S. Asian fans can catch LaLiga on Facebook

SPH Brightcove Video
Spain's top flight soccer division La Liga has announced a landmark deal with Facebook which will allow viewers in the Indian sub-continent to watch every game over the next three seasons for free on the social network.
Real Madrid's French goalkeeper Luca Zidane Fernandez (left) tries to block a shot on goal by Villarreal's Spanish midfielder Samuel Castillejo during the Spanish league football match between Villarreal CF and Real Madrid CF, on May 19, 2018. PHOTO: AFP

LONDON • Facebook has bought the rights to show Spanish top-flight football in the Indian subcontinent in the latest move by a US technology company into sports rights.

The company has signed an exclusive agreement to show LaLiga games featuring Barcelona's Lionel Messi and other stars for the next three years.

The deal will allow Facebook to show all 380 matches for the new season, which starts on Friday, to users in India, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, the Maldives, Sri Lanka and Pakistan.

Facebook will show the games for free to its 348 million users in the region, including 270 million in India. The company did not disclose how much it was paying for the rights, which cost Sony Pictures Network US$32 million (S$44 million) last time they were for sale in 2014.

Facebook and other US technology companies have been buying up rights to popular sports for streaming services.

Competition from cash-rich US tech companies is a threat to cable and satellite TV broadcasters, which have used sport as a way to attract and keep customers. Facebook pays about US$1 million a game to show 25 Major League Baseball games worldwide for no fee, supported by advertising.

From next season in Britain, Amazon will bundle 20 English Premier League matches with its Prime subscription service.

Real Madrid's French goalkeeper Luca Zidane Fernandez (left) tries to block a shot on goal by Villarreal's Spanish midfielder Samuel Castillejo during the Spanish league football match between Villarreal CF and Real Madrid CF, on May 19, 2018. PHOTO: AFP

Sky and BT currently share the rights to show live games on TV.

Peter Hutton, Facebook's director of global live sports, told Reuters its LaLiga streams would be free of advertising at first but that it was considering its options. He said the LaLiga deal was an experiment and not part of a land grab of sports rights.

"This is one deal," he said. "It's not something that is a big threat to broadcast world."

The deal is LaLiga's latest effort to expand its fan base in India, where it opened an office in New Delhi in 2016. Jose Antonio Cachaza, LaLiga's country manager for India, said: "This is the first step for us. We're excited to see it and we want make it as successful as possible so we can unlock other territories around the world."

India and the surrounding South Asian countries are a crucial untapped market for Facebook, which has hit saturation point in the United States and most of western Europe.

The social network already has over 241 million active users in India alone - the largest single country user base for Facebook, exceeding its 240 million US users - but there is plenty of room for growth.

India's population passed 1.3 billion last year and is expected to hit 1.5 billion by 2030.

Meanwhile, about 500 million people in India are expected to be Internet-connected this year, in a country that is primarily mobile first and has relatively affordable mobile data.

Facebook has already had some setbacks in India as it strives to reach chief executive Mark Zuckerberg's goal of connecting "the next five billion people".

In a coalition with Samsung, Ericsson, MediaTek, Opera, Nokia and Qualcomm, called Internet.org, Facebook launched its Free Basics service in India in 2015 with local mobile network Reliance Communications.

The service provided free Internet access to select sites, including Facebook but excluding competitors. It was banned from India by the nation's Telecom Regulatory Authority in 2016 for breaching net neutrality rules.

Last year, Facebook failed in its attempts to acquire the rights to Indian Premier League cricket with a US$610 million bid.

THE GUARDIAN

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on August 15, 2018, with the headline S. Asian fans can catch LaLiga on Facebook. Subscribe