Baseball to stay in dugout for TV sale
Major League Baseball won’t get a shot at controlling the nation’s regional sports TV networks, after all.
MLB has resigned itself to becoming a minority investor —as Disney wraps up its auction of the 21 so-called RSNs — giving up on a dream to become the operator of a nationwide chain of sports-focused TV channels, sources told The Post.
“MLBpreferred majority but have come to the conclusion that it is not going to be possible and they want to be part of a consortium,” according to a source close to the talks.
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred surprised media executives in November when he jumped into the auction. At the time, sources close to MLBsaid the league was angling to centralize the media rights of MLB’s various teams, boosting its ability to resell games to a fast-growing array of online streaming services.
The problem: MLB is owned by the 30 teams it encompasses — and those teams want to charge the RSNs as muchas they can for the rights to broadcast their games.
“MLBwantstomakesurerightsfeesgoup,” according to a source close to the process.
That wouldn’t sit well with Charter Communications, the cable giant that’s controlled by billionaire John Malone’s Liberty Media, which is a leading bidder in the auction. Ditto for Sinclair Broadcast Group, which some insiders believe is poised to scoop up the RSNs for around $10 billion in the coming days.
“It became hard to be behind MLB,” the source said.
The league has spoken to all the leading suitors in the auction as it has tried to position itself, sources said. MLB is now in talks to become a minority investor if Liberty Media wins the auction, according to sources close to the situation.
But if a rival bid from Sinclair or Big3 basketball prevails, MLB also would be willing to play ball with one of them as a junior investor, sources said.
“They moved around a lot on how they wanted to participate,” a source said.
MLBdeclined to comment.