Sports Biz: NHL embraces future with $2.8 billion ESPN deal

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NHL embraces future with $2.8 billion ESPN deal
By Andrew Marchand
March 10, 2021 | 8:25pm | Updated


The sweet sound of ESPN’s iconic music will play again in the ears of longtime NHL fans. You can almost hear Steve Levy welcoming back hockey with nostalgia and enthusiasm.

Though the new deal between ESPN and the NHL feels out of yesteryear, it is really about tomorrow becoming today in the world of big-time sports media.

In paying, according to sources, around $2.8 billion over the next seven seasons beginning next year, Disney is making sure diehard hockey fans must have ESPN+, Hulu or preferably — in Mickey Mouse’s passive, aggressive, but cunning business mind — both.

In picking up the “A” package starting in 2021-22, ABC/ESPN will broadcast four of the next seven Stanley Cup finals. It will have its choice of conference finals. It will have half the playoffs. This will all arrive for fans the traditional way you receive games on network TV and cable. So you will have to keep your traditional subscription to ESPN to see the postseason.

During the regular season, there will be 75 exclusive games on ESPN+ and Hulu. You will only be able to get them there. So, a year from now, if Rangers-Islanders is one of those 75, you would need to have ESPN+ or Hulu to view it. No MSG Network.

We have already seen this trend in soccer, where big-time fans of the sport must have Peacock (Premier League), ESPN+ (German and Italian leagues and FA Cup) and Paramount Plus (Champions League) if they want English-language broadcasts of all these matches.

Big-time wrestling fans were recently shifted from WWE Network to Peacock. The NFL is soon expected to announce a deal with Amazon Prime for exclusive Thursday night broadcasts that will start in a couple of years.

The NHL’s new deal with ESPN is worth a reported $2.8 billion.Getty Images

But this NHL deal is more than the NFL’s dip in the water. It is more evidence of the transition from cable to streaming.

Besides the exclusive games, a subscription to ESPN+ will include 1,100 out-of-market matchups that were formerly on NHL.TV.
“ESPN+ will be a must-have for hockey fans,” ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro said.

There are various prices and bundles on all these platforms, but, generally speaking, they are in the $5-7 per month range. Once you start paying them, you may do it for life. At 12.1 million ESPN+ subscribers and growing, it could be quite a business.

For the NHL, this deal made sense because there will be another one behind it. NBC is currently in the final year of its 10-year, $2 billion contract. A source said they are paying $240 million this year. ESPN, as part of a previous digital rights deal, was already spending $100 million on the NHL. If you add both those costs together, it is $340 million. Now, with both, ESPN will go to $400 million per year over the seven-year deal. A $60 million increase for you or me would be something else, but in the world of big TV is not that much.
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But the NHL still has three Stanley Cup finals, half of the playoffs and regular-season games to sell. NBC has the incumbent advantage, while Fox is the other main suitor.

They will likely come near the $200 million neighborhood, making the NHL around $260 million in the black, year-over-year. That’s the next story. Today, though, is about ESPN’s return.

ESPN comes back to the NHL, which is a win for those like Levy, Barry Melrose, Linda Cohn and John Bucigross, who stuck around and avoided the ceaseless staff cuts.

They will probably all be part of the coverage, while ESPN could look internally (ESPN New York’s Rick DiPietro seems like a natural as an analyst) and maybe outside to someone like Fox Sports’ Jenny Taft, who was born on skates.

The story of ESPN’s NHL reunion is 17 years in the making. The idea that these two are getting back together after all these years is a nice blast from the past, but this $2.8 billion agreement is all about how the future is quickly becoming the present for fans.
 
I enjoyed ESPN barely covering that bullshit

I thought this was coming, because I started seeing a lot of hockey shit in ESPN's top 10
 
NHL back on ESPN with 7-year multiplatform deal


1:57 PM ET
National Hockey League games will return to ESPN starting with the 2021-22 season.

ESPN and the NHL announced a seven-year deal on Wednesday, returning hockey to ESPN for the first time since 2004. Included will be 25 regular-season games on ESPN or ABC, early-round playoff series and one conference final each year, four Stanley Cup Final series on ABC and more than 1,000 games per season streaming on ESPN+. ESPN+ and Hulu will be home to 75 ESPN-produced exclusive telecasts per season.

The deal also includes opening-night games, the NHL All-Star Game and Skills Challenge and other special events. The NHL's out-of-market streaming package (NHL.TV) is also moving to ESPN+ as part of its subscription offerings.



International rights in Latin America, the Caribbean and parts of Europe are also part of the deal, as are extensive highlight rights for ESPN's digital platforms.

Executives from the NHL and The Walt Disney Company underscored the platform-rich offerings as a key part of the agreement.

"This agreement clearly underscores The Walt Disney Company's leadership in the sports media landscape and serves as a blueprint for sports deals in the future," Jimmy Pitaro, the chairman of ESPN and sports content for Disney, said in a statement. "We know the power of the NHL and are thrilled to welcome it back as a significant new pillar across our platforms, and we look forward to connecting more deeply and directly with some of the sports world's most passionate fans."

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman also lauded the deal. "Not only will this groundbreaking, seven-year deal enable the NHL to benefit from the incomparable power, reach and influence of The Walt Disney Company and ABC/ESPN, it sets a new standard in delivering our game to the most passionate and tech-savvy fans in sports in the ways they now demand and on the platforms they use," he said in a statement.

ESPN+ currently has more than 12 million subscribers. Hulu has 39.4 million.

The first NHL game on ESPN appeared on Dec. 19, 1979 -- a little more than three months after the network premiered. ESPN continued to produce NHL content for the next nine years. After a hiatus, the network became the home for the NHL from 1992 to 2004.

Since then, all games have aired on NBC or its cable properties.
 

Disney’s ESPN strikes 7-year deal to show NHL games
Published: March 10, 2021 at 9:59 p.m. ET
By
Joe Flint

0
$2.8 billion deal will bring games to ESPN, ESPN+, ABC and Hulu in coming years

The Boston Bruins and Philadelphia Flyers play during the "NHL Outdoors at Lake Tahoe" on Feb. 21, 2021 in Stateline, Nevada.

Walt Disney Co.’s DIS, +0.28% ESPN and the National Hockey League said they struck a seven-year deal that will bring the Stanley Cup Finals to Disney’s ABC broadcast network and make hundreds of local-TV games available on the ESPN+ streaming service.

ESPN is paying roughly $2.8 billion for the pay-TV and streaming rights over the course of the deal, according to people familiar with the matter. An ESPN spokeswoman declined to comment on financial terms. “We believe that the deal reflects the quality and volume of content we acquired,” she said.

The pact, which starts at the beginning of the 2021-22 season, puts dozens of national regular-season games exclusively on ESPN’s traditional TV networks and the ABC broadcast network and gives ESPN+ and Hulu the exclusive rights to stream 75 national regular-season games, the companies said.

The talks between the NHL and ESPN were previously reported by The Wall Street Journal and others Tuesday.

The companies said the deal gives ESPN the rights to stream 1,000 local-TV games on ESPN+ for people living in different media markets. That offering that was previously available on NHL.TV streaming service will be shut down, a person familiar with the matter said.
 
It's great for the league. NHL belongs on ESPN and ABC.

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