The Green Bay Packers reported a profit of just $724,000 in their latest fiscal year, which included their second consecutive season without a playoff appearance, a large contract extension for quarterback Aaron Rodgers and a change in head coach from Mike McCarthy to Matt LaFleur.
Green Bay’s profit in the year ending March 31 was down 97.9% from $34.1 million in the year ending March 2018 and down more than 99% from the record $75 million in the previous fiscal year.
“From a financial standpoint, it was a unique year for the Packers,” team president Mark Murphy said Friday. “We were a little more aggressive than we’ve been in a number of years,” Murphy said.
Expenses rose from $420.9 million to $477.2 million, boosted by Rodgers’ $134 million, four-year deal and contracts for several free agents: outside linebackers Za’Darius Smith and Preston Smith, safety Adrian Amos and guard Billy Turner.
The #Packers, the #NFL‘s smallest-market team, stated Friday they had a record $477.9 million in revenue and $477.2 million in expenses during the fiscal year that ended March 31. @KaplanSportsBiz breaks down the numbers: https://t.co/Fi1lokNTq3
— The Athletic (@TheAthleticWISC) July 12, 2019
“If we can get back to the playoffs and get to the Super Bowl, that always helps,” Murphy said. “We have a policy regarding our season-ticket pricing. We want to be just below the league average. We don’t want everything to be on the backs of our season-ticket holders.”
The NFL’s collective bargaining agreement is set to expire after the 2020 season, and the team has $397 million in its corporate reserve fund.
“The plan was that we had enough money to cover expenses for a year. I think we’re in very good shape with that,” Murphy said. “We don’t have a rich, deep-pocketed owner, so we have a $400 million corporate reserve. Three or four years ago, we put $50 million into the corporate reserve. It’s grown since then with investment returns, and we’ve made significant investments in real estate around this area.”
Interestingly enough, Murphy now wants to see 18 game season.
After publicly saying on at least four occasions that 18 games won’t work, Packers CEO Mark Murphy apparently has $een the light https://t.co/Ky0dR8FDi6
— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) July 12, 2019
I wonder why 🤔
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