Inside story of how STAR India won BCCI’s media rights bid
EXCLUSIVE
By Qaiser Mohammad Ali in New Delhi
STAR India Pvt Ltd used its money very smartly, and exactly when
and where it was required, to win the prestigious BCCI media rights for six
years, from 2012 to 2018 (click on graphics below to enlarge).

STAR’s smartest move came when it outbid Multi Screen Media (MSM),
Singapore, by a mile in the second rights period (2014-2018) compared to the
first one (2012-14), in which the winning company offered only “slightly more”
than the previous rights holder, Nimbus.


The Rupert Murdoch-owned STAR bid Rs 3,851.82 crore overall
while MSM quoted Rs 3,700.032, losing the race by a huge difference of Rs
151.788 crore. The overall reserve price for the six-year period was Rs 3,216.75
crore.
STAR will get to telecast a total of 96 matches – Tests,
One-day Internationals, and Twenty20 Internationals – during the six-year
period. The winner was chosen on the basis of the combined bids for the two
periods – comprising a two-year and a four-year period.
BCCI smartly split the media rights bid into three segments —
TV, internet, and mobile — and bundled the six-year period to maximise income. The
strategy worked well as the Board will now earn Rs 7.61 crore more per international
match, compared to Rs 32.50 crore that Nimbus was paying.
BCCI usually allots four-year media rights deal. But in this
case the first period was only of two years because that was the time left in Nimbus’s
four-year contract that was terminated midway, in December, for regularly defaulting
on payments, according to the Board.
Five parties – STAR India, ESPN Software India Pvt Ltd., MSM,
Zee Entertainment, and Times Internet Ltd. – bought the bid document, which cost
each one Rs 5 lakh, but eventually only STAR and MSM bid.
For the first rights period, STAR bid just Rs 27 lakh more (Rs
871.02 crore) than the BCCI’s reserve price of Rs 870.75 crore, as per BCCI
records. In comparison, MSM bid Rs 169.884 crore more, probably thinking that its
rivals would bid more on the two-year period.
An interesting part of STAR’s bidding for the first period was
that it quoted exactly the same amount as the base price for internet (Rs 50
lakh) and mobile (Rs 50 lakh) and a mere Rs 1 lakh more for TV (Rs 31.25
crore). MSM quoted much more than STAR, but fell short of its rival’s bid where
it mattered – the second rights period.
In the four-year period too, STAR played the numbers smartly
and bid exactly the same as the reserve price for mobile while MSM quoted more.
However, STAR won the race by bidding more money than its rivals.
Each bidder placed its bids in two separate envelopes. “The
first envelope contained the documents that fulfilled the eligibility criteria that
was required by the ITT (invitation to tender) while the second one contained
the financial bid,” an official who attended the marketing committee meeting
last month told Mail Today.
“A BCCI team comprising M/s Amarchand & Mangaldas and legal
counsels opened the first envelope to evaluate the eligibility criteria before
a special technical team checked the bids for internet and mobile rights,” he
said.
“There was a break in the meeting to enable BCCI’s legal team
study the bidders’ qualification. Once the house was satisfied that the two had
fulfilled the eligibility criteria, the financial bids were then opened and the
legal team tabulated their figures. Also, both bidders submitted a ‘performance
deposit’ of Rs 30 crore, as mentioned in the ITT.”
After the two envelops were opened, the bidders were
asked to go out to enable the BCCI members discuss the two bids and take a
decision on the winner. “All of us then unanimously approved STAR’s bid and the
company was formally awarded the media rights. The bidders were again called
inside the meeting room and were told about it,” said the official.
(This story first appeared in Mail Today on May 21, 2012)
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