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NBC reportedly makes offer to take over ESPN's MLB deal, 'Sunday Night Baseball' after split

Los Angeles Rams v Detroit Lions DETROIT, MI - SEPTEMBER 08: A detail of the NBC Sports logo on a microphone prior to a game between the Detroit Lions and the Los Angeles Rams at Ford Field on September 08, 2024 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) (Brandon Sloter/Getty Images)

“Sunday Night Baseball” may be headed to NBC next season.

NBC Universal made an offer to Major League Baseball earlier this month that would have it take over ESPN's package of regular season and postseason games, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Specifics of that deal are not yet known. It’s unclear when that deal could be finalized either, though the two sides have apparently been in talks for several weeks. NBC is offering significantly less than the $550 million per year that ESPN is currently paying, per the report.

ESPN announced earlier this year that it had "mutually agreed" to terminate its deal with MLB after the 2025 season. That ends a partnership that has been going on for more than three decades. ESPN and MLB were under contract through 2028, but they had an opt-out clause for earlier this year.

MLB commissioner Rob Manfred has reportedly complained that the league has “not been pleased with the minimal coverage that MLB has received on ESPN’s platforms over the past several years outside of the actual live game coverage.” ESPN has been asking for MLB to take a lower rights fee — it reportedly wanted to cut it by more than half, down to no more than $200 million a year — though MLB had declined.

ESPN first started broadcasting MLB games in 1990. It has carried regular season games, various playoff games, the Home Run Derby, its “Baseball Tonight” show and more. The split marks the latest transition broadcast-wise for MLB, which has reached deals with multiple different streaming services in recent years — including Apple TV, The Roku Channel, Amazon Prime and more. Diamond Sports Group, which ran more than a dozen team’s regional sports networks, went bankrupt, too. That has led some teams to have to start their own streaming services under the league’s watch.

If NBC is successful in landing baseball, it would mark the latest expansion the network has made in the sports world in recent years. NBC is preparing to start broadcasting NBA games on the network and on Peacock again next season, more than 20 years after it left the network.

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