What I find amazing in all this is that surely most viewers are tuning in for the game. I know when I decide to watch a sports event, it's on the basis of the fixture/match-up/event/whatever. Certainly I might prefer one commentary team over another. Indeed, I might actively dislike some commentators (announcers). But I'm still going to watch the game. They're very much secondary in sports where the action is pretty frenetic.
I will admit that they come much more into their own in slower paced sports where there are many hours to fill and not much of it is as action packed. Think of something like cricket (Test Matches run for five days!) or one of my favourite sports, cycling, where a stage might be six hours on the road.
I was listening to Matt Belloni on The Town podcast the other day talking about this, and his view is that it will all make zero difference to ratings. I guess the only thing that might happen is that NFL becomes slightly less profitable for networks - some of whom are already taking a loss on coverage since they treat it as a promotional vehicle.
One small thing was mentioned which might have an impact. There was the suggestion that employing a pricey announcing team might persuade the NFL to give you better games. Which leads to my question: who decides which games go where. When, say, Amazon buys Thursday Night Football, where is that in the pecking order of games when the fixtures are made?
I do know that for the UK rights to the Premier League, where there are three rights holders, the packages the rights-holders have entitle them to choose the fixtures in each given week. The Premier League determines which match-ups take place in a given week (everyone plays everyone twice in a 19 game - 19 game pattern, but local considerations happen, like not having both Manchester teams at home in the same week and so on), and then the rights-holders of, say, the 4pm Sunday game which is the biggest slot, get "first pick" of fixtures perhaps 25 times a season. The right-holders of the 12.30pm Saturday slot might get the remaining first picks. And so on down the list. You bid for the slot and a set number of first/second/third/whatever choices of fixtures. Although other things come into play to ensure every team gets a certain number of TV outings. (Not every game is televised live in the UK - none of the Saturday 3pm games).
Does a similar thing happen in the US? Or does the NFL have final say on what game will be the Sunday Night one etc?
Adam