Seattle Mariners have a new TV situation, according to The Athletic

There will be changes coming to Seattle Mariners television broadcasts, though what that means for viewers is yet to be known. According to The Athletic’s Evan Drellich, the Mariners are set to become the eighth team under MLB’s “in-house broadcasting group. ”M’s legends Ichiro, Félix among new names on Baseball HOF ballotDoes this mean TV broadcasts of Mariners games will be available beyond subscribing to a cable provider that includes ROOT Sports?

image

That answer isn’t clear. But it does make the possibility of tuning in Mariners games in a different format more likely than before. The Mariners have an arrangement “unique to the rest” of the teams under MLB’s broadcasting arm, according to an article by Drellich published Tuesday.

“It’s just complicated because they have distribution agreements that ran longer,” MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said of the Mariners, per Drellich’s article. “We’ll do the production for them, not clear how much more. ”This bit of news was just a small part of a much larger report by Drellich on MLB’s long-term TV broadcasting plans.

Seven other MLB teams will have MLB Media serve as their 2025 television broadcaster, most having come to MLB Media after Diamond Sports Media declared bankruptcy. The league is angling towards new national TV packages in 2028, according to Drellich’s report, and the MLB’s effort to pull that off will only be helped by having as many teams under its own broadcasting umbrella as possible. ROOT Sports Northwest has been the longtime home of Mariners TV broadcasts.

The Mariners initially owned a 71% stake in the regional sports television network beginning in 2013, but has owned 100% of the channel since Jan. 1, 2024. One change that is known for the Mariners on TV in 2025 is that play-by-play broadcaster Dave Sims will no longer be a part of the announce team after he became the new radio voice of the New York Yankees last week.

Seattle Mariners offseason coverage• Drayer’s Rebuttal: Why Mariners shouldn’t trade a starting pitcher• Mariners Odds & Ends: Could Seattle reunite with former prospect? • What would a Roki Sasaki signing mean for Mariners? • Drayer: The legacy Dave Sims leaves in Seattle• Why All-Star Alec Bohm makes sense as a Seattle Mariners targetFollow @BrentSteckerThis post was originally published on this site be sure to check out more of their content.

Related Posts

Former Major League Executive Details Toronto Blue Jays Sales Pitch to Juan Soto

Last week, the Toronto Blue Jays met with superstar outfielder Juan Soto. They were the first of four (known) scheduled meetings with the free agent, who could…

Astros, Blue Jays, Braves, Red Sox Among Teams Interested In Willy Adames

Willy Adames is drawing “very broad” interest in free agency, with MLB Network’s Jon Morosi (X link) naming the Astros, Blue Jays, Braves, and Red Sox as…

Houston Astros ballpark to be renamed Daikan Park from Minute Maid starting Jan. 1, 2025

HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — Minute Maid Park, home of the Houston Astros, as we know it is no more. Well, at least the name. The Astros announced…

Rays’ 2028 Stadium Deal In Jeopardy

The Rays will play their 2025 home games at Tampa’s George M. Steinbrenner Field — the Yankees’ spring training home — in the wake of damage wreaked…

Five things to watch on the Baseball Hall of Fame ballot: How can Ichiro not be unanimous?

Woohoo. It’s that time again. Hall of Fame election time. Baseball’s 2025 Hall ballot was announced Monday — featuring one guy destined for an all-time landslide (Ichiro…

Cincinnati Reds pitching plans more clear with Nick Martinez’ decision to accept $21M QO

The Cincinnati Reds‘ offseason workload just got a lot more manageable with the decision by their top pitcher to return in 2025. Swingman Nick Martinez, who produced…

Leave a Reply