Times-Call (Longmont)

Demoff talks options for games

- By Bennett Durando bdurando@denverpost.com

In his first public comments since inheriting oversight of the dispute between Altitude TV and Comcast, Kroenke Sports & Entertainm­ent executive Kevin Demoff acknowledg­ed streaming and overthe-air television as possible paths forward for local broadcasts of Nuggets and Avalanche games.

“We’re studying every possibilit­y,” said Demoff, who was announced as KSE’S new president of team and media operations. “It’s possible that we could wind up doing a streaming product, and it’s possible we could wind up doing something overthe-air. It’s hopeful that we could try to find a deal with all the cable providers.”

Altitude, the Kroenkeown­ed regional sports network, settled a nearly fouryear-old lawsuit with Comcast last March, but the two sides have remained at a contract impasse since then, keeping Nuggets and Avalanche games blacked out to subscriber­s in Colorado. Altitude filed the lawsuit against Comcast after its carriage deal lapsed in September 2019, accusing the cable giant of violating antitrust laws. Altitude is available in Colorado on Directv, Fubo TV and Charter.

Demoff is president of the Los Angeles Rams in addition to his new titles. He’s taking over responsibi­lities regarding Altitude after the recent resignatio­n of Matt Hutchings, who oversaw the RSN as KSE’S chief operating officer and executive vice president.

“The first meeting after this press conference is on this exact topic,” Demoff said. “So I think that tells you exactly where we are.”

The ongoing contract dispute has coincided with widespread strife for regional sports networks and a revolution in live sports streaming. Other NBA franchises have pivoted away from RSNS. In the last year, the Phoenix Suns and Utah Jazz have establishe­d models that made games available via new streaming services as well as over-the-air local television.

“When you look around the landscape and you see what Phoenix has done, you see what Utah has done, you see a lot of these teams creating a streaming product or an overthe-air product. You wonder, why is it more difficult for us?” Demoff said Thursday. “And I think that’s the question to get to the bottom of. Now one true answer is: We own Altitude. It is our network. So it is far more complicate­d than watching an RSN that you had a contract with drop off.”

In Denver, the RSN that broadcast Colorado Rockies games (AT&T Sportsnet) ceased operations last year, forcing Major League Baseball to take over the team’s broadcasts for the upcoming 2024 season. Rockies games will be available to stream on Rockies.tv, but the franchise has yet to reveal a cable television option.

“There is no greater priority to this organizati­on and for our fans than getting these games on the air,” Demoff said. “We have generation­al talents, championsh­ip teams. And not only is it for the fans now, but I look at the 7-year-olds, 8-year-olds who walk into this arena: They should be growing up rabid Nuggets, Avalanche (fans). … This should be the peak of their fandom. And so for us, it’s not just about who’s watching now. It’s about making sure we don’t lose that next generation of fans by not being on the air.

“For me personally, I worked very hard with some great people for my entire 30s to build these teams to places where the Avs hadn’t been in a while, and that the Nuggets had never been before. So every time I hear (local fans can’t watch games), it’s like a knife in the heart,” said Josh Kroenke, governor of the Avalanche and Nuggets. “When Kevin and I sat down to talk about this new role, and this new opportunit­y, the first and only thing we discussed was how to get Altitude back on the air for the majority of the Denver area.”

“We’re studying every possibilit­y,” KSE executive says

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