football

Could Sunday Night Football be stolen by a streamer?

โ€ขYahoo Sports

When it comes to the NFL's nascent effort to get the broadcast networks to pay more money for the remaining years of their current deals, CBS and Fox have been the focus. NBC inevitably will be on the radar screen. The league has started the process with CBS, activating a change-in-control term that allows the NFL to reopen the deal after the recent Skydance acquisition of Paramount.

And it's widely believed CBS will inevitably cough up significantly more than the $2. 1 billion per year it's due to pay over the remaining four years of its current contract. Fox entered the chat when suspicions emerged that Rupert Murdoch is instigating the ongoing political pressure against the league.

Those suspicions became confirmed when Murdoch's Wall Street Journal posted an editorial questioning the viability of the league's 65-year-old broadcast antitrust exemption. As to NBC, the question eventually becomes this: Is the Sunday Night Football package in danger of moving to another provider? Via John Ourand of Puck, Michael Nathanson of MoffettNathanson believes that, of the networks currently in business with the NFL, NBC has the greatest risk of losing its prime-time package.

"Look at what NBC is paying for the NBA," Nathanson said. "Now imagine what the NFL wants for Sunday Night Football , which is the best game. Whatโ€™s stopping Netflix, which wants more events, to get Sunday nightโ€™s best game for 18 straight weeks?

That would accelerate its ability to monetize ads. So, to me, the NBC Sunday night game is probably the most at risk. " Netflix, of course, would first have to want a weekly package.