As reported in the NY Times today, although the buzz has been around the industry for a couple weeks:
DirecTV is in the process of finalizing a deal to get exclusive use of the "Extra Innings" out of town package as well as an all-baseball channel set to launch in 2009.
http://www.nytimes.com/pages/sports/baseball/index.html
I'm thinking this won't go well. Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Comcast) plans to go after the NFL's limited anti-trust exemption over the Sunday Ticket package, which is only on DirecTV. Imagine what he (and Congress) will do to baseball over this.
I get why D* wants to do this, since user growth is next to nil and they're losing about $300 million a year on Sunday Ticket, this is a way to push subs up and potentially cut the losses on ST, by adding customers. Good luck with that, of course.
I don't get why MLB is going for this, though. With EI currently available through cable and satellite, it has about 750,000 customers. Were it to become available only through DTV, that number would drop by more than two thirds.
The money from D* isn't good enough to cut MLB's exposure and risk loss of the Anti-trust exemption.
I think MLB's owners need drug testing.
DirecTV is in the process of finalizing a deal to get exclusive use of the "Extra Innings" out of town package as well as an all-baseball channel set to launch in 2009.
http://www.nytimes.com/pages/sports/baseball/index.html
I'm thinking this won't go well. Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Comcast) plans to go after the NFL's limited anti-trust exemption over the Sunday Ticket package, which is only on DirecTV. Imagine what he (and Congress) will do to baseball over this.
I get why D* wants to do this, since user growth is next to nil and they're losing about $300 million a year on Sunday Ticket, this is a way to push subs up and potentially cut the losses on ST, by adding customers. Good luck with that, of course.
I don't get why MLB is going for this, though. With EI currently available through cable and satellite, it has about 750,000 customers. Were it to become available only through DTV, that number would drop by more than two thirds.
The money from D* isn't good enough to cut MLB's exposure and risk loss of the Anti-trust exemption.
I think MLB's owners need drug testing.