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30 for 30 2017 : This Was the XFL | ESPN
“My intent from day one, when I pitched this to ESPN, was to do a film about the love story between my father and Vince, and their 30-year relationship that started with Saturday Night’s Main Event and culminated with the XFL,” Charlie Ebersol tells me. “This is the story of two guys who, basically, anything they’ve ever touched has turned to gold, and they have this one thing that the public largely views as a failure, and yet somehow, the most shocking part for anyone, their relationship survived. In Hollywood, I can tell you, relationships don’t survive someone showing up late for lunch, and for the XFL to be an unmitigated failure to the public, and yet these two remain best friends, I think speaks to a much larger relationship.” “The NFL, leading up to the XFL in those eight years, ’94 to 2002, radically changed its position with networks. It used to be that every year was a four-year deal and by the fourth year the network was making money,” Charlie explains. “In 1994, when Fox wanted to get involved, they agreed to pay so much money that they would lose money every year, with the understanding that the NFL would validate their system. And it did, because Fox is a major player now because of the NFL. NBC had never lost money from airing a sport. The NBA, NFL, Olympics – all of them were on NBC in 1996, and they were making money. When the NFL came to my dad in ’98 and said, ‘You have to pay $500 million a year,’ which meant that they would lose $100 million a year — $400 million over the course of the deal – my dad just thought, ‘This is crazy, we’re paying for rights and we don’t own anything. After four years, we just have to renegotiate with the NFL to get these rights.’
“My agent, at the time, had another guy,” Rod Smart remembers. “He was a quarterback out of Michigan State, but I can’t recall his name. They were interested in him, and [my agent] said, ‘I have this running back as well.’ They said, ‘We’re not interested in a running back; we’re interested in your quarterback.’ He said, ‘Well, in order to get my quarterback, you have to take a look at my running back.’ We both went out for the workout and whatnot, and I blew them all away. They ended up keeping me and sending the quarterback back. Good for me, not too good for him.”