Apple is quickly becoming a player for major sports rights after deals with Major League Baseball and Major League Soccer, as well as a potential NFL deal.
Why it matters: Competition for sports rights has never been greater, and now legacy media companies have to contend with digital natives like Apple and Amazon.
Driving the news: Apple stunned everyone Tuesday when it announced that it signed a 10-year rights deal with Major League Soccer that begins in 2023.
- The deal will see Apple create a new streaming service for MLS games that will be exclusively housed within Apple TV. It will feature every single game, meaning there are no local blackout rules.
- Certain games may also become available on linear TV, and a source tells Axios that ESPN, MLS’ current rights holder, is still in talks for some of those games.
- While Apple declined to comment on the deal terms, it is reportedly for $250 million a year (up from the current $90 million per year it got from its expiring deal). When you factor in subscription revenue, the agreement is worth more than $2.5 billion for the soccer league.
Be smart: This arguably gives Apple greater control over a sport it carries compared to every other rights holder.
- “No fragmentation, no frustration — just the flexibility to sign up for one convenient service that gives you everything MLS, anywhere and anytime you want to watch,” Eddy Cue, Apple’s SVP of services, said in a statement.
The big picture: Apple and Amazon are fighting over sports supremacy in the streaming world.
- The two are seen as the biggest contenders for the NFL’s Sunday Ticket package as well as a stake in the league’s media business.
- Amazon is already in business with the NFL. It’s paying $1 billion a year to carry “Thursday Night Football” starting in the fall.
- Disney, Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery are looking to give their in-house services ESPN+, Hulu, Paramount+ and HBO Max a sports boost as well.
What’s next: A slew of major rights will come up for renewal over the next few years, including the Big Ten and Pac-12 conferences from the NCAA, as well as the NBA.