Illustration of MLB stadium with ESPN, NBC, and Netflix logos, depicting media rights deal excitement.
Illustration of MLB stadium with ESPN, NBC, and Netflix logos, depicting media rights deal excitement.
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MLB finalizes media rights deals with ESPN, NBC and Netflix

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Major League Baseball announced new three-year media rights agreements with ESPN, NBCUniversal and Netflix on Wednesday, covering the 2026-2028 seasons. The deals shift Sunday Night Baseball to NBC, give Netflix exclusive coverage of Opening Night, the Home Run Derby and the Field of Dreams Game, while ESPN gains rights to MLB.TV and additional national games. The partnerships aim to expand fan reach amid rising viewership from the 2025 season.

Major League Baseball revealed its restructured broadcast landscape on November 19, 2025, following ESPN's opt-out from the previous agreement earlier in the year. The new pacts, valued at approximately $750 million annually—less than the prior $1.65 billion ESPN commitment—distribute key programming across traditional and streaming platforms.

NBCUniversal returns to regular MLB coverage after a 25-year absence, taking over Sunday Night Baseball from ESPN, where it aired since 1990. NBC and Peacock will broadcast 25 prime-time Sunday games, the full Wild Card Series (8-12 games), Sunday Leadoff (18 early Sunday games), and select special events like Opening Day and Labor Day matchups. In 2026, NBC's season opener features the Arizona Diamondbacks against the two-time defending World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers on March 26. During conflicts with NFL or NBA, games shift to Peacock exclusively.

Netflix enters live MLB events for the first time, streaming the standalone Opening Night game on March 25, 2026, pitting the New York Yankees against the San Francisco Giants. It will also air the T-Mobile Home Run Derby ahead of the All-Star Game at Philadelphia's Citizens Bank Park and the Field of Dreams Game on August 13, 2026, with the Minnesota Twins facing the Philadelphia Phillies in Dyersville, Iowa. Netflix previously collaborated on documentaries like the Emmy-winning 'The Turnaround'.

ESPN maintains its longstanding partnership, now in its 39th season, acquiring exclusive rights to MLB.TV, which recorded 19.4 billion minutes watched in 2025—a 34% increase. The service, priced at $150 annually with T-Mobile perks continuing, will integrate into the ESPN App alongside in-market rights for six teams: Arizona Diamondbacks, Cleveland Guardians, Colorado Rockies, Minnesota Twins, San Diego Padres and Seattle Mariners. ESPN adds 30 exclusive weeknight games, plus events like the Little League Classic.

Unchanged elements include Fox/FS1 handling the All-Star Game, postseason through the World Series, and Apple TV's Friday Night Baseball.

"Our new media rights agreements... provide us with a great opportunity to expand our reach to fans," Commissioner Robert D. Manfred Jr. said. Netflix's Bela Bajaria added, "We are seizing that moment by bringing massive cultural spectacles... directly to our members." ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro noted, "This fan-friendly agreement allows us to showcase the great sport of baseball on both a local and national level."

The deals build on 2025's momentum, including the most-watched postseason in eight years and a World Series Game 7 averaging 51 million global viewers.

लोग क्या कह रहे हैं

Reactions on X to MLB's new three-year media rights deals with ESPN, NBC, and Netflix are largely positive, with users excited about NBC's return to broadcasting Sunday Night Baseball after 26 years and Netflix's first foray into live MLB coverage, including the Home Run Derby and Opening Night. Neutral posts from journalists detail the restructuring, such as ESPN acquiring MLB.TV rights and local streaming for six teams. Some fans express skepticism over potential increases in streaming costs and fragmentation of access, questioning impacts on existing T-Mobile MLB.TV perks and overall fan experience.

संबंधित लेख

Photorealistic illustration of Jason Benetti as NBC's new lead Sunday Night Baseball announcer in a Dodger Stadium broadcast booth with team analysts.
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NBC hires Jason Benetti as lead MLB play-by-play announcer

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NBC Sports has named Jason Benetti as the lead play-by-play voice for its Sunday Night Baseball coverage starting in 2026. Benetti, currently the Detroit Tigers' announcer, will debut on March 26 when the Los Angeles Dodgers host the Arizona Diamondbacks. He joins a team featuring studio host Bob Costas and analysts Joey Votto, Clayton Kershaw, and Anthony Rizzo.

Netflix will stream Major League Baseball's 2026 Opening Night live for the first time, featuring the New York Yankees against the San Francisco Giants on March 25 at Oracle Park in San Francisco. First pitch is at 8:05 p.m. ET, preceded by a 7 p.m. ET pregame show, highlighting Netflix's push into live sports amid its strategy to diversify beyond on-demand content.

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Major League Baseball kicks off its 2026 regular season tonight with Yankees-Giants on Netflix. The opening weekend features marquee matchups across national networks including NBC, Peacock, Apple TV and FOX. Fans can track all games via mlb.com/watch.

Formula 1 has extended its partnership with ESPN for comprehensive coverage across 18 Latin American countries and the Caribbean until the end of the 2028 season. This follows the recent shift of US rights to Apple from 2026, ensuring continued accessibility in the region with all sessions and support series.

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