Streaming Media
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Live content is led
by sports, and fan appetite—much like bidding for rights—shows no sign of
slowing down as the calendar turns to 2024. A survey of adult sports fans in
the U.S. the UK, Germany, Spain, and China suggests that the reach of top
sports leagues has never been more global, and the willingness of fans to spend
hundreds yearly to stream games and events from these leagues remains high in
some markets, according to Altman Solon’s 2023 Global Sports Survey.
ViewLift CEO Rick
Allen tells Streaming Media that the markets for sports broadcasting
in North America and Europe will begin to mirror each other through the
integration of linear TV and streaming.
“Europe must
prepare for the possibility of cord-cutting escalating in Europe, mirroring the
trend already well underway in the U.S.,” he says. “Whether it’s the global
fanbase inspired by Europe’s soccer dominance or the U.S.’s inventive solutions
addressing shifts in the RSN model, these lessons have the potential to ignite
innovation and the development of fresh revenue-generating business models. In
2024, we are likely to see more similarities as they draw lessons from each
other.”
NBA: America’s Most
Globally Relevant Property
The NBA is the next
major sports property with media rights up for grabs and even though a deal is
likely months away, the machinations surrounding it offers a picture of the
state of live streaming.
The current deal
with Disney’s ABC/ESPN and Warner Bros. Discovery’s TNT expires after the
2024–25 NBA season. While the league currently earns $2.7 billion per season
from those national broadcast partners—collectively the second biggest domestic
rights deal in U.S. sports—the vast majority of its broadcast revenue is
generated overseas.
Calling the NBA
“America’s most globally relevant sports property,” Ampere Analysis calculates
that the league performs far better internationally than the NFL and MLB,
earning $715 million annually from its non-US media rights agreements, equal to
21 percent of its total media rights value.
The NBA will use
that as well as a heated streaming market to raise valuation as high as $75
million, or $7–$8 billion per year.
Commissioner Adam
Silver, who heads NBA negotiations, wants to avoid creating too much
fragmentation for fans by adding too many broadcast media partners at the
same time as signalling an intent to work with one or streamers. “You’re
clearly seeing an evolution or a morphing of media moving continually to
streaming services,” Silver said. “Obviously other entrants in the market would
potentially be interested.”
In another
interview Silver added, “There will be more changes in media technology
over the next 5 years than there has been in the last 30 years.” Streaming
platforms and video technology increasingly will enable fans to tailor their
viewing via customization and personalization, according to Silver. “To the
extent you want to follow a particular player, you want more data as you’re
watching the game, you want to be chatting with your friends or part of a
larger conversation with experts. All of those things are beginning to happen
now in sports, but I feel like we’re just scratching the surface.”
Joining the two
incumbents in the bid will be Amazon, Apple, Comcast, Google through YouTubeTV,
and even Netflix.
Although the NBA
would be highly unlikely to strike an exclusive deal with a streamer, the
league’s domestic TV ratings are tanking. SportsMediaWatch highlighted that
the 2022–23 NBA season saw its linear viewership audience nearly cut in half
compared to its linear audience a decade prior.
Contrast that with
the record of over 32 billion views across social media last season,
and that 50% of its total social media audience were 25 years old or younger.
The NBA’s ability to secure a young and diverse demographic via linear TV is
another major reason why its streaming rights remain so valuable.
But it is the
global value of the NBA which makes the $7 billion to $8 billion number
possible. “The valuation could be light,” John Rowady, founder of sports
marketing agency rEvolution told TheStreet. “Given the league’s
international appeal and the digital opportunities it presents, this figure
isn’t beyond the realms of possibility in today’s evolving media rights
marketplace.”
DAZN Path to
Profitability
According to its
latest annual review published at the beginning of 2023, DAZN reached 15
million subscribers globally in 2022, generating total annual revenues of $2.3
billion but an operating loss of $1.36 billion. This represented a 70%
year-over-year revenue growth for the sports-dedicated subscription OTT
platform, which, in its seventh year of operations, has grown to become the
fifth largest buyer of sports rights globally, leading the subscription
OTT market by investment on sports rights.
According to Jack
Genovese at Ampere Analysis, DAZN has adopted a strategy of heavy investment in
top-tier rights to accelerate subscription growth at an early stage. Indeed,
Ampere estimates that, in its core markets of Japan, Germany, Italy, Spain and the
USA, DAZN grew at a CAGR of 90% per year since launching in 2016. Despite the
rapid growth in subscriptions, however, DAZN has yet to be profitable. In its
annual review, DAZN indicated that it is aiming to achieve profitability in
early 2024.
Currently, DAZN
generates up to 80% of its income from subscriptions. In order to break even,
Ampere thinks DAZN would need to grow subscriptions revenue by 34% in 2023
while also generating $730 million in advertising revenues.
Genovese says,
“While this sounds ambitious, if we assume advertising accounted for half of
this additional revenue, DAZN would be generating only around a third of the
advertising revenue generated by rival Sky from a broadly similar-sized
subscriber base.”
Netflix Inches
Toward Live
Netflix began
expanding its live capabilities in 2023 with mixed results. In March, the
company live streamed a Chris Rock special without a hitch. However, in April,
distribution difficulties struck a live streamed special for the reality
show Love Is Blind, forcing Netflix to revert to a pre-taped finale
which aired in October.
“To everyone who
stayed up late, woke up early, gave up their Sunday afternoon… we are
incredibly sorry that the Love is Blind Live Reunion did not turn out
as we had planned,” Netflix tweeted in a statement.
Netflix did not
give a reason for cancelling the livestream, but show host Vanessa Lachey
indicated it was a technical error in a live video on Instagram,
captioned: “Apparently we broke the internet.” Website tracker Downdetector
showed more than 10,000 people in the U.S. reported the website was not
functioning during the stream.
To coincide with a
new Las Vegas Grand Prix and the success of Netflix doc series Drive to
Survive, November saw the inaugural Netflix Cup, which pitted leading golfers
against F1 drivers in a live cross-sport event. The event aimed to strike a
balance between sports and entertainment, but reception was mixed.
While the event
aired commercial-free, Netflix was charging sponsors including Nespresso
$2 million for billboards at Las Vegas’ Wynn Golf Club, meaning that even users
on Netflix’s non-ad tiers would see them. Netflix says it is not interested in
chasing the costly rights fees of major sports like basketball and NFL, but
will continue to experiment with live one-off events; among them a live
broadcast of a Jake Paul boxing match.
“We are investing
heavily in increasing our live capabilities so that as the demand grows for
that and we find different ways, the liveness can be part of the creative
storytelling,” co-CEO Ted Sarandos said in a Q3 earnings call. “We want to be
able to do that at a big scale.”
In February this
year, Netflix will broadcast the first of a planned multi-year
partnership with the Screen Actors Guild Awards on its YouTube channel.
Women’s Sports
Become Hot Property
The 2023 FIFA
Women’s World Cup final in August attracted record viewing figures in pretty
much every region, underlining a breakthrough year for women’s sports.
Spain defeated
England 1–0 in the final in Sydney, with a record 12 million viewers watching
in the UK on BBC One (higher than the men’s Wimbledon final last July, which
peaked at 11.3 million). In Spain, 5.6 million watched the final, and it peaked
at 7.4 million viewers, with data published by Barlovento Comunicacion saying
that 56.2% of the Spanish television audience was male.
The tournament
contributed to an increase in women’s sports viewing figures in 2023, according
to data from the Women’s Sport Trust (WST). International women’s sporting
events were watched by viewers for nine hours, 58 minutes on average, the WST
found. In the UK, these included Golf’s Solheim Cup, England women’s cricket
team, and the Netball World Cup.
“There is still
more to be done in translating international success into [regular] viewing,”
the WST said. Which is why, at the same time as broadcast rights for women’s
sports reaches all-time highs, the reach of TV is considered a priority by
rights owners.
The new deal for
the National Women's Soccer League is a case in point. The NWSL secured US$60
million per season for 118 live matches
from CBS Sports, ESPN, Amazon and Scripps Sports—40
times the $1.5M previously paid for women’s soccer. Non-televised matchups will
be broadcast on a new DTC platform.
“Throughout the
process, it became clear that the best way for us to maximize reach, revenue
and relevance was to have multiple partners,” NWSL Commissioner Jessica
Berman told Sports Business Journal. “These partners emerged as the ones
who were prepared to make the appropriate investments, not just from valuation
and rights fee perspective, but also to provide marketing on their
institutional platforms and their willingness to cross-promote to each other.”
This will be a
template for a bidding war early 2024 for a fresh tranche of rights to arguably
the World’s leading women’s soccer league, the WSL. The current deal for $30
million over three seasons was signed in 2021 and shared between Sky and the
BBC. An increase in the number of WSL games televised from the current
56-per-year could lead to Sky and TNT Sports (formerly BT Sport) sharing live
rights, as they do for the Premier League.
TNT Sports in the
UK is doubling down on women’s sports coverage. It has licensed the rights from
DAZN to co-broadcast UEFA Women’s Champions League games, including the final,
announced a new deal to broadcast 20 games from Women’s Premiership Rugby each
season on TNT Sports and Discovery+ and continues to cover all of cycling’s
women’s World Tour (via Eurosport) and the Tour de France Femmes.
In March, DAZN
launched a FAST channel dedicated to women’s sports, featuring the Women’s
Champions League, Frauen Bundesliga, and Liga F. In Germany, it is known as
DAZN Rise, and in Spain DAZN Victoria. It also began streaming all
Uefa Women’s Champions League group stage games for free in the UK and
other territories on the company’s YouTube channel.
“DAZN made a
commitment to women’s sport a couple of years back with the Women’s Champions
League,” DAZN VP of production and editorial operations Louise Lawler told
Broadcast Now in March. “This deal was slightly different as it wasn’t
necessarily about seeing commercial opportunities for an initial return. It
wasn’t going to drive subscriptions to justify the rights fee, but what it
could do was grow the sport, so then you could get commercial opportunities and
subscriptions follow.”
Apple Grows Sports,
Looks to ESPN
Apple’s
ten-year $2.5 billion deal to stream MLS games on Apple TV kicked off
in February 2023, and had an immediate subscription boost when Inter Miami
signed soccer superstar Lionel Messi.
In an earnings call
in August, Apple boss Tim Cook credited Messi’s arrival for “beating our
expectations in terms of subscribers.” The Argentine reportedly gets a
cut of that new subscription revenue as part of the deal bringing him to
the MLS.
Analysts reckon
that Apple TV+ has about 50 million subscribers and is looking to sports to
drive growth. Even though the tech giant’s proposed deal for
exclusive Pac-12 football rights fell through, Wedbush Securities analyst
Daniel Ives believes the company will not be denied. “The massive appetite for
live sports content remains the laser focus for Cupertino now to boost its
streaming future and further tap into its massive installed base of 2 billion
iOS devices worldwide,” Ives reported in Deadline. “We believe the shoe
that fits for Apple is the golden ESPN assets which potentially may be on the
table in one form or another as [Disney CEO Bob] Iger and the Board
strategically look at Disney’s core assets over the coming months.”
A full acquisition
would likely cost more than $50 billion and has been downplayed by Disney,
which is preparing to let loose a DTC version of ESPN in the next couple of
years.
A key decision
looms for ESPN with the NBA, with those rights due to expire in 2025.
Speculation has centered on Apple, Google and Amazon as potential partners.
Their cash reserves could help Disney and ESPN manage to pay still escalating
rights fees at a time of austerity for the company and the overall media
sector.
Data,
Personalization, and Changing Fandom
With broadcasters
across the globe reluctant to invest further in the satellite or internet
bandwidth infrastructure needed to lift picture quality to 4K UHD (and with
limited prospect of audiences paying more for the resolution upgrade),
attention has turned to using innovations in data and in personalisation and
distribution over IP to give sportscasts an edge.
This will be
showcased this summer in Paris, which hosts the 2024 Olympics. Alibaba Cloud is
the IOC’s official cloud services partner and will provide
cloud-based broadcasting, data analytics, and tracking of athletes’ performance
on the field.
Expect this to
include biometric data such as the heart rates of competitors in archery.
Audiences will be able to chart the adrenaline rush experienced by archers as
they shoot their arrow in an on-screen graphic. Also in Paris, expect greater
use of 5G wireless technology to open up more of the same real-time performance
data from other sports.
At the Wimbledon
tennis Slam last year, AI was trained on raw ball and player tracking data to
generate a range of new data points throughout a rally, as well as to automate
highlight edits and, in an experiment, to provide voice commentary.
During WBD’s
coverage of cycling’s Tour de France, a 3D graphic helped show viewers the
gradients faced by the peloton. “Audience expect to be on the field of
play,” said Scott Young, SVP content and production at Warner Bros.
Discovery Sports Europe. “They don’t want to be in the grandstand anymore, from
a television viewing perspective.”
At the ICC World
Cup in India, all matches were produced in vertical video for viewing on mobile
phones. Key graphical features like ball tracking, player tracking and field
position were also tailored to fit the vertical format.
An AI-powered
bodycam worn by English Premier League players during the pre-game warmup has
also been trialled in the UK by WBD’s TNT Sports and may become a fixture at
later EPL matches.
All of this points
to a more personalized means of viewing live sport, fragmenting the traditional
broadcast experience, and even of the traditional loyalty to teams.
“It is important to recognize that the way fans consume sports is much
different from a generation ago, or even at the end of the past decade,” noted
Matt Del Percio, Director at research analyst Altman Solon. “While
historically, fandom was defined by the local team or teams you follow—and
often the team your parents followed—modern sports fans are making more
decisions based on athletes’ on-field performance and off-the-field
personalities or social media presence.”
EPL Rights Primacy
In the UK, the year
ended with the swift conclusion to the latest tender for rights to the English
Premier League. The winners are undoubtedly Sky Sports, which gained the bulk
of the 270 live matches per season on offer, and the EPL, which celebrates a
new record £6.7 billion (U$8.48 billion) domestic deal.
The EPL auctioned
25% more matches than ever, including more mid-week match days where games are
shown simultaneously. This expansion of content, and extension of the terms
from three to four years running 2025 to 2029, enabled the League to achieve
what it calls “the largest sports media rights deal ever concluded in the UK.”
Sky picked up
rights to 215 games and TNT Sports the remaining 52 meaning that neither Amazon
(current holder of a limited package of games) nor DAZN has secured any matches
in the new agreement.
“The deal will be
seen as reinforcing the Premier League’s status as the world’s most successful
domestic football competition,” said The Guardian’s Paul MacInnes.
“Despite securing growth in its annual revenue from domestic rights of just 4%,
below the current levels of inflation, the deal is more than double the value
of the agreement struck recently by Italy’s Serie A.”
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