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For the first time, starting in 2025, Brewers fans who live within the Brewers' local TV market will have the right to purchase a subscription to stream those games directly online. The league will produce and distribute the broadcasts, as the team and MLB pivot toward the future.

Image courtesy of © Mark Hoffman / USA TODAY NETWORK

We already knew the Brewers' contract with Diamond Sports Group, the parent company of Bally Sports Wisconsin, was up at the end of the season. Now, we know that there will be no renewal, on either a short- or a long-term basis. Instead, the team and MLB's central office moved decisively. The Brewers. Guardians, and Twins will join the Padres, Diamondbacks, and Rockies under a growing league umbrella for broadcast rights starting next season, with the league taking on the responsibility of producing and distributing the telecasts.

The quick move to this form of distribution reflects a lack of desirable alternatives, more than a particular appetite or enthusiasm for this solution--at least in the short term. The league no longer wants to work with the bankrupt company behind the various Bally Sports networks, and that feeling is mutual. There's no one else in the sports broadcast distribution on this level, though, at least regionally. Unlike the NBA, it's not feasible for MLB to put a significant percentage of its games on national TV outlets, so their partnerships with ESPN, FOX and Turner Sports can't be expanded to stand in for local broadcasts. Besides, fans like to hear their local announcers call their games.

For myriad reasons, the league can't provide teams with as much money as they were making under their contracts with major broadcast partners. Cable carriers no longer pay top dollar to keep the channels on which games air on board, and often silo those channels in premium packages few customers want to pay for. The cable TV bubble popped years ago; it's just taking effect now for much of the league.

This move will have major financial ramifications for the whole league this winter, and in years to come. In the short term, though, it means that fans will be able to buy monthly or yearly subscriptions to a version of MLB.TV that allows them to tune into Brewers games. The rate for that subscription might feel onerous, or very reasonable, depending both on how badly those fans want the right to watch games that way and on whether they already paid for MLB.TV, anyway.

Because the Brewers draw so well in person and were never making as much for their TV rights as many other teams in the league, this will hit them less hard than some of their neighbors, but it still means a diminution of revenue in one key sector, for an industry where virtually every decision over the last 30 years has been informed by a confident expectation of uninterrupted growth. That means a lot of uncertainty ahead, but for fans who have struggled to access Brewers telecasts in recent years, it's good news.

Meanwhile, for fans who have watched the team on cable, little is likely to change. The league plans to negotiate small, non-disruptive deals with major cable and satellite carriers to get a designated channel where they can air games for subscribers, without the carriage fees that became bones of contention between entities like Diamond Sports Group and Spectrum. This feels like a transitional year toward what might end up being a very different kind of solution in the future, but in 2025, it looks like the Brewers will be easier to watch, and not much (if at all) more expensive. In that sense, it's probably good news for fans, who matter most in this equation and often get the least honest treatment.


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Posted

Showing that picture of Sophia, I have in mind to ask - does anyone foresee a change in analysts or will they just jump employment from the fascists at Ballee and head over to MLB?

I like our announcers and would be loath for the team to part with any of them.

Posted

Is it possible that we could should get more revenue from this? If we have a million viewers paying 100 dollars a year, I doubt it costs 50 million to produce a season. That could be an increase.

What do you need 2 or 3 announcers, 2 or 3 analyst (pre/post), Sophia, maybe 4-6 camera guys and 4-6 guys in the truck to produce. You probably get some advertising revenue. I am sure there is some initial costs for equipment and travel expenses are steep.

Posted

Do we know what it will cost to stream Brewers games on mlb.com next year?  Best I can tell, Padres fans who live in SD area could stream for $75 per year.  That seems surprisingly reasonable considering I paid $20/month for the Bally app.

 

Posted
13 minutes ago, ClosetBrewerFan said:

Do we know what it will cost to stream Brewers games on mlb.com next year?  Best I can tell, Padres fans who live in SD area could stream for $75 per year.  That seems surprisingly reasonable considering I paid $20/month for the Bally app.

Hogg said it was $20 a month for the Dbacks this year, $100 for the year, and $200 a year for MLB.tv+Brewers 

Posted

Question from an Iowa Brewer fan who can see Wisconsin from my window. Its tough living in the worst MLB Blackout area in the country. Does this mean I'll now be able to purchase a streaming package to watch Brewers games? Or is it still gonna be blacked out for us Non-Wisconsin Brewers fans that don't matter?

Posted
20 minutes ago, iamporch said:

Question from an Iowa Brewer fan who can see Wisconsin from my window. Its tough living in the worst MLB Blackout area in the country. Does this mean I'll now be able to purchase a streaming package to watch Brewers games? Or is it still gonna be blacked out for us Non-Wisconsin Brewers fans that don't matter?

Welcome!

It seems like yes, anyone will be able to watch, blackouts are a thing of the past.

Posted
10 hours ago, iamporch said:

Question from an Iowa Brewer fan who can see Wisconsin from my window. Its tough living in the worst MLB Blackout area in the country. Does this mean I'll now be able to purchase a streaming package to watch Brewers games? Or is it still gonna be blacked out for us Non-Wisconsin Brewers fans that don't matter?

We're not entirely certain yet but it appears you will no longer be blacked out of the Twins or Brewers. The Cubs, Cardinals, and Royals will still likely be blacked out.

What happens when the Brewers play the Cardinals? Well...

Sesame Street Idk GIF

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