The Idaho Statesman (Sunday)

Bally Sports to send as much as $78M to Padres

- BY JEFF SANDERS San Diego Union-tribune

The Padres will recoup just a fraction of what they were owed when Bally Sports San Diego’s parent company defaulted on its television contract last season, according to a copy of an agreement filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court on Tuesday.

Diamond Sports Group agreed last year to pay the Padres as much as $78.9 million, as first reported by Awful Announcing.

The Padres originally sought $162 million from

Diamond Sports Group, which was contracted to broadcast the team’s games through 2032 at roughly $60 million per year – a total of more than $360 million.

The confidenti­al agreement was made public as part of an exhibit in a motion for the federal judge overseeing the case in the Southern District of Texas.

The sides eventually settled for an initial payment of just under $10.5 million and a remaininga­ssets payment that will not exceed $68.3 million. As part of the settlement, all parties have agreed to drop current and future litigation.

The first payment is due 30 days following Tuesday’s filing. It was not immediatel­y clear when the second payment, which reflects 62.5% of the liquidated cash value of Bally Sports San Diego, is scheduled to occur.

A spokespers­on for Major League Baseball, which took over producing Padres broadcasts last summer and now negotiates local TV contracts for the team, deferred comment to the Padres.

The team said it could not comment, citing pending litigation.

Diamond Sports Group filed for bankruptcy last year as it looked to eliminate more than $8 billion in outstandin­g debut.

The company made an 11th-hour payment to the

Padres on the eve of last year’s opening day and was required to make a final payment in May.

Instead, Diamond allowed a grace period to expire, sending broadcast rights back to the Padres and Major League Baseball. Diamond has since terminated its regional sports network contract with the Arizona Diamondbac­ks through bankruptcy proceeding­s, the fallout of years of losses set against the backdrop of consumer cord-cutting.

Last year’s terminatio­n of the Padres’ contract arrived as the club pushed spending to a franchiser­ecord $256 million. Major League Baseball agreed to backstop the Padres at 80 percent of its Bally contract for 2023. The Padres cut opening day payroll by more than $90 million to start 2024, although team officials have downplayed the impact that the loss of the Diamond contract would have on finances moving forward.

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