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France football TV rights $A1b per year

A new TV rights deal has ranked French football fourth among the European leagues but way behind England's Premier League.

France's top football league sold domestic television rights for 2016-20 for a record sum of just over a billion dollars a year, officials said on Friday.

The new deal saw Ligue 1 sold for 726 million euros ($A1.09 billion) a year and the second division for E22 million euros ($A33m) a year.

The Canal Plus cable television broadcaster made the biggest offer to secure the right to the first choice of the two best Ligue 1 matches each week.

The previous record for 2008-2012 sold for 668 million euros a year while this season and next the figure falls to 607 million euros.

But with Qatari and Russian investors now ploughing huge sums into Ligue 1 clubs -- allowing Paris Saint Germain to buy Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Monaco Radamel Falcao for a combined figure over E120 million ($A180 million) -- the French Professional League (LFP) had hoped for more.

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"I had wanted to put the French championship in the top three in Europe," said LFP president Frederic Thieriez, who added that the figure was below but close to what the league had sought.

"I would have liked more because I have big ambitions for French football, but the market has spoken," he added.

BeIn Sports, a Qatari-backed cable broadcaster, was the second highest bidder. None of the other competitors, such as Eurosport or telecoms firm Orange, won any television rights.

The auction put France in fourth place in the European television rights league -- ahead of Germany (675m euros), but behind Spain (750m), Italy (960m) and especially England's Premier League, which earns a massive E1.7 billion ($A2.54 billion) a year.

Despite the arrival of the Qatar Investment Authority to bankroll PSG and Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev at Monaco, French clubs say they face growing financial difficulties as they battle to pay top salaries to help them compete in Europe.

While PSG are close to qualifying for the semi-finals of Europe's Champions League, other clubs are deep in debt.

The French government has put football stars in the group that will have to pay a 75 per cent tax on the highest salaries. The French league estimates this will cost clubs 44 million euros a year.


3 min read

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Source: AAP


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