Los Angeles Times

KTLA set to air 10 early-season Dodgers games

Lineup includes game at which Scully will be inducted into team’s Ring of Honor.

- By Bill Shaikin bill.shaikin@latimes.com

Can a few games on free television get Dodgers fans to cancel their DirecTV and sign up for SportsNet LA?

The Dodgers announced Wednesday that, as expected, the team would air 10 games this season on KTLATV Channel 5 as simulcasts of the SportsNet LA broadcast.

With the Dodgers’ television blackout entering its fourth season, the 10-game package extends an olive branch to the majority of local fans who do not get SportsNet LA.

The first of the KTLA games is April 5, the last May 7. The deal includes the May 3 game, when retired Hall of Fame broadcaste­r Vin Scully will be inducted into the Dodgers’ Ring of Honor.

There are no current plans to add broadcasts on KTLA later in the season.

The Dodgers and Charter Communicat­ions, the cable company that markets SportsNet LA to other distributo­rs, hope the free sample of early-season games might entice DirecTV subscriber­s to switch to Charter’s Spectrum service.

There are no active negotiatio­ns between Charter and DirecTV, and DirecTV has not seen a strong enough demand among subscriber­s to persuade it to add SportsNet LA.

If the stalemate continues, the Dodgers and Charter could decide to extend this season’s model into future years: a few games on KTLA or another over-theair station, with the vast majority of games exclusive to Spectrum.

KTLA aired six games last season, including the final broadcasts in Scully’s 67year career. In 2014, the first year for the Dodgers’ SportsNet LA channel, KDOC-TV Channel 56 aired the last six games of the regular season.

The Dodgers own SportsNet LA. In exchange for a guaranteed $8.35 billion over 25 years, they granted Time Warner Cable exclusive marketing rights for the channel.

Neither TWC nor Charter Communicat­ions, which bought TWC last year, has been able to reach agreement with DirecTV or other local cable and satellite providers to air SportsNet LA.

As a result, Charter is the only major pay-TV distributo­r in Southern California to carry SportsNet LA.

In November, the Department of Justice sued AT&T, alleging its DirecTV subsidiary had violated antitrust laws by sharing informatio­n about SportsNet LA negotiatio­ns with other carriers.

With DirecTV as the “ringleader,” the government charged, cable and satellite companies could demand better deals from TWC without worrying that competitor­s would carry the channel.

“The ultimate result: many consumers in L.A. had fewer — or no — means by which to watch the Dodgers channel,” the lawsuit read.

AT&T has denied the charges and has asked a federal court to throw out the suit. In so doing, AT&T said the government had not alleged an agreement among competitor­s to freeze out SportsNet LA and had not proved that the channel would be on the air if not for the purported sharing of informatio­n.

TWC made an “extravagan­t bet” in paying the Dodgers so much money, AT&T said, and the asking price for distributo­rs to pay to carry SportsNet LA — a reported $5 per subscriber per month — was simply too high for a channel that many viewers would not watch.

Here are the Dodgers games KTLA will carry:

Wednesday, April 5, home vs. the San Diego Padres; Sunday, April 9, at the Colorado Rockies; Wednesday, April 12, at the Chicago Cubs; Sunday, April 16, home vs. the Arizona Diamondbac­ks; Tuesday and Wednesday, April 18 and 19, home vs. the Rockies; Sunday, April 23, at the Diamondbac­ks; Sunday, April 30, home vs. the Philadelph­ia Phillies; Wednesday, May 3, home vs. the San Francisco Giants; Sunday, May 7, at the Padres.

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