Premier League to ditch pay-per-view broadcasts - reports
The Premier League's controversial pay-per-view scheme for matches, which has been in place since October, is set to be scrapped after the international break, according to the Daily Mail. The original move prompted a furious response from fans and attracted poor viewing figures.
The Premier League is set to abandon its pay-per-view match broadcast plan after the November international break, according to the Daily Mail.
Since the top flight returned in June after its Covid-19 hiatus, the Saturday 15:00 embargo on live matches has been abandoned.
All matches were instead broadcast, with some even being shown free-to-air on the BBC for the first time since the Premier League was founded.
At the beginning of this season, Sky Sports and BT Sport continued to show all matches to subscribers, but since the last international break, some games have been shown on their box office platforms for £14.95.
It was a highly controversial move which was met with a furious backlash from fans and even Gary Neville, the former Manchester United captain who is now a pundit on Sky. Many fans elected instead to donate the money to charity.
The Mail claimed last week that the PPV matches were being watched by few fans, an average of around 38,000.
With the move backfiring and viewing figures poor, clubs have voted to end the PPV scheme from the end of the upcoming international break, claim the Mail, in time for the matchweek of the weekend of November 21-22.
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