The NBA might not be happy with the NFL making Christmas Day a regular part of its schedule. However, its new media rights deals nearly put the two leagues in the same economic arena.
The NBA's 11-year, $76 billion contract package, as reported by The Associated Press, would kick in with the 2025-26 season. The deal is for the same number of years as the NFL's most recent agreement, which began with the 2023 season.
The deals with ESPN/ABC, NBC and Amazon Prime Video will average $6.9 billion per season. The NFL averages $10 billion per year, but that is with five networks. Depending on how things fare with TNT Sports, the NBA could cross the $7 billion threshold.
The NFL remains the top attraction because of its ratings and advertising prowess. The NBA is a firm second and can command top dollar due to its younger viewers as well as having a ton of content.
Get top local stories in Southern California delivered to you every morning. Sign up for NBC LA's News Headlines newsletter.
When does this become final?
At least not for a couple of weeks. The NBA has a board of governors meeting in Las Vegas next week and could approve the deal there. Once the league sends the finished contracts to TNT Sports, it would have five days to match one of the deals.
Why is the deal so long?
Leagues want economic certainty. For the networks and media companies that hold the rights, live sports continue to be prime real estate for advertisers.
How will this benefit the fan?
You may need to go to your channel guide often, but during the last three months of the regular season there will be a national NBA telecast every night on either ABC, ESPN, NBC, Peacock or Prime Video.
Who has the top package?
ESPN and ABC will continue to be home to the league's marquee matchups, as well as the NBA Finals.
Even though the NBA will have two broadcast partners for the first time, the Walt Disney Company was adamant about not sharing the Finals. It will cost Disney $2.6 billion per year, which is just shy of the $2.7 billion per season it pays to the NFL for Monday Night Football, two playoff games and the Super Bowl in 2027 and 2031.
Under the current nine-year deal which expires next season, ESPN/ABC pay $1.4 billion per year.
NBC, the network that carried all six of Michael Jordan's title runs with the Chicago Bulls and the first three of Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant's championships with the Los Angeles Lakers, returns after carrying NBA games from 1990 through 2002.
NBC's deal with the league reportedly averages $2.5 billion per season, which is more than the $2 billion it reportedly gives to the NFL for Sunday Night Football.
With that price tag comes a Sunday night package of games once the NFL regular season is over, as well as NBA All-Star Weekend. Reports indicate NBC's deal also includes regularly aired games on Tuesday nights and a package of Monday games streaming on Peacock.
Dose this mean ‘Roundball Rock’ is coming back?
Yes. You don't have to wait until the fall of 2025 to hear "Roundball Rock," though, because NBC licenses it for its basketball coverage during the Olympics.
Is the NBA entering the streaming world?
Yes, with Prime Video. It will carry games on Thursday night after the NFL regular season ends, along with games on Friday and Saturday.
Prime Video will also be the main network for the NBA In-Season Tournament. It will average paying $1.8 billion per season (its deal with the NFL averages $1.1 billion per year).
Because ABC has the NBA Finals, who gets the rest of the playoffs?
All the networks will have games during the first two rounds. When it comes to the conference finals, ESPN/ABC has one series each season while NBC and Amazon Prime Video will alternate who carries the other one.
What does this mean for the NBA?
Labor peace was achieved with a new Collective Bargaining Agreement. The media rights are about to be done. That puts expansion by at least two teams to 32 on deck. The expansion fees will also carry a nice financial windfall for teams.
For players, it means the league’s salary cap will see an annual 10% increase. Get ready for the possibility that the top players may be earning somewhere near $100 million per season by the mid-2030s.
Is the WNBA part of this rights deal?
Yes. All three partners will carry games. ESPN/ABC and Prime Video already have games while NBC will return to carrying the WNBA after doing the first six seasons (1997 through 2002). It is possible the WNBA could still add more partners like it has in recent seasons.