• News/Talk
  • Music
  • Entertainment

Marketplace

Friday, November 23, 2007

Listen to the show

World Cup lottery has a large draw

Logo for the South Africa World Cup

Over 3,000 people will be in Durban, South Africa this weekend to witness the preliminary draw for the next men's soccer World Cup. Gretchen Wilson reports TV networks will spend billions to broadcast the lottery.

Logo for the South Africa World Cup (worldcupblog,org)

More on International, Sports

TEXT OF STORY

Lisa Napoli: This weekend more than 3,000 people will be in Durban, South Africa, to witness the preliminary draw for the next men's soccer World Cup. This lottery is a big deal in the global sports world. It determines who plays who in qualifying matches over the next two years. And Gretchen Wilson reports from Johannesburg, there's money to be made.


Gretchen Wilson: Sunday's draw for qualifying groups will be broadcast live to 144 countries. Nail-chewing fans will watch to see if their country's team will meet stiff competition in a so-called "group of death."

The world's media industry will watch, too, because a lot of money's at stake. Globally, TV networks will spend more than $2 billion on broadcast rights for this World Cup. And Sunday's draw gives networks an idea of how much they can demand from advertisers in specific games.

It will also give national broadcasters an idea of the calendar their national team will face in the qualifying phase, and whether they have a good chance to make it to South Africa in 2010. That's when ad dollars multiply.

Not surprising, during the final phase of last year's men's world cup in Germany, each match had a cumulative average of 260 million viewers.

In Johannesburg, I'm Gretchen Wilson for Marketplace.

Music From This Show

  • Sweater Song Weezer Buy
  • Dress Up Music Brokers
  • Jet Airliner Steve Miller Band Buy

The Specials

GAME: Budget Hero

Budget Hero

Think you could balance the federal budget? Play the game.

Conversations from the Corner OfficeTM

Conversations From the Corner Office

Marketplace goes one-on-one with CEOs, company founders, head honchos...

Sit in

Working

Working

Intimate profiles of workers in the global economy.

Meet them

Marketplace on iTunes U

iTunes U

Marketplace is on Apple's online education platform, iTunesU. Get free downloads in subjects like History, Science, Business and more. Study up

 ©2009 American Public Media