Sports Business
The latest in sports business deals, partnerships, revenue strategies, and industry trends shaping the global sports economy.
36 articles

The Masters turns decades of archive footage into an AI-powered fan product
The Masters is transforming its historic video archive into a searchable digital product, using AI to let fans find more than 50 years of tournament moments through natural-language prompts. The move signals a broader shift in sports media, where old content is becoming a revenue-driving feature rather than a passive library asset.

The Masters turns its archive into an AI-powered fan product
The Masters is using IBM’s agentic AI to transform decades of tournament footage into a searchable digital experience inside its app and website. The move shows how premium sports properties can turn legacy content into a more valuable engagement and monetization asset.

Prediction markets hit a federal wall as sports wagering’s next growth engine faces a crackdown
Prediction markets have emerged as one of the fastest-growing disruptions in sports wagering, but their expansion now faces a bipartisan federal push to shut down sports-linked contracts. The fight underscores a broader business battle over whether these products are innovative financial instruments or sports betting operating under a different label.

Piracy reveals the commercial weakness in Ligue 1’s streaming-first reset
Piracy is no longer just a nuisance for French football — it is a direct threat to Ligue 1’s attempt to build a sustainable streaming business. New league research suggests illegal viewing is widespread, undercutting subscription growth, pricing power and the long-term value of Ligue 1+.

Scripps Turns Women’s Sports Into a FAST Channel With Clear Revenue Potential
Scripps is converting its women’s sports rights portfolio into a free ad-supported streaming television channel, creating a new distribution layer with built-in advertising upside. The move signals how leagues and media companies are increasingly using women’s sports not just to reach audiences, but to build more efficient, scalable businesses.

IPL media rights are poised to plateau at US$5.4 billion, marking a turning point for cricket’s most valuable asset
The Indian Premier League’s next broadcast cycle is forecast to hold at US$5.4 billion, ending a long stretch of rapid media-rights inflation and signaling a more mature phase for the league’s business model. With competition between major media buyers easing, monetization pressures rising and franchise dependence on broadcast income deepening, the IPL’s valuation story is shifting from rights-led growth to broader commercial execution.

Monarch Collective’s Cleveland WNBA investment signals women’s sports is now a real asset class
Monarch Collective’s minority stake in Cleveland’s planned WNBA expansion franchise is another sign that women’s sports has moved beyond narrative momentum and into institutional investment territory. The deal expands the fund’s portfolio beyond soccer and highlights how scarcity, media potential and league structure are turning women’s sports into a more conventional sports asset.

CBS deepens WNBA investment as women’s basketball becomes premium broadcast inventory
CBS is expanding its WNBA coverage to as many as 20 live games a year on its main broadcast network, underscoring the league’s rise as a commercially valuable property rather than a niche offering. The move reflects a broader media-market shift in which women’s sports are increasingly being treated as scalable, advertiser-friendly content with real rights value.

RCB and Rajasthan Royals deals signal a new valuation era for the IPL
Two blockbuster franchise transactions are pushing the Indian Premier League into a new financial bracket, with Royal Challengers Bengaluru and Rajasthan Royals reportedly changing hands at valuations that rival major global sports properties. The deals underscore how aggressively institutional capital, family offices and established sports owners are now bidding for Indian cricket assets.

Main Street’s collapse signals the end of the old local sports TV model
Main Street Sports Group’s expected exit from regional sports networks marks a decisive break with the cable-era economics that once made local rights a cash machine for MLB, the NBA and the NHL. As cord-cutting accelerates and streaming becomes the default, leagues and teams are being forced to redesign distribution around reach, direct fan relationships and more flexible revenue models.

IPL 2026 highlights how cricket’s fan economy is moving beyond broadcast
The 2026 Indian Premier League season is shaping up as a clear signal that cricket fandom has evolved into an always-on digital economy. As fans shift from passive viewers to active participants, the commercial value of data, interactivity and owned relationships is beginning to outpace traditional broadcast reach.

NBA expansion is shaping up as a scarcity play worth billions
The NBA is inching toward its first expansion in more than 20 years, with Las Vegas and Seattle emerging as the leading candidates. But the bigger story is financial: the league may be turning limited franchise inventory into a premium asset class, with expansion fees potentially reaching unprecedented levels. Backed by a massive new media-rights deal and rising franchise valuations, the NBA could use expansion to generate a multibillion-dollar windfall for existing owners while reinforcing the league’s status as one of sports’ most valuable properties.