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.

Main Street Sports Group’s expected departure from the regional sports network business in April is more than a corporate failure. It is a clear market signal that the old local sports television model no longer works at scale in a streaming-first economy.
For decades, regional sports networks were among the most valuable assets in American sports media. They converted local fandom into guaranteed carriage fees, helped teams lock in rich rights deals and gave leagues a reliable source of revenue outside national television contracts. That formula is now collapsing under the weight of cord-cutting, shrinking pay-TV penetration and changing viewer habits.
The numbers tell the story. The U.S. pay-TV base has fallen sharply from its peak more than a decade ago, and that decline has eroded the economics that once supported RSNs. Fewer subscribers mean less carriage revenue, less leverage with distributors and less ability to service debt. In a business built on scale and stability, the market has become too fragmented and too volatile to sustain the old structure.
Main Street’s downfall follows the broader unraveling of the RSN sector. The company’s predecessor, Diamond Sports Group, emerged from a multibillion-dollar acquisition of the former Fox Sports regional portfolio, only to enter bankruptcy when the business could not support its obligations. After restructuring, rebranding and leaning into direct-to-consumer streaming, the operator still could not generate enough momentum to offset the decline in linear television.
Even a distribution deal with Amazon Prime Video and a reported surge in streaming subscribers could not change the fundamentals. The issue was not awareness or product breadth. It was the structural mismatch between a legacy rights model and a consumer market that no longer behaves like the one that created it.
The impact on teams is immediate. Main Street controlled local media rights for 29 MLB, NBA and NHL franchises when it exited bankruptcy, and those clubs now have to rebuild their distribution strategies and absorb the revenue shock. Few alternatives will match RSN economics in the short term, but the upside is greater strategic control, broader digital reach and the chance to monetize fans more directly.
Baseball is the most exposed league in this transition. MLB clubs have historically relied more heavily on local media revenue than teams in other leagues, in part because baseball’s long season and regional viewing patterns made it a natural RSN product. That advantage has turned into vulnerability as the local cable bundle weakens.
Several MLB teams that split from Main Street have already moved to more flexible models, including a mix of free-to-air and subscription streaming. Others have brought production in-house or partnered with league-run media operations. The Atlanta Braves are taking the most ambitious route, building their own network and direct-to-consumer service. The Los Angeles Angels have also moved to regain full control of their regional rights.
The leagues themselves are not waiting for the market to stabilize. MLB has been centralizing production and distribution capabilities so it can manage more local games internally and eventually package more inventory for national negotiations. That approach is designed to strengthen the league’s hand when its next major media deals come up for renewal.
The NHL is taking a similar stance, signaling that it can step in for clubs without local deals and potentially fold more games into broader national arrangements. The NBA, backed by larger national media rights and a stronger streaming outlook, is building a local-game hub that could bring in major platform partners and create a more scalable digital model.
What is emerging is a new hierarchy in sports media. Leagues with strong national rights and digital leverage can absorb the decline of RSNs. Leagues and teams that depended on local cable economics are being forced to reinvent distribution, pricing and fan acquisition all at once.
Other RSN operators are also under pressure. Some have exited the business entirely, while team-owned networks such as YES Network, MSG Networks and NESN continue to argue that local ownership and brand alignment can still work. Newer team-backed networks in markets like Houston, Chicago, Atlanta and Detroit suggest the RSN format is not disappearing so much as being rebuilt around different ownership structures and different assumptions about audience behavior.
The broader future of local sports broadcasting is likely to be hybrid. Pay-TV, streaming and over-the-air distribution will coexist, with leagues and teams seeking wider reach rather than exclusive dependence on one channel or one distributor. That shift could unlock more advertising, more sponsorship, more ticketing integration and more direct fan data than the old model ever allowed.
The business lesson is blunt: local sports content remains valuable, but the delivery system that monetized it has changed permanently. The next phase will reward operators that can combine distribution flexibility, platform partnerships and centralized rights strategy. The RSN era built the modern economics of local sports television. Its collapse is now forcing the industry to build something more durable in its place.
Why It Matters
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.


