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EntertainmentBlogsNews: NHL Media Rights, Paramount-WBD, Angels and More
News: NHL Media Rights, Paramount-WBD, Angels and More
Entertainment

News: NHL Media Rights, Paramount-WBD, Angels and More

•February 11, 2026
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Sports Media Watch
Sports Media Watch•Feb 11, 2026

Why It Matters

These moves reshape revenue streams and bargaining power across major sports and entertainment properties, influencing how fans access content and how investors value media assets.

Key Takeaways

  • •NHL seeks early rights deals before NFL negotiations accelerate
  • •Paramount adds quarterly fee to pressure WBD shareholders
  • •Angels join MLB’s $20‑monthly in‑market streaming service
  • •Paramount secures $43.6B equity and $54B debt commitments
  • •CBS airs first UFC primetime simulcast on broadcast network

Pulse Analysis

The NHL’s push to renegotiate its U.S. media contracts ahead of the NFL’s next rights round reflects a broader urgency among leagues to secure premium distribution dollars before market dynamics shift. With current agreements valued at roughly $625 million and overlapping Canadian revenue exceeding $1.2 billion annually, an early renewal could lock in stable cash flow and protect the league from a potential rights‑price dip if networks await NFL benchmarks. ESPN and TNT Sports, still weighing NFL demands, now face pressure to present competitive offers that sustain the NHL’s growth trajectory.

Paramount’s enhanced hostile tender for Warner Bros. Discovery underscores the intensifying consolidation battle in the streaming arena. By incorporating a $0.25‑per‑share quarterly fee—potentially worth $650 million per quarter—and covering the $2.8 billion termination cost tied to the Netflix deal, Paramount signals willingness to outbid rivals and accelerate regulatory clearance. The firm’s $43.6 billion equity pledge, bolstered by Larry Ellison’s personal guarantee, and $54 billion in debt capacity illustrate the financial muscle behind the bid, positioning Paramount as a formidable contender for a media powerhouse that could reshape content distribution.

MLB’s expansion of in‑market streaming, now including the Los Angeles Angels, marks a decisive shift toward direct‑to‑consumer models that bypass traditional regional sports networks. Priced at $20 a month or $100 for a season, the service offers fans a blackout‑free alternative while giving MLB leverage to eventually centralize local rights and possibly launch a national package by 2029. The move aligns with broader industry trends—evident in ESPN’s programming tweaks, Netflix’s subscriber disclosures, and Fubo’s FAST channel launch—highlighting a landscape where flexibility, fan access, and strategic bundling drive revenue growth across sports and entertainment platforms.

News: NHL media rights, Paramount-WBD, Angels and more

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