This saga has gone on for decades, since Expos move in 2004. The decision, at least the history part of it, is worth reading. The short version is that the Orioles owner is a POS. When the Expos moved to Washington, Bud "Light" (Kennesaw Molehill) Selig granted Baltimore "compensation" in the form of a complex deal relative to the RSN, MASN. The Orioles were supposed to negotiate "in good faith" with the Nationals over the value of the Nationals rights. Which, of course, they did not do and Angelos has had it tied up in court all this time. And it is still not over. When he (or his son, who is also a POS) is finally out of options, he will almost certainly just bankrupt MASN and never pay the Nationals what he owes. It is how this character operates. The shame of it is that Angelos' character flaws and illegal activities (he got rich as a trial lawyer by presenting falsified medical reports) were well known when MLB owners let him buy the team.
Anyway, the lessons here for sport business are two:
- Washington, the 8th largest TV market in the country, with 2.1% of the TV homes, and, with legitimate claims to several not small markets as part of their region, could not afford to keep its World Champion team together, because it made so little money from the RSN deal. Well, what happens if all the RSNs go away? What replaces it yield WAY LESS MONEY. Suddenly every team is, is you buy into this "no blackouts" nonsense, NFLesque equal in revenue.
- The precedent of paying Baltimore "compensation" will be used over and over again. Remember that every square inch of this country (and of Canada as well) is claimed by at least one, and in some places up to six, team as "home territory". All the talk about teams in Charlotte, or Nashville, or other places, runs into this problem. Someone, generally the Braves, will want huge cash.