From Front Office Sports <[email protected]>
Subject An Antidote to Long Seasons
Date March 9, 2025 12:02 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Read in Browser [[link removed]]

Sunday Edition

March 9, 2025

POWERED BY

Good morning. Two Sundays ago in this newsletter, I wrote about the success the NHL had with its new 4 Nations Face-Off tournament and how it’s the latest sign that sports leagues must break up their long seasons with must-see events or new formats. Readers wrote in with their responses, which we always love to see. Here are just a few of them.

You can always write to me at [[email protected]]—you might end up in a future mailbag [[link removed]].

— Dan Roberts [[link removed]], FOS EIC

Reader Mailbag: Leagues Need Must-Watch Moments

Zach Boyden-Holmes/Imagn Images

It’s March already! I’m still savoring the thrill of the two U.S.-Canada showdowns we got last month as part of the NHL’s 4 Nations Face-Off.

That left me counting down the days to the next live sports must-see TV moment: the NCAA basketball tournament. The whole event is great, but those first two days, chock full of buzzer beaters and upsets, are the most fun. And there’s a reason so many people covertly watch at their desks, unwilling to miss a single game: Your friend thread is texting about it, and your Twitter timeline is posting about it. You need to tune in—live.

I generally think that the NBA, MLB, NHL, and MLS seasons are simply too long. I still can’t count that many annual sports events you need to catch on TV live in the moment. There’s the Super Bowl, the Olympics, Game 7 of the NBA Finals or World Series when it gets that far, tennis Grand Slams, the final round of golf majors…

But see, that list isn’t long and quickly loses steam—if you’re not a big tennis or golf fan, the latter few don’t resonate for you. Everyone tuned in for that 4 Nations Face-Off final (it averaged 9.3 million people in the U.S. [[link removed]]); everyone is going to tune in for March Madness (last year, Caitlin Clark drew 18.9 million [[link removed]] viewers to the Iowa–South Carolina women’s final).

In other words, for now, I’m sticking with my take from this newsletter last month [[link removed]] that in an era of waning viewership for almost everything, the only things that will truly hit are must-see moments.

Sports leagues must create appointment viewing. It isn’t easy to force such things, but they can start by trying exciting new formats to break up the monotony of their long seasons. The NBA has tried it with its in-season tournament, although the results so far have been mixed [[link removed]]. The NHL pulled it off last month with 4 Nations Face-Off. Newly launched leagues like Unrivaled in women’s basketball and TGL in golf have appealingly short seasons. I need a reason to tune in right now at the exclusion of all the other things I could be watching or doing on any given night. These formats deliver.

Our readers had a lot to say in response to this vision of live sports television’s future. Here’s a selection of their comments.

Eric Bolte/Imagn Images

“The biggest thing that I hear for the NHL and sports in general is where to find games. The multi-platform model includes multiple tiers, making it confusing to quickly find your favorite team. Fans are on overload with options creating the Paradox of Choice. I think a lot of frustration comes from this.” —Kerri Jacklets

“Between TV, TikTok, YouTube, Disney+, etc., there are too many entertainment options fighting for viewers’ attention vs ‘meaningless’ games.” — Dallas Anderson [[link removed]]

“I’ve often thought that baseball should break its season into quarters or halves. Have a winner come from each quarter of the season and have a play off between those teams to advance to the playoffs. It will create drama and tension into a long season and give mini pennant races at different points of the season.” —Chris Bleak

“Our sporting culture has become just another brand of televised entertainment that now requires made-for-tv events to stir up viewership. This approach may stir up interest for a time, as witnessed by the NHL’s 4 Nations competition, but I suspect that once the novelty wears off, these stunts won’t woo more fans to the ice rink or the basketball court. By having sports live and die by the capricious nature of TV ratings, we’re turning America’s sports into geek shows, dependent on novelty to generate growth and interest. By way of contrast, my years spent in England reflected a different attitude toward sports. Although the likes of the Premier League have given an American-style sheen to its business approach, by and large, football/soccer remains deeply rooted in each club’s community and in the culture at large. I never once heard a complaint that a season was too long or that clubs would pull up stakes to get a better stadium deal elsewhere.” —Richard Steele

“I disagree with you about having shorter seasons for baseball, basketball and hockey. Countless local, small vendors would be hurt if the seasons were shortened. The NHL was created in 1917. The National League of baseball started in 1876 and the American League came about in 1901. The NFL started in 1920. The NBA [came] along in 1946 as televisions were in 0.5% in U.S. homes. The games of these sports are not made-for-tv events. The games were being played before television, which was invented in 1927.” —Lawrence Benenson

“You are right, although I would be a bear on your audience loss predictions. The world is awash with content and diversions and thus the ‘appointment to view’ is constantly being challenged. Oversupply of repetitive sports have proven ineffective in addressing splintering audiences.” —Randy Haynes

“Agree with you 100%. Also, stars bring out the viewers—even for a baseball game in the middle of the week in July. I grew up watching the Red Sox and later always watched during the Ortiz/Pedro years. This past season I never saw a game. No stars.” —Martha Cusick

“My whole life (59) I’ve never watched all regular season NBA, NHL or MLB games… I only start watching regularly during the last month and then the playoffs. My husband (57) says ‘Well then you are not a true fan,’ to which I reply, ‘I am, but I don’t NEED to see them all, since you do.’ He has the NBA package, watches any basketball game at any given time, especially our hometown team (Mavs)… These days folks cannot become true fans of anything because they have short attention spans and too much of everything.” —Lucy Johnson

SPONSORED BY WILSON SPORTING GOODS

Live Like an Athlete

From the NFL to the NBA, Roland-Garros to the US Open, NCAA to the AVP, Wilson’s dominance across the sports equipment landscape [[link removed]] is felt now more than ever. A brand steeped in tradition, with products expertly crafted for the next generation [[link removed]], Wilson empowers every human to live like an athlete. [[link removed]]

Good Week / Bad Week Eagles Soar, Mavs Suffer

Bill Streicher/Imagn Images

Good week for:

Eagles ⬆ The Super Bowl LIX champions signed two of their most important pieces to long-term deals. On Tuesday, Saquon Barkley agreed to a two-year, $41 million contract extension [[link removed]] to become the first running back in history to earn more than $20 million per year. The next day, Philadelphia re-signed All-Pro linebacker Zack Baun to a three-year, $51 million contract [[link removed]] with $34 million guaranteed, per ESPN senior NFL insider Adam Schefter.

ACC ⬆ A year ago, the conference was in jeopardy of falling apart. It looks poised to have new life as it’s considering a framework to settle four lawsuits with Florida State and Clemson [[link removed]]. The approach would implement new revenue-incentive structures related to TV ratings and lower the exit-fee penalty.

Bad week for:

Mavericks ⬇ The hits keep coming for Dallas. Kyrie Irving tore the ACL in his left knee Monday, which will keep him out for the rest of the season and likely for a significant chunk of next season as well. His future in Dallas is in question [[link removed]] as the eight-time All-Star, who turns 33 later this month, has a player option for next season. Even if he accepts, he could be a free agent in 2026. Irving and Anthony Davis are both currently injured, putting an even darker cloud on last month’s shocking Luka Dončić trade [[link removed]].

Michael Jordan ⬇ NASCAR does not intend to reach a settlement [[link removed]] with 23XI Racing, the team owned by NBA legend Jordan, and Front Row Motorsports, which first sued the league last year [[link removed]]. The two teams did not sign the most recent charter agreement from NASCAR, and their lawsuit called the league “monopolistic bullies.” But NASCAR claims that teams’ share of the media-rights revenue has increased to 49% in the new agreement, up about 25% from the previous charter agreements.

Sunday Reads Style: Off the Court, On the Field

Michael Cummings

Dressing athletes including Chelsea Gray, Kelsey Plum, and Cameron Brink, stylist Sydney Bordonaro is weaving fashion into the DNA of women’s basketball at Unrivaled and beyond. FOS contributor Molly Elizabeth Agnew [[link removed]] speaks to Bordonaro about the fusion of personal style and the sport that’s experiencing explosive growth [[link removed]]. Lumberjacks, steamed cheeseburgers, thunder chickens: Minor league teams are increasingly going big with alternate identity nights, defined by a total (albeit temporary) rebrand that demands an all-hands-on-deck effort from the front office. FOS contributor Alex Prewitt [[link removed]] spoke to some of the teams about how and why they go all out [[link removed]]. Advertise [[link removed]] Honors [[link removed]] Learning [[link removed]] Events [[link removed]] Video [[link removed]] Shows [[link removed]] Written by Daniel Roberts [[link removed]], Colin Salao [[link removed]], Meredith Turits [[link removed]] Edited by Meredith Turits [[link removed]], Catherine Chen [[link removed]]

If this email was forwarded to you, you can subscribe here [[link removed]].

Update your preferences [link removed] / Unsubscribe [link removed]

Copyright © 2021 Front Office Sports. All rights reserved.

460 Park Avenue South, 7th Floor, New York NY, 10016
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis