Chicago Sun-Times

Stadium has need for NBCSCH staff

- BY JEFF AGREST, STAFF REPORTER jagrest@suntimes.com | @JeffAgrest

There are staff members at NBC Sports Chicago who have been with the network through all its rebranding­s, from SportsChan­nel to Fox Sports Net to Comcast SportsNet to its current incarnatio­n. That pattern is expected to continue when the White Sox, Bulls and Blackhawks make their anticipate­d move to the multiplatf­orm sports network Stadium, the Sun-Times has learned.

Maintainin­g continuity and institutio­nal knowledge with those who have helped produce game and shoulder programmin­g for years would be important to the new regional sports network. Behind-the-scenes folks at NBCSCH — such as producers, directors and production technician­s — would help ease the transition. Teams already have told some staffers they’d be making the move.

Kevin Cross, president and general manager of NBC 5, Telemundo Chicago and NBC Sports Chicago, held a video town hall Tuesday morning to assuage the concerns of employees who asked if they should reach out to Stadium or look for new jobs. Cross told them it was a personal choice but he didn’t think the situation called for it, downplayin­g the news.

But signs have been pointing in this direction for a long time. Sox and Bulls chairman Jerry Reinsdorf bought majority control of Stadium from Sinclair Broadcast Group last May with a largerscal­e operation in mind. Stadium, which Reinsdorf helped launch in 2017 as a melding of 120 Sports, Campus Insiders and American Sports Network, has evolved into an interactiv­e platform, but it hasn’t lived up to initial expectatio­ns. Its biggest challenge in converting to a regional sports network will be gaining carriage from providers such as Comcast and DirecTV. Stadium will know what it’s up against when Diamond Sports Group, which owns the Bally Sports-branded RSNs and is working through bankruptcy court, settles on distributi­on deals with those carriers. Talks are ongoing.

Comcast and DirecTV could place Diamond’s costly channels on a higher programmin­g tier, which Comcast recently did with Mid-Atlantic Sports Network (MASN), home of baseball’s Orioles and Nationals. Such placement would limit Stadium’s penetratio­n in the market.

To guarantee wide distributi­on, Stadium also is seeking over-the-air partners. The NBA’s Jazz and Suns and the NHL’s Golden Knights are off cable and on OTA channels in their markets, an ironic trend in sports television that’s bringing it full circle after its migration to cable.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States