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ONLINE NEWS & NOTES: PETER KING SEES BIG THINGS FOR NFL.COM

          CNNSI.com's Peter King cited a source as saying that
     when the NFL's three-year, $10M contract with ESPN to manage
     the league's NFL.com Web site expires, "the next three-year
     deal could fetch as much as" $100M.  King: "That's basically
     a million new dollars a year for each team in the league
     starting in 2001" (CNNSI.com, 10/25).
          SWEET STUFF: The WALL STREET JOURNAL's David Sweet
     writes, "Confronted with threats of legal action from rival
     ESPN, CBS SportsLine backed down from directing traffic from
     espn.sports.com to www.sportsline.com" (See THE DAILY,
     10/28).  By yesterday afternoon, attempts to reach the Web
     addresses like fox.sports.com resulted in the message,
     "Failed to connect to server."  ESPN Internet Group Senior
     VP & GM Steve Zales: "Discontinuing this practice is the
     least CBS SportsLine can do" (WALL STREET JOURNAL, 10/29).  
     ....Sweet profiled Maxfootball.com, which is a "rarity on
     the Internet," a Web site that "relies on original video and
     audio programming," unlike "primarily text-based" ESPN.com
     and SportsLine.com.  Site co-Founder Mark Newman: "We feel
     the broadband era is about to begin and we want to be in the
     forefront of it."  Sweet wrote that "problems do exist," as
     home Internet connections "are often too weak to download
     video, so Maxfootball.com must focus on businessmen in their
     offices."  Also, the site "has not secured rights to video
     of replays, which would complement" commentary by talent Ted
     DeLuca and Gary Horton (WALL STREET JOURNAL, 10/27). 
          GOING FOR SPEED: Speedvision reached an agreement with
     RACER Magazine that will make RACER the provider of auto
     racing news for speedvision.com (Speedvision).
     

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