Everyone thinks Apple’s negotiations with the NFL are dragging on

The NFL logo on a yellow and red background
Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

While Apple’s still the “front-runner” when it comes to securing the rights to the NFL Sunday Ticket, negotiations are taking unexpectedly long. That’s according to a report from The Athletic (via 9to5Mac), which indicates things have slowed down because Apple may be looking to score the rights to more than just the football games.

The rights to NFL Sunday Ticket — which DirecTV has held for nearly three decades — expire after this football season. Amazon, YouTube, and Disney are also said to have placed bids to secure the rights to the out-of-market games package, which the NFL reportedly wants $3.5 billion for.

But The Athletic reports that Apple expected it would gain the rights to aspects not specifically mentioned in its contract with the NFL. “You have to think about… the technology that has never even been invented… ways people want to consume that have never been invented yet,” a person close to the NFL told The Athletic.

There’s also the possibility of acquiring streaming tech from the NFL, too. Last December, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell told the Sports Business Journal that the NFL is “months away, not days away” from selling a stake in NFL Media, which includes RedZone, the NFL website, and NFL Network. At the time, Goodell seemed unsure about bundling Sunday Ticket with the media asset sale.

“That’s the thing that’s probably going to influence the timing a little bit more,” Goodell told the SBJ. “There’s so much interest, you’ve got to figure out: Do you want to include this in a relationship or do you want to exclude that and keep it over here for another partner? I think that’s part of the issue we’re going through.” In March, a report from Front Office Sports indicated that Apple’s looking to wrap Sunday Ticket and a stake in NFL Media in one single billion-dollar deal.

But Apple may also be working on putting its own spin on the way viewers consume sports, particularly in the virtual reality (VR) space. Earlier this month, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reported that Apple’s hiring employees to build out 3D environments for its rumored mixed reality headset, in line with its acquisition of NextVR in 2020, a company that specializes in creating VR experiences for sporting events, concerts, and more. Securing Sunday Ticket would coincide with the headset’s rumored 2023 launch.

As noted by The Athletic, Apple could be considering some of the limitations that come along with NFL Sunday Ticket as well. For one, Apple can’t stream the games internationally and won’t have access to in-market games, like CBS and Fox does. This aligns with a CNBC report from October, which indicates that Apple wants to “offer consumers more than standard rights agreements,” including the ability to offer “games globally or in local markets.”

Apple already has some of these privileges with the live sports partnerships it secured with Major League Soccer and Major League Baseball. While Apple’s upcoming MLS streaming offering will let users watch out-of-market games when it launches next February, its showing of Friday Night Baseball games also bypasses local broadcast restrictions.

Source: The Verge Everyone thinks Apple’s negotiations with the NFL are dragging on

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