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So I guess the real advantage is prestige and attracting additional Free Agents?
Thanks for the posts.
Well, you do make more money on hat and tee shirt sales.
WOW!!
So I guess the real advantage is prestige and attracting additional Free Agents?
Thanks for the posts.
Well, you do make more money on hat and tee shirt sales.
I thought all that went to the NFL? No?
Don't forget that along the way the Patriots organization got to host two additional home games, and got all the additional revenue (ticket sales, concessions, parking) from those two events.
Even though the Giants were on the road yesterday the visiting team gets 40% of the revenue from ticket sales (I'm assuming for playoff games other than the Super Bowl the revenue split is the same as it is during the regular season).
So even though revenues are split equally among all 32 teams for the Super Bowl, there are still financial incentives for the winning organizations - not the least of which is increased demand for tickets the following season.
I don't know if it has changed with the new CBA, but as of last year this was the breakdown on what players make:
Wildcard: $19,000
2nd Round: $21,000
Conference: $38,000
Lose in SB: $42,000
Win the SB: $83,000
CNBC | How Much Do Players Get Paid For Winning the Super Bowl? | Darren Rovell
I don't know if it has changed with the new CBA, but as of last year this was the breakdown on what players make:
Wildcard: $19,000
2nd Round: $21,000
Conference: $38,000
Lose in SB: $42,000
Win the SB: $83,000
CNBC | How Much Do Players Get Paid For Winning the Super Bowl? | Darren Rovell