• Loading stock data...
Thursday, January 8, 2026

The Athletic Looking To Boost Subscribers With Cross-Marketing Deals

  • The digital sports subscription website unveiled its first national deal with T-Mobile, who will offer customers free one-year subscriptions to The Athletic and MLB.TV.
  • The Athletic says its subscriber base is now around 1 million customers.
Photo Credit: Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports

The Athletic has found early success with its content-first, subscription-driven business model.

But back in February, the subscription-based sports website made a key course change in its business strategy.

The Athletic realized it needed to place its content in front of more potential customers. So it created its first dedicated business development team under Evan Parker, general manager of business and editorial operations. 

Parker and his group set out to find sports teams, leagues, and promotional partners who understood The Athletic brand. Their goal? Boost the company’s brand image and subscriber count, which it says is now around 1 million customers.

Launched in 2016, The Athletic said it reached 300,000 subscribers within two years and hit the 500,000 mark by June 2019.  The San Francisco-based company raised $50 million in Series D funding in January, according to Axios. With that investment, it has raised $139.5 million in total.

“We’ve been going out talking to brands across the country, and across the globe, and trying to figure out really good fits for us. In order for us to do a partnership, it has to be something that benefits our subscribers,” Parker said. “We’re not in the business of selling advertisements. We’re not going to throw a bunch of banners all over our products. We need to find our partners who understand our mission, who understand our quality bar, who understand what we’ve promised to our subscribers – that the content is front and center. That we’re not going to be littering their experience with a lot of advertisements.”

The Athletic’s work in the marketplace over the past six months is starting to pay off. It recently unveiled its first national promotional partnership with wireless network operator T-Mobile.

Ahead of the start of MLB’s Opening Day, T-Mobile is offering free, one-year subscriptions to The Athletic and MLB.TV to all U.S.-based T-Mobile and Sprint customers.  

Running from July 21 through August 4, the promotion will include national television commercials on networks such as ESPN and FS1 and heavy online advertising on MLB.com and homepage takeovers of Bleacher Report, ESPN.com, and SB Nation. There will also be ads inside T-Mobile retail stores.

T-Mobile U.S. completed its long-awaited $26.5 billion merger with Sprint on April 1. The wireless carrier now has 140 million customers, ranking third behind Verizon and AT&T. 

Despite all the hoopla about The Athletic as the “future” of sports journalism, the brand is only four and a half years old, noted Parker. With no ad revenue to rely on, it still has “a lot of work to do from a brand recognition standpoint,” he said.

“We know that when we give people a chance to sample our product, the retention rates are off the charts. So if we can get people in the door through a free trial offer with T-Mobile, we’re pretty confident over the course of the next year that we’ll retain them – and turn them into long-term subscribers.”

Parker declined to comment on the financial specifics of the T-Mobile deal. But the wireless carrier is picking up the production and media spending tab for a new national TV spot touting the co-promotion, he added.

“It’s great to have our brand on ESPN along with MLB.TV,” Parker said. “To get that kind of exposure in front of hard-core sports fans…is as good as it gets.”

Parker said he expects to announce more T-Mobile-like deals in the coming months.

READ MORE: The Athletic To Add 50 Podcasts To Lineup

The Athletic is employing “classic cross-branding promotion” to increase subscriber numbers, according to Crystal Howard, the ex-public relations director for ESPN The Magazine turned marketing consultant. 

The T-Mobile alliance “provides a new audience for the platform to have a relationship with,” she said.

Like every other sports media brand during the coronavirus pandemic, The Athletic has been hammered by the sports shut down, laying off 8% of its staff in June and shedding nearly 100% of its freelance contributors. The digital subscription site employs about 550 people but does not disclose revenue numbers.

Baseball is a fertile ground for The Athletic. The site broke the story of the Houston Astros sign-stealing scandal. The Athletic and T-Mobile were supposed to announce their baseball-driven partnership back in March, but have been waiting for the start of the season.

“There’s been a lot of anxious people on our end who have been waiting for baseball so we can get this thing out there and bring it to life,” Parker said.  

Without live game action, the web site’s writers and editors have delved deep into their “creativity well,” said Parker. Even during the sports hiatus, it has published an average of 150 stories a day. With several leagues now poised to come back, Parker’s also hoping for a big jump in the company’s bottom line.

“We’re getting back to game action. With real news to cover, I think we’re going to see some incredible content,” Parker said.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

TGL Ratings Hold Steady Despite ESPN Schedule Shift

The season opener had an audience of 646,000 viewers on ABC.
Dec 11, 2017; Orlando, FL, USA; New York Yankees outfielder Giancarlo Stanton (27) talks with Yes Network during the winter meetings at Walt Disney World Swan and Dolphin Resort.
exclusive

Yankees RSN and Comcast Reach Deal, Preserving Local Access

After nearly a year of acrimony, a new agreement is quietly struck.
Jul 13, 2025; Wimbledon, United Kingdom; Darren Cahill and the support team for Jannik Sinner of Italy react during the menÕs singles final on day 14 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club.

Pam Shriver, Brad Gilbert Out at ESPN As Network Revamps Tennis Coverage

Darren Cahill’s future is still up in the air after nearly 20 years at ESPN.
Sep 28, 2025; West Sacramento, California, USA; Athletics pitcher Elvis Alvarado (61) throws a pitch against the Kansas City Royals during the third inning at Sutter Health Park.

Why the A’s Hit a Legal Snag Trademarking Their Las Vegas Name

The team has been denied twice in attempts to register its new name.

Featured Today

Hockey in Florida Was Once a Risk. Now It’s Thriving

The state of Florida has become a traditional—and highly lucrative—market.
Dec 30, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) reacts after scoring a basket against the Detroit Pistons during the second half at Crypto.com Arena
January 4, 2026

Why Pro Sports Team Valuations Will Keep Climbing in 2026

Asset scarcity and increasing media-rights deals underpin soaring valuations.
Imagn Images/Front Office Sports
January 2, 2026

FOS Crystal Ball: Predictions for the Business of Sports in 2026

Here’s what FOS journalists think could be on the horizon.
Heated Rivalry (L to R) - Connor Storrie as Ilya Rozanov and Hudson Williams as Shane Hollander in Episode 104 of Heated Rivalry. Cr. Sabrina Lantos © 2025
December 24, 2025

Hockey Needed Some Virality. Then Came ‘Heated Rivalry’

No one was prepared for the Canadian show’s smash success.
Dec 25, 2011; Green Bay, WI, USA; An NBC TV camera during the game between the Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field. The Packers defeated the Bears 35-21.

NBCU Betting on Big February Sports Run to Reignite Peacock Growth

Despite a fast-growing set of sports programming, subscribers have plateaued.
Jacksonville Jaguars safety Antonio Johnson (26) celebrates a pick six during the second quarter in an NFL football matchup at EverBank Stadium, Sunday, Jan. 4, 2026, in Jacksonville, Fla.
January 7, 2026

NFL Sees Highest Viewership in More Than 35 Years

The league posts its second-best viewership total on record.
opinion
January 7, 2026

The New Brady Rules: Why NFL QBs Turned TV Talents Are Double-Dipping

Tom Brady started it, and now other NFL TV stars want dual gigs.
Sponsored

ESPN Edge Innovation Conference 2025: Inside the Technology Shaping the Future of..

At ESPN Edge Innovation Conference 2025, ESPN showcased how AI, immersive tech, and a rebuilt direct-to-consumer platform are redefining the future of sports media.
The Warner Bros. studios in Burbank, California, U.S. November 18, 2025.
January 7, 2026

WBD Rejects Paramount Again

The TNT Sports parent company will continue with its planned Netflix merger.
January 6, 2026

Main Street Sports Crisis Pushes RSN Rights Closer to League Control

The regional sports broadcaster misses another set of scheduled rights payments.
Dec 8, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; ESPN sideline reporter Laura Rutledge (left) interviews Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert (10) after the game against the Philadelphia Eagles at SoFi Stadium.
January 6, 2026

Laura Rutledge Opens Up on Justin Herbert and Viral Sugar Bowl Sprint

“I did not know that anybody was going to be filming that.”
January 6, 2026

From CFP to Non-Playoff Bowls, U.S. Audiences Want Even More CFB

Bowl games across the sport are showing audience increases.