Lets see if I got this correct... (The below is my OPINION)
Last year Dish paid $28 million for the MLB package (these numbers are from memory) and now DirecTV has this new deal reported to be at $700 million, which is for 7 years, so that $100 million a year.
Now MLB has said Dish and Cable can have the Extra Innings package if the match DirecTV's deal.
That's not what it says. According to SkyReport today:
they must agree to "match the same rate structure and carriage requirements" of the announced deal.
Now pick it apart.
1) Rate structure does not necessarily mean paying the same as last year, or paying the same $700M for seven years. D* is the distributor; they're paying MLB for rights to resell, but they also probably have an internal rate that they charge themselves, and that's how they determine "rate structure". Let's face it, when challenged they have to document their rate structure somehow. Most likely it means a per-game shown rate that matches what they charge themselves. Dish and cable will have to agree to that rate.
2) carriage requirements. IMO, this is the meat of the stipulation, not the rate structure. This part is how D* will gain rights to Phillies games from Comcast. It's also how E* will have to sign-up for whatever RSN's they don't carry. Because if E* isn't able to show the games, then they will have failed the carriage requirements, nixing the deal.
I don't see how the carriage requirement hurts anybody. If you subscribe to E* you're going to get new RSN's now and MLB channel later; if you're cable the same applies. If you're D*, you're nailing-down Comcast SportsNet and resolving that ugly dispute.
......
Business costs are business costs, and they always get passed-on to the consumer. The D* subscriber is going to get the privilege of subsidizing his share of the deal, just like everybody else.
As of today, there are 2+ weeks for Dish and cable to negotiate before a single EI game is shown. There are no rates published, even for D* subscribers. There is nothing written showing how any individual will be denied a single game, or discriminated-against based on his provider.
Until a rate structure and subscription rates are published, nobody can claim they're being bent-over and screwed. Bitching now is pretty silly, childish, and uninformed.
How about we tame the paranoia, toss-out the call-your-congressman crap, until there is something concrete to bitch about.