Tag: Sportel Monaco

  • “The first choice for those in sports is Sportel Monaco” – Sportel Monaco’s Loris Moneni

    “The first choice for those in sports is Sportel Monaco” – Sportel Monaco’s Loris Moneni

    Loris Moneni is content as punch. It is the last day of the 35th edition of Sportel Monaco and as the executive director of the sports media rights and technology confab, he has reason to be pleased. There has been a strong turnout of buyers, exhibitors, sports leaders, and government and federation representatives. Thousands of meetings between the various participants have laid the groundwork for deals running into hundreds of millions of euros, possibly even billions. The veteran of Monaco Mediax has spent nearly two decades at the event management firm, doing it all—from director of marketing communications at the TV festival to executive director of the Sportel Awards, finally rising to become executive director of Sportel Monaco.
    Indiantelevision.com sat down with Moneni in Monaco to discuss the highlights of Sportel Monaco and what lies ahead in the coming months and for the 2026 edition. Excerpts from the conversation:

    On the highlights of Sportel Monaco 2025
    From the organising side, it was the new layout. We put in place a new entrance and new layout just to make it feel different. The participants have been coming for many years with the old layout. For some of them, we have new spaces to use in this building. So it was interesting for us to propose something new. We noticed everyone had very busy days with lots of people coming together at the same time. Lots of meetings, lots of good conversation—it was really an interesting atmosphere with good energy.

    On the major trends discussed at the conference
    We had new big topics. We had a sharp focus on private equity and how they are viewing investment in sports tech and sports initiatives. This was a big masterclass panel in the conference programme. I think it was really interesting for everyone, and it was also new for us to welcome this kind of conference. It’s also important for us to have new buyers coming. That was the case this year, with new companies attending Sportel for the first time. We also had a good mix of buyers and sellers.

    On the number of exhibitors, attendees and buyers
    We had 2,000 participants coming from 70 different countries around the world. So it’s really important. We have 150 to 160 new companies attending this year compared to last year. At least 30 to 40 per cent of the attendees were buyers, which is good for the sellers of sports media rights.

    On Sportel’s leaning towards Europe and plans to make it truly global
    That’s not totally true. It’s not totally European; it’s becoming more global. We have the big professional leagues coming from the US—the NBA, the NFL, the NHL. The ATP, the WTA—they are all here. The World Cup hockey from Canada is here for the first time. They are exhibiting this year to promote their tentpole events. The ICC attended, despite not having a stand. So we have good representation from all over the world and from this continent.

    On the presence from Asia
    Annually, we have been having the same presence. I mean, we have new companies, which is good for us, but we are more or less about 10 per cent. We have about 60 per cent from Europe, then about 20 per cent from the Americas, and the remainder from other nations. We are encouraged by the presence from Asia—that’s why we are going to Singapore next March with Sportel Asia.

    On the presence from the technology side
    We have lots of people now talking about one of the other big topics—AI. So many players coming and talking about that. You probably see some of them exhibiting. We have lots of people coming from the AI side, and this is one of the most used technologies now in content production for sport.

    On the absence of blockchain companies this year
    You’re right, we don’t have many actors and players in blockchain this year at Sportel. There were discussions. I can’t really explain why, but it’s a fact.

    On the feedback for Sportel Singapore from European and American clients
    We have got very good response from our clients, who have expressed their sincere interest to go to Singapore—much more than the last time we did an Asian outing in Bali. Even though it’s just the beginning of the commercialisation of Sportel in Singapore, it’s pretty encouraging. We will have this larger presence from Asia, and the goal for us is to bring Europe and the US to the Asian market.

    On the percentage of renewals from existing clients for 2026
    We’ll give you more information in the coming months because they have until the end of this year to confirm their location. But usually the renewals are pretty good. We have more or less 60 to 70 per cent of people that renew every year.

    On what he sees developing in the sports, media rights and sports tech business in the coming year
    We can see now that we have new collaborations that didn’t exist in the past, and maybe some unusual collaborations happening in the world of sports broadcasting, media rights and technology. It’s nice because we see more and more competitors and companies popping up. Also, more and more sports events are taking place, and we can see new opportunities cropping up.

    On speculation about Sportel coming to India and whether it can be scaled up like the one in Monaco
    I can’t answer this question in the affirmative. But it is definitely a location, a place that we look forward to being present in—probably next year we can make it to India. Why India? Because it’s quite an underdeveloped sports market, and it’s a really huge market, as is the entire south Asian region. So it’s really interesting for us to be present there. I believe that there’s real interest to have Sportel there because it is a one-sport nation—cricket. The traditional sports that we have in Europe are not very popular in India; they have niche audiences.
    But I know that Indians are watching football, especially the Premier League. Hence, it would do well for the other big leagues in Europe to go there and promote themselves, to build their audiences and make their media rights valuable.
    We are not looking for the scale of Monaco in India. The format of Sportel abroad is different from the one in Monaco. In Monaco, you have 2,000 participants. When we go to Miami or Singapore, it’s more like 500 to 700 attendees and we don’t have a big exhibition; you don’t have as many stands. We have only 20 to 25 exhibitors, whereas in Monaco we have 75 to 80 exhibitors.

    On the rationale behind the pitching competitions and the start-up exhibition area
    It’s important for us to have these kinds of small companies or start-ups. They are looking forward to the big players seeing their products or services or the improvements they have made. The big players need them also, to get exposed to their innovations and new technology, as they are always looking to offer audiences at home and in stadia something new. So it’s really important for us to have this mix of traditional players that have been coming to Sportel for maybe 30 years, and the tyros which are just entering the market. With this mix, we have the entire sports and sports tech community together in one location.

    On the perception that large-format global exhibitions and confabs are on their way down, with exhibitors and attendees preferring to communicate digitally post-covid
    That may be true as a generalisation in turbulent times with mergers and acquisitions ballooning, companies going bust and tight cost controls being resorted to. However, it is not true in our case. The strength of Sportel is the “executives” and the “quality of people” coming to the event. More or less half of the attendees here are decision-makers. So they travel and have been doing so for many years. The current economic and geopolitical turmoil has not stopped them.
    If they have to choose one event in the sports and media rights business, all of them would choose Sportel Monaco. Of course, our attendee numbers dwindled just after covid, but it was the same for everybody. But what’s also true is that we bounced back quickly and we have had 2,000 participants from 2022, and the figures are the same in 2025. Our strength is that everyone involved in the sports ecosystem wants to be at Sportel Monaco.

    On the outlook for Sportel 2026
    We have lots of goals for next year. The first is to maintain our renewal targets of existing exhibitors for 2026. The second one is to attract newer exhibitors and companies to come and attend and exhibit. We already have many new big players and other newer companies who have expressed their intent to be present at Sportel Monaco 2026. We have to now convert those. Other goals that are a priority at this time would be to keep this kind of atmosphere and good energy that I was seeing at the beginning of this year’s Sportel. We know that the discussions between participants this year have been serious and they have made announcements. They were here to discuss business, strike deals and build relationships. After speaking to attendees, they have made it quite clear to me that the objectives they had set have been met. So it has been a successful Sportel 2025, and we would like 2026 to be the same, if not better.

  • Sportel 2025: Laliga’s Tebas declares war on football pirates

    Sportel 2025: Laliga’s Tebas declares war on football pirates

    MONACO: Piracy is theft, plain and simple. That’s the message Javier Tebas delivered with fire at Sportel Monaco, opening his remarks with a moral flourish: “When I was a young man I was taught not to steal because it’s a sin. This is stealing.” The LaLiga president wasn’t mincing words. He warned that illegal streaming remains one of the gravest threats to football’s future and demanded that rights holders stop being passive victims.

    “Rights holders need more awareness,” Tebas urged. “Broadcasters have to work on the protection of the service.” The enemy, he explained, is growing more sophisticated by the day. Pirates are deploying increasingly advanced technology to siphon content, forcing LaLiga to respond with its own arsenal. The league is pouring investment into anti-piracy systems designed to trace and block illegal streams in real time. “Pirates are extremely advanced,” Tebas said. “We’re blocking. It is like the NASA headquarters…but we need to be able to trace them.”

    The war on piracy wasn’t Tebas’s only battle. He also vented his frustration over UEFA’s reluctant approval of LaLiga’s plan to stage a match in the United States—the December 2025 fixture between Barcelona and Villarreal in Miami, Florida. “It is very frustrating,” he said of UEFA’s stance. “This is a very old-fashioned vision of professional football.”

    Tebas argued that taking one league match abroad is a natural step for a global sport, not some radical betrayal of tradition. “This is just one game, not twenty,” he pointed out, before deploying a cultural counterpunch: “We accepted Halloween from the US, why don’t they accept something from us?”

    But the LaLiga chief suggested there’s more lurking beneath the surface—secrets he’s saving for his memoirs. “I am going to write about it when I retire and talk about a lot of secrets,” he teased. Until then, he’ll keep fighting pirates, battling UEFA, and dragging Spanish football into the future—willing or not.

  • Monaco’s Grimaldi Forum turns into a high-stakes sports-tech power play as Sportel 2025 starts

    Monaco’s Grimaldi Forum turns into a high-stakes sports-tech power play as Sportel 2025 starts

    MONACO: The sports industry’s deal-makers have flooded into Monaco this week, and the energy is electric. Nearly 70 countries have sent their sharpest minds to Sportel 2025, a three-day collision between legacy sports titans and maverick tech disruptors that kicks off today and runs through 22 October. This is where real money gets moved and genuine innovation gets showcased.

    The Grimaldi Forum is heaving with some of sport’s biggest names exhibiting: Fifa, La Liga, the World Cup of Hockey 2028, alongside a glittering roster of tech firms like Qualcomm, AWS, and Wasabi. But Sportel is no mere trade show—it’s a strategic summit where the next generation of sports media gets hammered out.

    The conference programme cuts straight to the chase. Javier Tebas, La Liga’s president, will deliver a keynote spelling out how the world’s most compelling league is monetising itself. But the real fireworks come in a masterly panel on investment: “Where is the next $1bn coming from?” features the CEOs of Surj Sports Investment, Kings League, and the Professional Fighters League, all circling the same question—which markets are still hungry, and where will private equity and sovereign wealth funds actually deploy capital?

    There’s more. A panel on Formula 1’s storytelling prowess asks whether authentic sport crossed with entertainment star power can turbocharge sponsorship and rights values. Then comes the tech avalanche: sessions on generative AI reshaping everything from content creation to the fan experience; on new live-streaming tools that personalise what viewers see; on how Liverpool FC is harnessing AI and cloud infrastructure to deepen loyalty across the globe.

    The Ligue 1+ case study is particularly clever—a league building its own direct-to-consumer platform, hoarding first-party data, and cutting out the middleman to capture fresh revenue. That model is spreading. So too is the adoption of ad-supported streaming as the default for OTT platforms. World Rugby, via the platform WURL, is showcasing exactly how.

    The conference even has a competition worth caring about: “Pitch Perfect Innovation Contest” will see start-ups including Pendular, FalconHQ, and Camb.ai each get three minutes to convince industry heavyweights that their solution deserves backing. And a Women’s Lunch (by invitation) will celebrate female leaders redefining the sport-media nexus—expect Alexis Ohanian from Seven Seven Six, Lauren Pedersen from SportAI, Fiona Wong from the NBA, and marathon world record holder Paula Radcliffe to set the room ablaze.

    The message from all sides is unambiguous: artificial intelligence, cloud technology, and direct fan relationships aren’t the future anymore. They’re the present—and if you’re not moving now, you’re already behind.

  • Sportel Monaco flexes its muscles as sports media titans prepare to gather

    Sportel Monaco flexes its muscles as sports media titans prepare to gather

    MONACO: The sports media industry’s glitterati are preparing to descend on Monaco’s Grimaldi Forum next month, as Sportel Monaco returns for its flagship annual gathering from 20-22 October. The event, which has become the de facto marketplace for international sports media deals, is already showing signs of its strongest edition in years.

    Exhibition space is nearly sold out, with more than 70 exhibitors confirmed including heavyweight American networks ESPN and NFL, alongside European football powerhouses LaLiga and Bundesliga. Tech disruptors such as Sportradar, WSC Sports and Wurl will rub shoulders with traditional broadcasters in what promises to be a fascinating collision of old and new media.

    The 2025 programme reflects an industry in flux. Conference sessions will dissect how generative artificial intelligence is revolutionising production and fan engagement, while panels explore the streaming wars and new monetisation models that are upending traditional broadcasting. Private equity’s growing appetite for sports assets will also come under the microscope.

    Hollywood’s creeping influence on sports storytelling gets star billing with a panel titled Hollywood hits the paddock: F1 taking storytelling to the next level. The session reflects Formula 1’s remarkable transformation from niche motorsport to global entertainment phenomenon, aided by Netflix’s Drive to Survive series.

    LaLiga president Javier Tebas will deliver the event’s keynote address, while executives from Amazon Web Services, Liverpool FC, World Rugby and the Professional Fighters League are among those offering insights into their strategies.

    Networking remains central to Sportel’s appeal. A new Sports Bar will provide a relaxed environment for deal-making, while the Women’s Lunch returns after its successful debut last year, highlighting female leadership across the industry.

    “This year is already shaping up to be a great success,” said Sportel Monaco executive director Loris Menoni. “The programme is designed to reflect the very latest industry trends.”

    The Monaco gathering’s strength has convinced organisers to expand eastwards once again. Sportel Singapore will return on 24-25 March 2026, following strong Asian demand for the format.

    As traditional media companies grapple with cord-cutting and tech giants muscle into sports rights, Sportel’s marketplace function has never been more crucial. The Monaco edition will reveal whether the industry’s transformation is accelerating—or whether some old certainties still hold.

  • Sportel Monaco’s exciting conference line up

    Sportel Monaco’s exciting conference line up

    CANNES: The days are being counted down on Sportel Monaco, the leading confab for the sports media, broadcast and technology industry. Scheduled to be held from 28-30  October 2024 in the Grimaldi Forum, it features conference programming capturing the hottest topics and future trends, presented by a new wave of top tier visionaries, star studded businessmen and disruptive innovators, at the heart of a bustling exhibition and market floor – the largest gathering of its kind, bringing together decision makers from the global sports media industry. 
     
    Industry heavyweights including Alibaba Group president & director J. Michael Evans, OBS CEO Yiannis Exarchos, WBD Sports Europe SVP content, production & business operations Scott Young led by Michael R. Payne, will share exclusive insights around “Paris 2024: An Olympic Broadcast & Viewership Success,” which showcased the biggest tech overhaul in decades – never seen at this level at the Olympics. 
     
    Inspiring discussions with footballing legends turned entrepreneurs lead the way, starting with, Kosmos-Kings League Founder  Gerard Piqué who will share exclusive insights about the creation of this competition with a Gen Z focus and how it is disrupting the beautiful game. Marco Materazzi, official ambassador of (GRAS) Blockchain Sports and mentor of the Brazilian reality show “O Grande Jogo” (The Big Game) will talk about how he is helping young boys to develop their football talents and become a part of the sport. The renowned Laliga president  Javier Tebas will share through his highly anticipated Keynote session, how Laliga is leading the change as a top tier sports organisation to fight against audiovisual fraud in the sports media and broadcast industry. 

    Two exciting masterclass topics will be hosted by SportBusiness including, “Behind the Lens: Creating a Successful Sports Docuseries,” diving into the business of creating blockbuster sports docuseries. Revealing the key factors that turn compelling sports narratives into profitable, global entertainment phenomena, will be the PGA Tour (Tom Jeffs), World Athletics (James Lord) and Fremantle (Georgette Schlick), led by SportBusiness’s Callum McCarthy. Following on, SportBusiness’s Imran Yusuf will host the Sportel  spotlight panel, “What’s Next for Cricket as it Continues its Growth Journey?,” both commercially, powered by India, but also still going strong in its historical territories, notably the UK and Australia and now exploring new exciting territories such as the US, how are fans and digital set to play a key role? Expert panelists include Fox Sports Australia (Nic Goard), Rajasthan Royals, (Jake Lush McCrum) and Quidich (Gaurav Mehta).

    Sponsorship is now the second most important revenue stream for most rights holders and an informative panel, “The Role of Sponsorship Evolving in an Industry Under Pressure to Generate Revenues,” will dive into the different models of sponsorship, whether category exclusive marketing rights, or a broader, more fragmented sponsorship strategy and how brands strategically connect with their target audiences. Sponsorship experts led by Sportel’s  Giovanni Aquilanti will feature Milano Cortina 2026 (Nevio Devide), Fifa, (Marco Nazzari) and Protocol Sports Marketing (Lowell Conn) to complete the line up.

    Opening the conference programme will be podcast pioneers, Unofficial Partner, with its popular sports media podcast series coming to the Sportel stage. “The Bundle Live” will explore the biggest stories of 2024 and the people and companies having the greatest impact on the sports media industry. Expert insights will be shared by Gemba Europe & Middle East (Claire Kelly), EBU, (Glen Killane), OneFootball (Yannick Ramcke) and led by Unofficial Partner’s Richard Gillis.

    Speakers Corner will also play host to a slate of case studies and presentations highlighting the latest technologies and solutions trending for the sports media and broadcast industry, including topics and speakers: “Live Sport Production” (LiveU with EBU/Actua Films); “Building a champions league of MMA” (PFL); “How Fast  is Shaping the Future of Sports Streaming” (WURL with EBU/Nagra and World Rugby); “Maximising a League’s Value Beyond Automafc Producfon” (Spiideo with Svensk Elitfotboll); “First Live Referee Camera in MMA” (Tivio Studio); “Amazon Web Services Innovation in Sport” (AWS with European League of Football); “Future Fans: Engaging Younger Audiences with GenAI” (WSC Sports); “Reality Show the Big Game” (Blockchain Sports with Marco Materazzi); “Revolutionizing Sports Streaming: AI and New Monetisation Innovations” (Harmonic) and “The Opportunities and Vision for Regional Sports: CBC Sports Connect’s Evolufon” (Pixellot with CBC).

    New for 2024, the Innovation Stage will also shine the spotlight not once, but twice on multiple presentations: “Private 5G, Mobile & Ultra Low Latency: Lessons Learned from a Summer in Paris” (Haivision); “Sports ABC – Sports Economy and AI Tech” (ISB with Ztudium) and “Breaking Down The Fan-Centered Formula for Sports Streaming Success” (Infront Lab, whose Activation Engine will be on display throughout masterclasses at Sportel  Monaco for interactive polls and audience Q&A).

    Warming up to the “pitch” session, now a firm highlight at Sportel events, the spotlight will shift to a select group of new Sportel companies that are transforming and revolutionising sports content with AI and other groundbreaking technologies, in this quick-fire pitch, powered by Magnifi. Each “Pitcher” will have just three minutes to present and two minutes Q&A, to impress both the audience and an international panel of judges, with the winners receiving prize money and prestige!

    Another first, is a special event championing women in sports media and innovation, co- sponsored by AWS, with a networking lunch and the panel: “How Women are Driving Innovation in Sports,” featuring awesome ladies led by AWS (Julie Souza), with Formula E (Aarf Dabas), and SailGP (Melissa Lawton) and Sportradar (Diana Ustymenko). Wrapping up on day three, is another first in collaboration with SVG, the “Sports & Generative AI Workshop,” with sessions led by SVG’s Ken Kerschbaumer and George Bevir, plus guest moderator Carlo de Marchis (A guy with a scarf). An interactive discussion between the panelists and audience, will debate the potential role AI will play in everything from rights, advertising, content creation, content distribution, and the fan experience, addressing concerns and opportunities. On stage panelists include AWS (Paul Devlin and Dave Mace), PGA Tour (Scott Gutterman), Veritone (Peter Leeb), Magnifi (Ross Tanner) Spectatr (Shifa Garg), ISB (Ursula Romero), HBS (Johannes Franken) and Tradable Bits (Maurizio Barbieri),
    entwined with lots of audience engagement throughout the morning, wrapping up a truly engaging and innovative Sportel conference programme.

    “Sportel Monaco continues to evolve, with the pulse of the sports media landscape. This year, we are thrilled to welcome an unprecedented number of executive leaders and innovators, sharing their visions on the future of sports media and the technologies that are redefining our industry. In 2024, the focus on emerging trends such as AI and innovations for broadcast, demonstrates how Sportel remains at the forefront of innovation. Our goal is to provide participants with an environment where they can not only discover these technologies and trends, but also engage with the minds shaping the future of global sports.” said Sportel Monaco executive director Loris Menoni.

  • Sportel Monaco 2024: back with a bang

    Sportel Monaco 2024: back with a bang

    MUMBAI: Less than a fortnight from now,  sports media and tech executives from all over the world will be flying into Nice, France to get to the lovely principality of Monaco. The occasion: Sportel, Monaco, which is being held from 28-30 October 2024 in the famed Grimaldi Forum.

    They will spend the three days will be spent  hobnobbing, networking, exchanging ideas and doing deals as Sportel hosts industry leaders for three days of conferences, and exhibitions centred around the most important market floor for sports media.

    Sportel Monaco is expected to attract influential industry players, such as the legendary Laliga president, Javier Tebas and for the first time following the broadcast success of Paris 2024, OBS CEO  and OCS  executive director Yiannis Exarchos, Alibaba group director & president J. Michael Evans, among many more, to discuss the key trends and innovations shaping the future of sports media. A rich programme of expert masterclasses and case study presentations, plus a new sports and generative AI workshop in collaboration with SVG, will complement the business activities and meetings throughout the three-day event. 

    “I am committed to upholding the high standards of excellence that have always defined our event. This year is already shaping up to be a great success, with the exhibition space nearly sold out and the addition of a new conference innovation stage to accommodate an even richer programme,” said Sportel Monaco executive director Loris Menoni.”More new features are coming before the event begins, including an inspiring women’s Lunch, to shape the world of business and beyond. I am excited to welcome our community back to Monaco for what promises to be an exceptional event.”  

    According to data on the Sportel Monaco website, more than 1,501 participants globally have registered to participate in this year’s edition. Additionally, for the very first time, Indiantelevision.com has partnered with the sports confab and is going to be attending the event.

    Amongst the Indian companies in attendance figure: Citadel Advisory group (Rahul Johri), Quidich (Gaurav Mehta, Jaskaran Singh Bakshi), Rajasthan Royals Sports group (Jake LushMccrum), Spectatr (Richa Singh, Manjush Mangal, Rijul Dutta & Shifa Garg),  MultiTV Tech Solutions (Sandeep Bansal, Varun Mathur, Puneet Kumar & Vikas Somata), FanCode (Mandela Kiran) and Indian Television Dot Com’s India Spark, represented by CEO Khalid Khan.

    And they are all ready for some sporting action – off the pitch, of course.