Santa Fe New Mexican

Netflix dabbles in airing live sports

Streaming giant likes having global broadcasti­ng rights, which NFL, NBA do not allow

- By Joe Reedy

After being on the sidelines, Netflix has started dipping into live sports.

Over the past few months, the streaming giant has aired exhibition events in golf and tennis. It is also slated to air the July 20 bout between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul. Beginning next year, Netflix will start carrying World Wrestling Entertainm­ent’s flagship show, Raw.

So there’s been speculatio­n about whether Netflix’s recent forays into live sports are a precursor to becoming a major player for live sports rights. While having another competitor for rights would certainly be welcomed, it is unlikely to happen soon.

“The discipline that they have shown about what they’re either creating or acquiring and not deviating from that has been fascinatin­g to watch so far,” said Tag Garson, president of Excelsior Sports and Entertainm­ent, a consulting and marketing company.

Int November’s Netflix Cup, where Formula 1 drivers were paired with PGA golfers in a match-play format, and the March 3 Netflix Slam exhibition match between Rafael Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz had one thing in common — they paired seamlessly with documentar­ies the company was already offering.

The Netflix Cup brought together famous figures from Drive to Survive and Full Swing, and the Netflix Slam for Point Break. Even though Point Break is ending after two seasons, Netflix is producing a documentar­y series about Alcaraz that will air next year.

For those wondering where boxing fits in, Netflix’s third season of Untold did its first episode on Jake Paul’s rise in boxing and the controvers­ies that nearly derailed his career.

In Netflix’s case, live sports serve as shoulder and support programmin­g for the documentar­ies and series, which is the opposite of what usually happens.

“Everything that they’re doing has compelling storylines. It doesn’t matter what genre we’re talking about within sports and entertainm­ent,” Garson said. “The way that they’re going about it is also putting a very high production value into what is being distribute­d across Netflix.”

Gabe Spitzer, Netflix vice president of nonfiction sports, has said in recent interviews that they have talked to every league and team but have mainly discussed series and documentar­ies.

Netflix has also proved it can create programs featuring the top sports leagues without carrying games. A new NFL series called Receiver, which followed five wide receivers throughout the last season, was announced Tuesday. For three weeks, last year’s Quarterbac­k series was among Netflix’s top 10 series globally.

Netflix is also working on a project with the Boston Red Sox and developed multiple series devoted to the recent FIFA men’s and women’s world cups.

Netflix’s and Apple’s strategies with live sports are similar.

Both are willing to bid if it means rights beyond the United States.

The WWE deal gives Netflix the rights to carry Raw in the U.S., Canada, the United Kingdom and Latin America, with additional countries to be added as contracts expire. The bigger component, though, is that Netflix becomes the carrier of all WWE shows and specials outside the U.S. and the company’s premium live events, including WrestleMan­ia and SummerSlam.

Netflix has said in recent announceme­nts about programmin­g that it has 260 million paid membership­s in over 190 countries.

That’s why Netflix would be unlikely to explore bidding on a piece of the NBA package when negotiatio­ns open in a couple of months, or UFC when ESPN’s rights come up for renewal in a year, unless it contains additional countries.

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