ESPN Re-Ups With MLB For $5.6 Billion Over 8 Years

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  • TheImmortalGoud
    No longer a noob
    • Jan 2011
    • 1790

    ESPN Re-Ups With MLB For $5.6 Billion Over 8 Years

    One domino has fallen in the conversation about the MLB rights that are expiring after this season. ESPN has agreed to renew their contract with Major League Baseball, to the tune of eight years and $5.6 billion, or about $700 million per season. The $700 million is more than twice what ESPN is currently paying Read more...


    One domino has fallen in the conversation about the MLB rights that are expiring after this season. ESPN has agreed to renew their contract with Major League Baseball, to the tune of eight years and $5.6 billion, or about $700 million per season. The $700 million is more than twice what ESPN is currently paying ($306 million), and the overall benefits are actually very insignificant. ESPN gets one wild card playoff game, and picks up some radio, digital, and international rights. They also retain the rights to Sunday Night Baseball, Monday and Wednesday games, and highlights for Baseball Tonight.

    The fact that ESPN doubled what they're paying per year for, essentially, one playoff game speaks to the power that TV rights for major sports hold over the networks. There are a couple of benefits, though. ESPN will increase their total amount of live games by 13%, and perhaps most importantly, the deal gets rid of blackouts on all ESPN broadcasted games. Every baseball fan is pretty much high fiving and doing backflips when hearing the words "no blackouts". Currently, the Monday and Wednesday games are blacked out in home markets of the teams involved due to the presence of a local feed. This is never an issue for Sunday Night Baseball because of ESPN's exclusivity rights with the broadcast, and the fact that the one game is aired nationally.

    The most interesting parts of this deal are related to other entities. Will ESPN have enough money left after this deal to re-up with NASCAR and the Big East, whose rights are also up for grabs? What does this do for the value of the Saturday MLB package currently held by Fox? Everyone expected ESPN and MLB to continue their contract, but I don't think anyone could have predicted a doubling of the money involved. Another ineresting aside is the removal of blackouts for Monday and Wednesday games. Is this going to potentially open the door for Fox to get rid of Saturday blackouts for all games in the timeframe? I think that would pretty much be nirvana for a baseball fan, and would do a lot in appeasing fans of the league.
  • Warner2BruceTD
    2011 Poster Of The Year
    • Mar 2009
    • 26142

    #2
    A few thoughts.

    -Not sure why whoever wrote this is surprised that the rights fees doubled. I guess this person isn't paying attention to the current climate.

    -The lifting of the Mon/Wed blackouts isn't really a big deal to viewers. If a game is blacked out, it just means it's available to you on the local channel. It IS a big deal to ESPN, because now instead of giving people a black screen or a backup game, everybody gets their prime game.

    -I don't expect FOX (or whoever wins the bid) to drop the Saturday black out. Unlike the Mon/Wed blackout, it's impossible to watch any game other than what FOX gives you during their exclusive window. This is obviously bullshit for the fans who pay for Extra Innings or mlb.tv. I understand where FOX is coming from, but they really need to at least lift the blackouts for the people who pay to watch MLB.

    -I don't expect ESPN to re up with the Big East, which is really a shame, and the final nail in the coffin of the best basketball league in the country over the last 30 years. Fuck CFB, and fuck the BCS.

    -The only time I watch baseball on ESPN is when the Reds play on Sunday Night and I have no other choice. Can't remember the last time I watched an ESPN baseball broadcast otherwise. Not that this has anything to do with the article, just something I realized as I was reading it.

    Comment

    • ThomasTomasz
      • Sep 2024

      #3
      Warner, same here with watching ESPN for baseball. No need to watch Baseball Tonight, as there is the MLB network for that. And MASN and CSN here have plenty else to keep me busy.

      Comment

      • Goober
        Needs a hobby
        • Feb 2009
        • 12271

        #4
        Don't the ESPN baseball broadcasts get terrible viewer numbers? People watch their local team. If they want more baseball they turn on MLB.tv, not turn on ESPN.

        Comment

        • EmpireWF
          Giants in the Super Bowl
          • Mar 2009
          • 24082

          #5
          Originally posted by Goobyslayer
          Don't the ESPN baseball broadcasts get terrible viewer numbers? People watch their local team. If they want more baseball they turn on MLB.tv, not turn on ESPN.
          Mlb.tv subscriptions can't be bigger than the numbers ESPN pulls, I'd assume.


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