance with the Court s rulings Seven won the right to put its programming on Foxtel s analog cable system including its set top boxes C7 still had the AFL and crucially had the rights to the 2000 Sydney Olympics Two more channels C7 Olympic and C7 Games were set up which would carry non stop Olympic programming during the Games the channels being made available to Austar and Optus customers at additional cost 5 Foxtel and C7 negotiated access to Games content for Foxtel viewers 6 C7 was later forced to give refunds to some customers after the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission ruled that they had misrepresented the C7 Olympic service by advertising that the service would carry all Australian men s and women s basketball games 7 Litigation editLate in 2000 Seven lost the rights to the AFL to a News Corp Australia headed consortium also containing PBL Nine Network Network Ten and Telstra The new rights deal which started with the 2002 season saw Nine and Ten carry games on free to air and a new service Fox Footy Channel launched on Foxtel C7 continued to provide its service to Optus and Austar but its programming lineup near the end of its run was extremely weak C7 was reduced to showing XFL games on several weeks delay and live woodchopping in prime time Optus dropped the channel in late March replacing it with Fox Sports 8 Soon after Austar replaced it with the Fox Footy Channel 9 With no carrier the channel was officially closed on 7 May 10 Later that year Seven launched what is considered to be the largest ever media lawsuit in Australia naming 22 defendants including Nine Ten Optus Austar the AFL the NRL Fox Sports PBL and Telstra Claim edit Seven s principal claims relying on anti competitive provisions in Part IV of the Trade Practices Act were that Foxtel denied C7 access to Telstra s cable network and Foxtel s STBs in order to weaken C7 s position when negotiating television deals with the AFL and NRL One or more of the named defendants acted illegally to collude in the marketplace and use their combined market power to prevent competition Foxtel s owners Telstra News Corporation and PBL signed an agreement in late 1999 to ensure Foxtel gained the AFL and NRL rights Optus s undertaking to carry Fox Sports was a breach of an exclusive contract it had with Seven for provision of sports programming Seven claimed damages of A 480 million amended from the original A 1 1 billion 11 Soon after the case began the suits against Network Ten and the AFL were settled in the Federal Court Attempt to harm soccer edit During the trial it was revealed that C7 had purchased the rights to National Soccer League content with the intention of suffocating coverage of the sport to benefit the AFL i e Australian rules football This was evidenced by an email from C7 to the AFL complaining about the AFL s ingratitude 12 Judgment edit The judgment was handed down on 27 July 2007 and telecast live by the ABC Sky News owned in part by the Seven Media Group and PBL Yahoo7 the Sydney Morning Herald website and ABC Online C7 lost the case conclusively on most points with Justice Sackville declaring that based upon the anti competitive provisions of the Trade Practices Act upon which Seven relied the case could not succeed In a key point he explained that the reason is that even if each of the consortium respondents had the objective attributed to it by Seven that of killing C7 achieving that objective could not have substantially lessened competition in the retail television market Justice Sackville labelled Seven as far from a helpless and innocent victim being the author of its own misfortune and stating there is more than a hint of hypocrisy in certain of Seven s contentions He was unable to accept Seven s chairman Kerry Stokes as a reliable witness 13 The judge also commented on the hefty financial cost of the case remarking that in my view the expenditure of 200 million and counting on a single piece of litigation is not only extraordinarily wasteful but borders on the scandalous 14 The case has continually been labelled by both the legal and media sectors as one of the most extreme examples of mega litigation Costs hearing edit In costs documents lodged on 27 August 2007 the NRL one of the defendants in the case argued for an indemnity costs order the actual costs incurred by the parties to be awarded against Seven with the figure estimated at approximately 200 million On 14 September 2007 Seven agreed to a A 23 5 million costs settlement with News Limited the Australian Football League the National Rugby League Channel Ten and pay TV group Austar 15 Appeal edit In December 2009 Seven lost an appeal against the court s decision The appeal court said the Seven Network had failed to establish that there was any anti competitive purpose in the business dealings of the respondents in the retail TV market 16 17 References edit Seven Network Limited v News Limited 2007 FCA 1062 at 162 and 393 398 per Sackville J 27 July 2007 Federal Court Australia Browne Ashley 11 March 1999 Optus Lines Up For Goal Green Guide The Age Melbourne p 12 Retrieved 3 May 2010 Wilson Caroline 13 February 1999 New Cable Deal A Boost For AFL Sport The Age Melbourne p 22 Retrieved 3 May 2010 Joyce James 26 March 1999 Tunedin Friday Guide Newcastle Herald p 6 Retrieved 3 May 2010 Idato Michael 14 August 2000 The 55 Question The Guide Sydney Morning Herald p 2 Retrieved 3 July 2010 Burke Finola 10 July 2000 Foxtel power play for AFL rights The Australian p 35 Mitchell Peter 10 March 2001 Games pay viewers get 20 back The Daily Telegraph Sydney Australia p 3 Maiden Malcolm 30 March 2002 Seven And Optus Dispute May End in Legal Channels Business The Age Melbourne p 2 Retrieved 3 July 2010 Schulze Jane 14 March 2002 C7 faces kicking in pay TV maul The Australian p 21 Hart Matthew 8 May 2002 C7 Sport scrapped by Seven The Courier Mail p 25 Ryan Peter C7 court case gets personal ABC radio PM 27 September 2005 Retrieved 2 September 2014 Masters Roy Free for all over pay TV rights revealed Business section The Age 19 December 2005 Retrieved 2 September 2014 Seven Network Limited v News Limited 2007 FCA 1062 at 393 398 per Sackville J 27 July 2007 Federal Court Australia Seven Network Limited v News Limited 2007 FCA 1062 at 10 per Sackville J 27 July 2007 Federal Court Australia Sexton Elisabeth Seven and News strike costs deal in C7 case Business section The Sydney Morning Herald 15 September 2007 Retrieved 2 September 2014 Moran Susannah Seven Network loses C7 appeal over pay TV rights The Australian 2 December 2009 Retrieved 2 September 2014 Seven Network Limited v News Limited 2009 FCAFC 166 2 December 2009 Federal Court Full Court Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title C7 Sport amp oldid 1170520761, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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