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    Home » Sections » Broadcasting and Media » Netflix hopes for live sports knockout with Mike Tyson, Jake Paul fight

    Netflix hopes for live sports knockout with Mike Tyson, Jake Paul fight

    A showdown between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul on Friday is the latest one-two punch from Netflix.
    By Agency Staff15 November 2024
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    Netflix hopes for live sports knockout with Mike Tyson, Jake Paul fight
    Boxers Mike Tyson, Jake Paul, Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano attend a news conference, ahead of their postponed professional fight which was set to take place at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas on 20 July in New York City. David ‘Dee’ Delgado/Reuters

    A showdown between former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson and social media influencer-turned-fighter Jake Paul on Friday is the latest one-two punch from Netflix, as the media giant hopes to cash in on sports’ sprint to streaming.

    The intergenerational showdown has all the makings of a crossover hit, with 58-year-old Tyson bringing in the old guard and 27-year-old Paul, who achieved early fame on YouTube, appealing to the younger, screen-toting social media junkies.

    The fight will be available to all of Netflix’s more than 280 million subscribers for no additional fee.

    These are two huge personalities — it does have the potential to be the biggest streaming sports event

    “The trend in all sports right now is moving some of their properties to streaming,” said Bob Dorfman, a veteran San Francisco-based sports marketing analyst. “These are two huge personalities — it does have the potential to be the biggest streaming sports event.”

    The American subscription television network HBO announced in 2018 it was dropping live boxing from its programming, ending a 45-year relationship with the sport and leaving a broadcasting vacuum in its wake.

    Netflix has dabbled in sports content before, with exhibition golf and tennis events and the wildly popular docuseries Formula 1: Drive to Survive, which is credited with boosting the auto racing circuit’s popularity in the US.

    The fight at the 80 000-capacity AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, its first live boxing event, works in favour of Netflix’s strategy of providing proprietary content that viewers cannot find elsewhere.

    Mega-event

    While the fight will not have traditional advertising, it has sponsors whose messages will be part of the live-streamed event.

    Advertising is not a major contributor to the streamer’s current revenue, though its ad-supported tier is quickly growing, with 70 million subscribers reported this week, up from 40 million in May.

    Read: Netflix beats investor forecasts in every major metric

    The mega-event is the sign of a lasting love affair between sport and streaming, said Neal Pilson, the former president of CBS Sports, though he predicts streaming and traditional broadcast will exist side by side for the foreseeable future.

    “This is a one-time-only event… It’s more as a novelty in my view. It doesn’t change the industry,” said Pilson, president of Pilson Communications. “The industry is still going to be driven by the league deals.”

    Amazon Prime picked up Thursday Night Football in 2021 and MLS signed a 10-year mega-deal with Apple TV in 2022 worth a reported US$2.5-billion. Major League Baseball signed a deal with Apple for Friday Night Baseball, a weekly doubleheader, in 2022, as well.

    Leagues have been gravitating to streaming both because it reaches a global audience, including younger viewers, who are not watching traditional television.  — Amy Tennery and Dawn Chmielewski, (c) 2024 Reuters

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