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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

March 26, 2026

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MLB fans tuning in to the season-opening broadcast Wednesday night may have been confused. The Yankees-Giants game, which streamed on Netflix from Oracle Park, is one of three MLB broadcasts airing this season on the streamer, including the Home Run Derby and Field of Dreams game. It’s also a key component of the league’s strategy to nationalize its media business as much as possible. 

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • CBS will air 20 WNBA games on broadcast TV in 2026, as a part of the network’s new media-rights deal with the league. Read the story.
  • Blackstone is making its first pro sports bet on cricket as part of a group buying Royal Challengers Bengaluru in a deal valuing the team at $1.78 billion. Read the story.
  • The NFL completed its expected plans to begin its 2026 season on a Wednesday, with the Sept. 9 game set for Lumen Field in Seattle. Read the story.
  • As the WNBA prepares for its 30th season, the question remains as to whether commissioner Cathy Engelbert will stay after this one. Read the story.

MLB Media Strategy Goes National—and Fans Might Get Confused

Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images

Potential confusion for baseball fans kicked off Wednesday with the season-opening broadcast of the Yankees and Giants on Netflix. The game is also a fundamental component of the league’s strategy to nationalize its media business as much as possible. 

The Netflix game from Oracle Park is one of three MLB broadcasts airing this season on the streamer, including the Home Run Derby and Field of Dreams game. It’s also one of three new media deals for the league going into effect this season, joining a pact with NBC Sports and a dramatically reworked agreement with ESPN that includes distribution of the MLB.TV out-of-market package. 

Combined with the league’s other existing national media deals, and ones individual teams have locally, some teams will be aired on at least a dozen different outlets in 2026. Consider the Yankees, whose distribution this season will include the YES Network, Amazon Prime Video, NBC, Peacock, ESPN, ABC, Fox, FS1, TBS, Apple TV, and Netflix, in addition to non-exclusive coverage on the MLB Network and the local outlets of the team’s opponents. 

“Watching your favorite team play isn’t as easy these [days]. Many games are still on broadcast, but an increasing number are on a range of different online platforms,” said Federal Communications Commission chairman Brendan Carr in a social media post last month. Carr has taken an active interest in many sports-related matters, including ones involving the YES Network, and has initiated a public inquiry into the increasing fragmentation in sports broadcasting. 

In part responding to this accelerating dynamic, MLB has created a new web page, MLB.com/Watch, devoted to directing fans to the outlets carrying each game. 

That will be particularly salient in the season’s first week, which will include the debut MLB broadcasts for Netflix and NBC in these new rights deals, the return of Fox, TBS, and Apple in their existing pacts, and six non-exclusive games shown nationally on the MLB Network. 

“Discoverability is really going to be important going forward,” MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said last fall at the Front Office Sports Tuned In media summit. 

Building the Brand

Despite the channel confusion, as well as the extra costs that will be borne by fans to watch, the additional outlets that are MLB rights holders this year advance the long-term nationalization goal held by Manfred. 

In Manfred’s final stretch in the post before his January 2029 retirement, he intends to rework MLB’s media business so it more closely resembles the NFL’s nationally oriented approach. The key inflection point of that plan arrives in 2028, when all of MLB’s current national-rights deals expire and when Manfred intends to blend that inventory with local rights in new ways. 

There are several potential benefits in that strategy. Among them is reducing the fiscal differences between high-revenue clubs such as the Dodgers and Yankees and low-revenue ones like the Marlins, and continuing to give star players a wider platform to become national stars on a scale similar to Shohei Ohtani or Aaron Judge. Of course, that’s easier said than done—particularly aggregating local rights held by large-revenue clubs. But the broader mission remains in place and is already starting to show results. 

“We’re going to the market with maximum flexibility to put the pieces together in a way that gives you reach and enhances the popularity of the sport long-term, but also enhances the economics that you need to keep the sport growing from a revenue perspective,” Manfred said. “There will be more games available in national packages, that is my bet.”

SPONSORED BY TRAVEL TEXAS

Big-League Action in Dallas–Fort Worth

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Stand in awe of AT&T Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys, or take the family to root for the Texas Rangers as they light up Globe Life Field. For some authentic Texas tradition, head to the Fort Worth Stockyards for legendary rodeo action, or feel the adrenaline surge at Texas Motor Speedway. No matter your sport, DFW is a playground for all fans.

Discover your Texas sports paradise.

FOS NEWS

Netflix’s First Sports Anchor Has Arrived

Elle Duncan

FOS graphic

Netflix is entering live sports in a big way—and Elle Duncan is right at the center of it. Duncan joins Front Office Sports to discuss becoming Netflix’s first sports anchor in the biggest Netflix year yet, featuring MLB Opening Day, the Home Run Derby, and Christmas Day NFL games. 

She explains what convinced her to leave ESPN for Netflix, how she prepared for Alex Honnold’s stunning free solo of Taipei 101, and what she’s watching on her own Netflix account. Watch the full interview.

SPONSORED BY ALLY

Grab the Remote and Watch History in the Making. March 28 at 1 p.m. ET. New York vs. Montréal

Ally and Scripps Sports are bringing the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) to every household in the United States. Yes, that’s right. Free on ION. The first nationally televised PWHL game in the U.S.

Why? Because we bank on women’s sports. 

Ally Bank, Member FDIC.

ONE BIG FIG

March Madness Trades

Seamus Magee, right, and Anthony Mea, both of Hoboken, watch the first games of the NCAA basketball tournament at the Meadowlands Racetrack, where sports fans can legally bet on March Madness games for the first time in New Jersey on Thursday, March 21, 2019, in East Rutherford.

The Record

13 million+

The number of trades that have been made on derivatives marketplace CME Group through FanDuel’s and DraftKings’ prediction-market platforms in college basketball since the NCAA men’s tournament started. (FanDuel and DraftKings use CME Group’s exchange for their new prediction-market products.) 

LOUD AND CLEAR

In the Tank

Feb 15, 2026; Inglewood, California, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver speaks to media after the 75th NBA All Star Game at Intuit Dome.

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

“We are going to fix it—full stop. … There is an aspect of team-building that is a genuine rebuild. Rebuild with integrity. The problem we’re having these days is it’s become almost impossible to distinguish between a tank and a rebuild.”

—NBA commissioner Adam Silver at the league’s Board of Governors press conference Wednesday when asked about the tanking problem.

Editors’ Picks

The Planet’s Best Chess Players Are Having Their LIV Golf Moment

by Luci Keleman
Chess’s most prestigious tournament is battling a splashy Saudi event.

UFC-Backed Boxing Bill Passes House With Bipartisan Support

by Eric Fisher
The bipartisan measure clears the chamber on a voice vote.

ESPN’s Burke Magnus Has Been a ‘Steward’ for Lacrosse: Paul Rabil

by Ryan Glasspiegel
Magnus played a key role in bringing the PLL to ESPN.

Question of the Day

Do you think it's getting harder to follow MLB on TV?

 YES   NO 

Wednesday’s result: 59% of respondents said the World Baseball Classic made them more excited for the MLB season.

Events Video Games Shop
Written by Eric Fisher
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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