For the better part of two years, the unraveling of the regional sports network model has forced local rights holders across Major League Baseball, National Basketball Association, and National Hockey League into an improvised, often inelegant patchwork of distribution solutions. What was once a highly efficient — if overbuilt — system of bundled carriage fees has given way to a fragmented landscape defined by experimentation, short-termism, and uneven economics. Into that vacuum steps DAZN, whose $100 million acquisition of ViewLift may represent the first credible effort to reassemble something resembling the RSN model — albeit in digital form. The current moment is best understood as a transition defined by trade-offs. In the wake of the collapse of Main Street Sports, teams have been forced to choose between reach and revenue, rarely achieving both at once. Some have leaned into an over-the-air reset, striking partnerships with local broadcast stations to regain mass distribution in markets like Phoenix, Utah, and Las Vegas. That approach has restored visibility and, in some cases, rekindled casual fan engagement. But it has also stripped away the high-margin affiliate fees that once made RSNs such a powerful economic engine. Others have pursued direct-to-consumer streaming, launching standalone services that offer control and a direct billing relationship with fans. Many of these efforts — often powered behind the scenes by firms like ViewLift — have proven technically sound but commercially uneven. Subscription uptake has been constrained by pricing friction, limited marketing scale, and the simple reality that local sports, on their own, are a narrower value proposition than the bloated but effective cable bundle they are replacing. |