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"FLEXIBLE" NFL SCHEDULE WOULD ALLOW NETS TO AIR TOP GAMES

          The NFL is "exploring the possibility" of making its TV
     schedule "more flexible" in the final weeks of the season to
     "showcase more attractive matchups" for its nationally
     televised broadcasts, "particularly" ABC's MNF, according to
     sources of Leonard Shapiro of the WASHINGTON POST.  Team
     owners were told at a meeting in N.Y. on Tuesday that the
     league "will consider leaving the December TV schedule open"
     so that better matchups could be provided to ABC, CBS, Fox
     and ESPN.  CBS and Fox "could get more competitive games for
     the second half" of their Sunday doubleheaders, usually
     broadcast nationally.  Both networks currently "have
     flexibility," but would "have more choices under a plan now
     being devised by the NFL."  NFL Senior VP/Broadcasting &
     Network TV Dennis Lewin declined comment.  ABC Sports Dir of
     PR Mark Mandel also declined comment on the proposal but
     said, "the NFL has always done right by ABC.  If either one
     of us could do anything to improve ratings, we'll do it"
     (WASHINGTON POST, 1/21).  USA TODAY's Rudy Martzke writes
     that Lewin proposed that "most December games would be
     listed as to which team was home but not whether it was a
     doubleheader game on CBS, Fox or on ABC's" MNF.  The
     proposal also says that "on a designated trigger date,
     possibly three or four weeks before the games would be
     played, ABC, CBS and Fox would pick their games.  The three
     networks would alternate as to which gets the first pick
     each weekend" (USA TODAY, 1/21). 

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