Over The Top Sports Streaming Comes To Europe With Amazon's Deal With The Premier League

from the it's-spreading dept

We've made the point repeatedly that one of the last and most important threads on which the current cable television industry is hanging is that of live sports. While cord-cutting is indeed a thing, the many broadcast agreements pro and major college sports leagues have with cable broadcast partners keeps the cord-cutting from becoming a deluge from a burst dam. That being said, small but important steps have begun with many leagues, which are finally recognizing the demand viewers have for over the top streaming options. While there are still far too many restrictions in these sports streaming options, there is no doubt that American sports leagues have begun snipping away at this thread for cable television.

And now it this practice is coming to Europe as well. Specifically, Amazon has secured a relatively small but massively important streaming broadcast agreement for Premier League soccer.

Amazon has scored the rights to stream Premier League football (soccer) matches in the UK for three years. It’s the first time that Brits will be able to watch a full day of games on a streaming-only service, and Amazon will offer 20 games next season to Prime subscribers at no extra cost. Amazon has secured one of the smaller packages of Premier League games, but an important one over the festive period. Prime subscribers will get access to the first midweek December games rather than the big weekend fixtures, and Amazon will also be streaming all of the festive Boxing Day fixtures.

“This will be the first time a full round of Premier League fixtures will be broadcast live in the UK,” notes Amazon. It’s a deal that will mean British football fans will need to have an Amazon Prime subscription to watch any Boxing Day matches live. Boxing Day is a public holiday in the UK, and it’s a big day of football matches. It’s also the day after Christmas Day, when most British football fans will sit around in their pajamas and feast on leftover Christmas dinner food and watch matches live.

The plans Amazon has for this specific broadcast agreement obviously revolve around more than just revenue from the matches themselves. The timing of the games is key, centered around the post-Christmas holiday. Amazon will be pushing the public to sign up for Amazon Prime so that they can stream these games, while at the same time pushing those same customers to do their holiday shopping on Amazon as well. It's a way to gobble up marketshare in a fairly ingenious way.

But the greater overall effect could be on the cable industry in Europe. Imagine if the viewership numbers for these streaming games compares favorably to broadcast cable television numbers. Suddenly, the Premier League will have found a brand new partner to show its games, one that is motivated by more than just selling advertising during commercial breaks. There's a synergy there that cable TV simply can't have. And, of course, the public would have far less use for cable TV if it can get its sports via streaming.

This trend has and will continue. And it doesn't look good for the cable industry.

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Filed Under: eu, football, sports, streaming, streaming sports
Companies: amazon, premier league


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  • icon
    Gary (profile), 5 Jul 2018 @ 7:37pm

    Streaming

    Video game streaming will overtake live-action sport-ball at some point soon. That will hit the bottom line at Cable pretty hard I imagine.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it
    icon
    shubham (profile), 6 Jul 2018 @ 12:48am

    Streaming

    Thanks for sharing beautiful with us. I hope you will share some more info about Over The Top Sports Streaming Comes To Europe With Amazon's Deal With The Premier League. Please keep sharing!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Lord Lidl of Cheem (profile), 6 Jul 2018 @ 1:18am

    Let's not get carried away here - there are 380 premiere league matches a year, so Amazon only be broadcasting around 5% of the matches - I agree it's a start but its more of a bonus to Amazon customers than a broadcast-model breaking revolution.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      PaulT (profile), 6 Jul 2018 @ 1:54am

      Re:

      Two things to note here. First, the plan is obviously not simply as a bonus to existing customers, but as a drive for higher sales to new customers. They wouldn't be spending the money if they were thinking it would just be people already paying them who will watch.

      Secondly, as the article notes, they haven't just bought rights to random bunch of games, they've bought the rights to the most popular games, so that anyone wanting to legally watch them on the busiest day in a standard football year has to do it via Amazon.

      So, this may be the thin end of the wedge - Amazon get a bunch of annual subscribers who only buy for one day of the year, then as people with those subscriptions use them they may start to drop Sky, etc. if the games they actually want to watch aren't on there, or they may start to drop Netflix if they find more they want to watch on Prime and so on... If successful, they buy the rights to more games next year, giving people more reasons to drop competitors...

      It's certainly not an instant win for them, but if their competitors drop the ball here, it's likely a very successful move.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        christenson, 6 Jul 2018 @ 2:45pm

        Re: Re: More than that....

        Cable TV is only saleable at all right now due to a near-monopoly on live sports.... and Amazon just ended it.

        Expect an avalanche to follow...or a Cable exec wakes up, tries his best to spike the deal. Popcorn stocks are up...

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Ninja (profile), 6 Jul 2018 @ 6:11am

    "This trend has and will continue. And it doesn't look good for the cable industry."

    Good riddance. They could die faster.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Pixelation, 6 Jul 2018 @ 8:54am

    Over The Top

    I'm sure Amazon, Comcast, AT&T, etc. will soon add an "OTT" tax for streaming sports.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    John Smith, 7 Jul 2018 @ 7:51am

    OPEC and US Stell had "synergy" as well. How long before Google doubles the salary of every NFL player and puts the league out of business rather than bidding for the rights?

    Media feeds the best that swallows it whole with all the free advertising it gives social media sites and search engines.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Bergman (profile), 7 Jul 2018 @ 3:54pm

    DMCA Takedown of the stream in 3... 2...

    Even if it's a totally bogus claim, odds are someone will try it on the grounds that some fee collection agency somewhere with no jurisdiction wasn't paid what it wasn't owed.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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