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The 2007-2011 Australian Rules Football (AFL) broadcast rights covers broadcast rights for television (both within Australia and internationally), radio, internet and wireless telephony.

Television
The 2007-2011 television broadcast rights were awarded to the Seven Network/Network Ten consortium. On 8 February 2007, the consortium announced four games per week would be on sold to pay television network Foxtel.

Initial negotiations
The Australian Football League started negotiations for the AFL television rights in early 2005. There were two main parties in the negotiations for the AFL television broadcasting rights; the Seven Network/Network Ten party and the Nine Network/Foxtel party.

Network Ten were originally expected to continue their current partnership with the Nine Network, but announced their intention to bid with Seven on 17 March 2005. The Seven/Ten alliance left the Nine Network without a free-to-air television partner, which posed difficulties for the network; it was committed to broadcasting National Rugby League (NRL) matches in Sydney and Brisbane which would conflict with AFL matches.

Eddie McGuire publicly criticised the Seven/Ten alliance on Nine Network program The Footy Show. McGuire said that the alliance would squeeze Nine out of the bidding, and would result in television rights going for "bargain basement prices". He continued that low-priced broadcasting rights could threaten the financial viability the AFL. Seven Network spokesman Simon Francis described McGuire's criticism as "complete nonsense", and that as a result of the Seven/Ten alliance, "the AFL [would] negotiate a higher rate." Network Ten chief executive John McAlpine said McGuire's on-air attack was "pathetic" and hypocritical, as the Nine Network had teamed up with Ten under similar circumstances for the previous set of television rights.