Sky retains position with most Premier League domestic TV rights until 2022

Published on: 13 February 2018

Relive the top strikes from Week 27 of the 2017-18 Premier League season. Man United players gave local schoolchildren a Pancake Day to remember as they surprised pupils at Old Trafford.

Sky has maintained its position as the main Premier League broadcaster in the UK after claiming four of the seven available packages of domestic television rights for 2019-22.

The league's main partner since its inception in 1992, Sky picked up 128 games, including all the matches on Fridays, Sundays and Monday evenings.

BT claimed the other package to have been sold so far, switching from its current 5:30 p.m. slot on Saturdays to 32 games at 12:30 p.m.

The two remaining packages of two full matchday programmes have not yet been bought, which means the auction will continue on Thursday.

In terms of how much money the league has brought in for its clubs, the five packages to have gone cost £4.464 billion, which is just under £700 million short of the total achieved in 2015, when 168 games were up for grabs.

With 40 more games a season still to be sold, the cost-per-game price is £9.3m, down from the current £10.2m.

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Source: espn.co.uk

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