The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Streaming push leaves fans scrambling to find games

- By Gerry Smith

The dawn of the streaming era once promised a brighter future for sports fans, a blissful world of à la carte consumptio­n in which everyone could break free of their overstuffe­d, overpriced cable subscripti­ons and pay only for what they really wanted to see.

The reality, as baseball diehards are discoverin­g this season, is much less idyllic.

To watch all the games they want, many fans will have to pay not only for cable but also for multiple streaming services. And once they’ve figured out which app or channel is showing their favorite team, they will be left hoping that the live stream doesn’t crash at a crucial moment. Last month, in the third and fourth innings of Apple Inc.’s first baseball broadcast, some viewers found themselves gazing unhappily at a dreaded error message.

The current fragmented landscape can be traced back, in part, to last year when ESPN decided to scale back the number of games it would broadcast as part of a new contract. Afterward, Major League Baseball sold a large portion of those games to Apple and to Comcast Corp.’s Peacock. This season, New York Yankees fans will also need a third streaming service because Amazon.com Inc., which owns a stake in the team’s cable channel, started streaming a package of 21 games that will air exclusivel­y on Prime Video.

Subscripti­ons to Prime Video start at $9 a month. Peacock’s Sunday slate will be behind a $5-a-month paywall. The games on Apple are free.

Jack Carroll, 65, never misses a Yankees game. But to watch his favorite team this season, he’s had to enlist his son, John, to moonlight in filial tech support.

Recently, John spent 20 minutes on a video chat explaining to his father in New Jersey how to sign up for Apple TV+. Afterward, John tweeted: “Please have sympathy for me and the thousands of other children of boomer Yankee fans going through the same thing tonight.”

“He finds it all very confusing and bewilderin­g,” John, 36, said later in an interview. “It makes me wonder what older fans are doing if they don’t have younger children who know this stuff.”

The current arrangemen­t has intensifie­d the debate over how sports leagues and broadcaste­rs should best strike a balance between reaching a younger generation, weaned on streaming, while continuing to serve an older demographi­c, still tethered to their traditiona­l TV packages. The median age of baseball fans is 57, the oldest among the major sports, according to a study last year by the advertisin­g buyer Magna.

Chris “Mad Dog” Russo, a popular, 62-year-old sports radio host in the New York area, has described baseball’s deal with Apple TV+ as “dangerous.”

“The old-time Met fan living out in Plainview, he’s going to be raising hell a week from Friday,” Russo said on his Siriusxm radio show before Apple’s first broadcast between the New York Mets and Washington Nationals. “And then baseball wonders why everyone’s so upset.”

From the start, baseball was one of the earliest adopters of streaming. The league has been making its games available online since 2002-five years before Netflix began offering an online option.

Noah Garden, chief revenue officer for Major League Baseball, said in an interview that the league decided to push deeper into streaming this season, in part, to be less vulnerable in the years ahead to cable-tv blackouts.

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