The [League Name] Network Debate – Let the ESPN Viewer Attrition Begin

December 16, 2009

Read the debate intro and the arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan about whether or not league affiliated cable networks are beginning to come into their own.



I am really partial to these media debates (as you may have noticed since I seem to draw the judging straw for the majority of them). I am extremely fascinated by how and why fans choose to consume sports content. The development of so-called “niche” sports networks – those dedicated to a single sport or league – carry forward the immersion perspective to sports fandom. As the popularity of these networks grows within the diehard fan community (and make no mistake – popularity is increasing), ESPN viewer attrition is a plausible reality. Fans are beginning to shift their focus from a holistic perspective on all sports to a concentration only on the sports and leagues they like the best. Before these networks existed ESPN owned 100 percent of sports fans’ eyeballs. The only possible outcome is for ESPN to no longer own 100 percent of the market. Thus, competition.

The argument from Loyal Homer leads me to believe ESPN viewership will be replaced by the most diehard of information-hungry fans. Therefore, the debate victory is awarded to Loyal Homer.

The first paragraph of Loyal Homer’s argument won me over. The exclusive immersion of content is a tremendous advantage these networks have over what is now becoming a general sports aggregator in ESPN. For ESPN to compete with these exclusive networks they would need to serve almost every conceivable sports master. It is an impossible task, even for ESPN and its many distribution touch points.

Loyal Homer also proved that “niche” networks have improving reporting and are capturing a larger share of the all-important live events. League-affiliated networks also provide access to previously inaccessible events for fans. As Loyal Homer pointed out, NFL junkies love understanding what is happening at the pre-draft rookie combine. The NFL Network provides exclusive access and content never before seen for even the most enthusiastic of fans.

Bleacher Fan made some interesting points, specifically about specialization. While the argument is correct in pointing out these specialist networks’ singular focus, it is precisely the enthusiast audience the content is designed to appeal to. Live events will draw bigger ratings, but the diehard fans are the ones that watch the analysis and other network content on any network, including ESPN. The specialization of each network is designed to appeal to an audience that has previously not been catered to by ESPN’s more holistic sports approach.

Bleacher Fan is correct that the league-owned networks are unable to carry live events year ‘round that draw big ratings. However, as previously stated, that goal is the not the stated purpose of these networks. They are designed to appeal to the 365 day fan of a single league or sport, not the occasional seasonal fan that only watches when their team is doing well. Competition is well-defined and relative in this case. Is the MLB Network looking to displace ESPN? No. But the minds behind the MLB Network have recognized that the diehard 365 day fan is not well served, so they are providing a product to serve the need.

Bleacher Fan is correct that the not every sports fan NEEDS a 24-7 view of MLB’s Winter Meetings. However, if some do (and Loyal Homer points out how value that content is), what’s the harm in filling that void? Passionate fans are a highly sought after crowd for advertisers because they buy the products that sponsor their passion. Those purchases are viewed as if the viewer is giving to a political cause or a charity. If the sponsors are happy the content lives on. And the exclusive networks are now better at attracting these types of fans than ESPN is.

The basic differences I have with Bleacher Fan’s argument boil down to the comparison between shopping for specialty food items and watching sports television. One requires a great deal of effort, the other requires a flip of the channel. Also, those seeking 10 varieties of milk and 50 choices of cereal prefer two separate stores for the depth they seek. Depth trumps efficiency. Therefore, both stores exist for a reason and serve an audience, just not as big of an audience as a general store. Bleacher Fan’s so-called “snob” audience is a real, valid, money-spending audience deserving of content they wish to see. To define the audience for sports as singular is not only invalid, it misses the huge money-making opportunity locked within the enthusiast.

Taking the MLB Network example ever farther, the content, guests on shows, and personalities on the network are all solid. The reporting is solid. The bar was set high in these pillars of sports broadcasting from the start, and that foundational philosophy allowed the network to also be very aggressive in how it penetrated markets. Rather than the soft launch approach many of these channels have used – a few homes while trying to cut sweetheart deals with the various carriers and cable companies – the MLB Network sold minority ownership stakes in the network to all of the big broadcast distributors like Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Cox Communications and DirecTV. Instead of launching in a few million homes as many of the other networks have, MLB Network launched in 53 million homes – including Sports Geek’s home – from day one. For perspective, the MLB Network was in as many homes on day one of its broadcast life as the NFL Network was after six years on air. The MLB’s updated and more aggressive model is better for its stakeholders while also providing a blueprint for the success of present and future niche networks.

That long-winded example is essential to prove a point – these networks are competing with ESPN in every way shape or form, and the viewer attrition just beginning will hit light speed as more networks adopt the successful MLB Network model (keep an eye out for the NHL Network in most homes in 12-18 months). I know when I want baseball news or scores at night during the season I no longer turn on Baseball Tonight – I go for the MLB Network to get stats on the scroll, highlights, and live look-ins at games that are not in my market (this is key for an Indians fan… especially late in the season). The MLB Network is a better baseball product than ESPN, and fans will slowly wake up to a new sports information/broadcast reality – ESPN is no longer mandatory viewing.

The truth is, the more ESPN tinkers with formats, lets columnists clumsily anchor Sportscenter (yes that is YOU RICK REILLY, STOP IT!!!!), and takes credit for reporting done by competitive organizations, the more fans will turn away. ESPN is still a primary destination for the holy grail of sports broadcasting – live events – but it is losing the battle in analysis. Live events are the next target from the networks (see the NFL Network’s model and MLB Network’s Thursday Night Baseball for two examples). Because of the close league ties, getting the live programming will not be an issue, as the league’s sensitively dance around the current but temporary structure of potentially airing competing live content on two networks.

ESPN will always fulfill the needs of the devoted sports fan who desires broad coverage of every sport. But that all-inclusive sports fan has been taken for granted by ESPN. Fan fragmentation is the new reality of sports content, and competitive niche channels are popping up to prove the point. The 100 percent share of eyeballs the network enjoyed for the majority of its life is gone. The answer to the fundamental question – Could ESPN be replaced by viewers? – is yes.

Stay tuned – the next time ESPN must renew rights to a major sports league’s games, the deal will look different. And that is a positive trend for diehard fans.

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The [League Name] Network Debate – Could ESPN Be Replaced?

December 15, 2009

Read the arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan about whether or not league affiliated cable networks are beginning to come into their own.



Smart fans – like the kind that read informative and fascinating debates on modern sports – demand information. Well, check that. Smart fans demand GOOD information from reliable sources. Historically sports fans have become extremely reliant upon ESPN. For better or worse, whether we agree with all of the editorial decisions or not, ESPN has been the most reliable, easily accessible source for immediate sports news and information for more than two decades.

But, the way fans are accessing and consuming information is changing. ESPN was the primary information source. Now league-owned and powered networks are beginning to create an alternative to ESPN.

Competing with ESPN requires insightful commentary, solid non-news programming, instant information, access, and great reporting. ESPN has been a champion in each category in recent years. Now niche networks are creating competitive content. The MLB Network is showing it can attract top talent like Harold Reynolds and Peter Gammons. The NFL Network has exclusive rights to very important games like the upcoming games for the New Orleans Saints and Indianapolis Colts as those teams attempt to preserve undefeated seasons. The NBA Network and the NFL Network also have exclusive content that diehard fans want to see.

The number of households a network has penetrated does not matter in this situation. Network growth sometimes comes after the content is proven to be solid. For example, the Big Ten Network was kept out of the majority of households in its first year of existence in much of the Midwest despite the ownership of exclusive content. While not the primary driving force in negotiations, when the non-event related content improved the cable companies and the network did manage to strike a deal that fans benefitted from.

MLB Network is an excellent example of a cable station that is coming into its own. It employs excellent analysts ranging from Harold Reynolds to Al Leiter to Barry Larkin to Sean Casey to Billy Ripkin to some former general managers – former GMs with much better luck staying away from interns. The non-event programming is excellent, too. While Bob Costas is not a personality everyone finds appealing, his show, Studio 42, is widely acclaimed as an excellent interview show. The purpose build, baseball-diamond shaped studio is ideal for creating atmosphere and giving the former players ample space to demonstrate the finer nuances of the game. The lengthy, in-depth documentaries are ideal for the baseball fan that appreciates history and statistics. It is a themed network in the same way Disney is a themed park. Down to the details, MLB Network is appealing to the baseball fan.

So, why would a baseball fan bother with ESPN any longer for baseball content? Sure, Baseball Tonight is a great program, but MLB Network has an hour of pregame for the night’s games, then live look-ins and analysis of each of the night’s biggest moments. In short, ESPN no longer offers any type of content that makes it a destination for baseball fans.

With league-owned networks creating competitive content and reporting to ESPN, will ratings follow? Will these series of networks supplant ESPN as the go to source as fans begin to favor depth over a cursory overview? Fortunately the world has a gift. That gift is called The Sports Debates.

Today’s debate topic: Are league-affiliated networks finally coming into their own?

Loyal Homer will argue that league-affiliated networks are starting to come into their own, citing moves like the MLB Network’s recent announcement that former ESPN baseball reporter Peter Gammons is leaving the worldwide leader for the MLB Network. Bleacher Fan will argue that the niche league-affiliated networks are not coming into their own and ESPN will remain the supreme source for sports news and information.

Now, begin the debate. I’m going to flip on the MLB Network and watch Hot Stove.

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The [League Name] Network Debate – In MOST David versus Goliath stories, Goliath Wins for a Reason!

December 15, 2009

Read the debate intro and Loyal Homer’s argument that league affiliated television networks are finally coming into their own.



Golf Channel, Tennis Channel, NHL Network, MLB Network, NBA TV, NFL Network – when will it all stop?!

Don’t get me wrong, I have enjoyed many different programs on these various sport and league-affiliated networks. Does that mean that there is a need for 24-hour coverage of each sport individually, or that these networks should be considered viable competition for more established sports-themed networks such as ESPN or Fox Sports? Absolutely not.

Too much specialization

I give the MLB Network a great deal of credit for being able to sign Peter Gammons, a HIGHLY respected baseball reporter who will bring credibility and outstanding insight to the MLB Network. What Gammons will not bring, however, is a noteworthy increase in viewership. Sure, there are fans out there who seek out Gammons’ opinions and reports, and they will hungrily seek out his input and analysis no matter where it is housed. The ‘Gammons Army’ is not, however, so great that it will single-handedly propel a niche network into legitimate competition against major networks.

The problem that the MLB Network faces (as well as other league-specific networks) is that it is a network based solely on events, and those events do not run year-round. While MLB Network may be able to provide occasional programming that is noteworthy, it will not be able to provide ENOUGH programming to sustain a full-time network that can effectively COMPETE with those major networks. There is just not enough baseball to talk about 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Eventually, the repetitive and excessive over-analysis of the same events becomes overkill. While I may want to know the details about the pending trade that would involve Cliff Lee and Roy Halladay, I don’t need to hear about what seven different people think about it over a period of four hours tonight, and then another ten opinions on it tomorrow!

Each sport separately makes for great headlines from time to time, and when a big story breaks it is nice to be able to utilize the league-specific networks as ONE of the resources at our disposal to find out more about a situation. Where ESPN or the Fox Sports Network holds an advantage, though, is in not restricting reporting only one sport. Instead, they can focus on those sports and events that are most relevant REGARDLESS of the sport the event occurs in. That flexibility allows those major networks to report any news that happens from any sport, rather than try to create news even in times when nothing truly newsworthy is happening. Honestly, do we REALLY need 24-hour a day news coverage of winter meetings?

Think about specialty-food stores. There are going to be times where you as a consumer are looking for a specific product, and you know that the best quality product you can find is at one of those specialty food stores. However, it is foolish and wasteful to go to the milk store, then the bread store, then the egg store, pasta store, etc, EVERY time you go grocery shopping. More often than not, the practical (and nonetheless effective) choice is to go to a one-stop shop where you can get everything you need in a quick and efficient manner.

The Power of the Masses

Separately, each league-affiliated network offers certain programming that is worth tuning in for. As Sports Geek pointed out, the NFL Network has exclusive rights to very important games. The problem that these specialty networks face is that there are very few fans exclusive to their sport. MOST fans of baseball are ALSO fans of football, or basketball, and vice versa. You cannot expect the average sports fan to segment out and schedule when and how they get sports news and updates from separate locations when there is a viable product already in place that provides COMPREHENSIVE coverage of the collective sporting world. It would be like opening a shoe store that sells only left shoes. Sure, there will be people out there who need a left shoe, and the quality of that left shoe may be unsurpassed, but those same people are also interested in purchasing a right shoe. If you can’t provide it, they will probably go somewhere else for their shoe needs.

There will always be aficionados (the term snob also comes to mind) who laud the merits of specialized products. Food-aficionados (snobs) swear by organic products and natural foods. For movie-aficionados (snobs), they will insist upon the merits of “indie films” and swear off the big-budget, no-story-having, mass-produced, over-commercialized, under-performed movies of the major studios. While those aficionados (snobs) may be correct when they swear that the specialized product they love is of a higher quality, it does not change the fact that their product does not appeal to the population at-large.

The target demographic for specialized products is very important, and should not be overlooked. However, they represent only a small portion of the population at-large. As much as aficionados despise major corporations for pandering to the masses – and will curse the masses for being under-informed, mindless sheep – it is the masses that hold the power of determining success or failure in the marketplace. The masses hold all the cards, and the masses like having a single resource to provide them with the information they desire.

For the same reason that a Farmer’s Market should not strive to compete with Wal-Mart, niche-based networks should not strive to compete with ESPN… they will NEVER win!

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