Combine the Turner Sports agreement announced Tuesday and the one with The Walt Disney Co. and ESPN announced March 10, and you have network television, cable TV and streaming. You have two partners with powerful platforms, strong track records and huge incentives to promote the game on the air, online and on social media.
"You've got more national games than ever before," NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said Tuesday. "You've got more extensive coverage than ever before. You're going to be able to get as much hockey as you want, and for us, that's exciting. And coupled with … a fun and innovative approach to covering sports, I think that's going to bring more people into our game."
For the NHL, these agreements represent an increase in U.S. media rights fees and a potential for growth at a time when the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted everything from the business to the fan experience.
Commissioner Bettman declined to give figures but said, "We think the arrangements we have now are much more reflective of the value that we bring as compelling content." He said he thought they would result in the NHL salary cap, tied to revenues and flat at $81.5 million until revenues recover, would rise sooner than it would have otherwise.
For Turner Sports and ESPN, the NHL represents an important draw for all their platforms even though each has partnerships with other major pro sports leagues.
ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro said March 10 the NHL had the largest growth in fandom among the major pro sports leagues since 2005. Viewership among ages 18-48 was up about 30 percent in 2021. Younger demographics were up double digits.
"Our strategy at Turner has been to be involved with the most premium sports content, and I think we've put together a portfolio that reflects that," WarnerMedia News & Sports chairman Jeff Zucker said Tuesday. "And adding the NHL to that portfolio only enhances Turner Sports."
For hockey fans, as Commissioner Bettman said, "It's more hockey in more places in more ways."
The Stanley Cup Final will alternate between ABC and TNT over the next seven years: on ABC in 2022, 2024, 2026 and 2028, and on TNT in 2023, 2025 and 2027.
ABC and ESPN will televise one conference final series and half of the first-round and second-round games of the Stanley Cup Playoffs each of the next seven seasons. So will TNT and TBS.
ABC and ESPN will televise 25 exclusive regular-season games each season. TNT and TBS will televise 72, including the NHL Winter Classic, the annual outdoor showcase on New Year's Day.
ESPN will produce 75 exclusive national broadcasts each season and stream them on ESPN+ and Hulu, and stream more than 1,000 games each season on ESPN+. Turner Sports plans to stream games on HBO Max, though the details are being determined.