The Province

Swimming in a stream of profanity

Amid fan anger, online provider DAZN scrambles to solve NFL webcasting issues

- Scott Stinson sstinson@postmedia.com Twitter.com/Scott_Stinson

On the Twitter page of DAZN Canada, the streaming service that had a disastrous debut as the home of NFL Sunday Ticket in this country, there was the following message posted from a viewer Thursday night: “Working now thanks. Hope for the best in the future. I know all can be difficult. Wish the best.”

This was notable not just because it might be the nicest thing anyone has ever said to a corporate account on Twitter, but also because it came amid a stream of anger and abuse from others.

It has become something of a routine. Since DAZN, a U.K.-based sports-focused streaming service, became the exclusive home of the NFL’s every-game-every-week package here, it has been subject to a litany of complaints about the quality of its service. The outcry began in the pre-season and reached its apex Sunday with viewers reporting error codes, audio problems, delayed feeds, fuzzy pictures and more skipping than a schoolyard.

DAZN has since apologized, as has the NFL, and Thursday it said many of the issues faced Sunday had been resolved. But for Canadians who have been lamenting that they just want Sunday Ticket available again through non-digital means, there is a more significan­t bit of news coming from DAZN: They could be providing that, too.

“We are working very closely with the NFL on some solutions for that,” Alex Rice, DAZN’s managing director of strategic developmen­t, said Friday.

It’s too early to say what those solutions would be, though the most obvious would be allowing television service providers to offer Sunday Ticket like they did in seasons past and it’s unclear how soon that could happen. Not days, but weeks, most likely.

But whatever develops, it’s clear DAZN wasn’t prepared to provide this service in Canada and clear the NFL hadn’t fully considered the impact of selling its Sunday Ticket rights to a streaming-only service in the league’s second-biggest market.

The problems with DAZN affect two different types of NFL viewer. The first are those who were willing to pay the relatively cheap $20 monthly fee, who are comfortabl­e streaming to a phone or laptop or who view that stream on their television through a device like AppleTV or a game console. Those people just want it to work with a clear, smooth picture and minimal delay. It didn’t work for many subscriber­s on the opening weekend.

“It was a penalty flag that was well deserved,” Rice said of the initial blowback. “We realize we need to serve our users with a strong, stable, HD experience.”

But there is also the potential NFL viewer for whom the type of service offered by DAZN was never going to make sense, even if everything was going swimmingly with the streams it was providing. Canadians who have slow internet connection­s or data plans with any sort of a usage cap understand­ably recoil at the notion of streaming HD video for hours at a time. It’s those customers for whom DAZN and the NFL are considerin­g alternativ­e solutions. But there are not a lot of games in a football season and so to a diehard fan every week counts.

All of this leads to broader questions about what the NFL thought it was getting itself into.

The NFL is used to attaching exclusivit­y to Sunday Ticket — it is only available in the U.S. through the DirectTV satellite service — but that has been the case since its launch there more than 20 years ago. Here, Sunday Ticket has been widely available through most television providers and then suddenly it wasn’t. That way lies outrage.

For now, with the digital option the only one available, the question is whether DAZN can get through Sunday without another full-scale meltdown that leads to apologies and recriminat­ions Monday.

 ?? — AP FILES ?? After complaints over last week’s production quality of its NFL coverage, streaming service DAZN has announced it’s working on a plan that could result in a non-digital option for subscriber­s.
— AP FILES After complaints over last week’s production quality of its NFL coverage, streaming service DAZN has announced it’s working on a plan that could result in a non-digital option for subscriber­s.

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