Green Bay The Green Bay Packers said Wednesday that its net proft was up slightly last year, but so are operating expenses, especially player costs.
Team executives released their financial report in advance of the July 29 shareholders meeting at Lambeau Field and stressed that the franchise is still in sound financial shape.
Net profit for the fiscal year ending March 31 was $5.2 million, up from $4 million last year. Profit from operations, which does not include investment income and provisions for taxes, dropped dramatically to $9.8 million, continuing a trend from the past several years.
In the last fiscal year, profit from operations was $20.1 million.
Expenses, especially player costs, increased markedly. Operating expenses jumped to $248 million, up from $228 million. Of that amount, $161 million went to player costs, up from $139 million.
Player costs are defined as not only salary, but signing bonuses, player incentives, and health and pension costs.
In interviews, team executives said the franchise remained in a strong financial position. At the same time, however, they stressed that player costs continue to be a concern. That is and will be the manta the entire National Football League wants to stress as it continues negotiating with the players union on a new collective bargaining contract.
According to team officials, while player costs have gone up 11%, revenue has only gone up 5.5%.
Player costs are growing at twice the rate of revenue, Murphy said. That, he said, helps explain why the league, with the Packers in full support, agreed to opt out of the current contract and go to an uncapped salary season in 2010.
If an agreement is no reached with the just players next March, there could be a lockout for the 2011 season.
Of particular concern, team executives said, is the issue of local revenue. Local revenue, which stays with each franchise, is an important part of the bottom line. For the Packers, local revenue for the fiscal year ending March 31 was $100.4 million, down slightly from $100.8 million.
Murphy said Pro Shop revenue, as an example, was down.
The economy really impacted us, he said.
Weve all been challenged, Murphy said in an interview. Local revenue is the place where the team has felt the economic challenges. Imagine where we would be in we hadnt done the renovation of Lambeau Field.
Murphy and other executives noted that, in order to grow more local revenue, the franchise did not want to do it on the backs of season-ticket holders. Rather, Murphy said, the team is looking and planning at possible projects that include land the team owns west of Lambeau Field, and the possibility that the south end zone will get more seating in the future.
One bit of good news was that the team recovered somewhat in investments. Last year, the investment account was only down $2.1 million. The year before, the team said it had lost $11.2 million.
The Packers also reported that its Packers Preservation Fund, an account designed as a piggy-bank of sorts, had been kept at $127.5 million. That fund is designed to act much in the way a private owner of a sports franchise would tap into his personal wealth to fund a team.
1. Team executives also said that sales and marketing revenue for the team, which includes Atrium revenue and the Packer Hall of Fame revenue, totaled $43 million, down from $43.7 million the year before.
2. National TV revenue totaled $95.7 million, just higher than the year before, when it was $94.5 million. Total national revenue was $157 million, compared with $147 million the year before.
3. Road game revenue, which also is part of national revenue, totaled $16.1 million, compared with $16 million the year before.
Ill post more as the day unfolds.