NHL hopes to score big audiences with Amazon streaming launch - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 01:36 AM | Calgary | -7.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

NHL hopes to score big audiences with Amazon streaming launch

Amazon Prime Video's new NHL broadcastPrime Monday Night Hockey the league's first exclusive national broadcast package with a digital-only streaming service in Canada aired for the first time Monday night.What does it mean for the future of the sport?

League premieres new docuseries and weekly broadcasts on Amazon Prime amid push to attract new viewers

A Montreal Canadiens player lunges at the puck as a Pittsburgh Penguins goaltender fall into the butterfly position.
Amazon Prime Video's new NHL broadcast Prime Monday Night Hockey the league's first exclusive national broadcast package with a digital-only streaming service in Canada aired its inaugural regular season broadcast this week. (Eric Bolte/Imagn Images/Reuters)

The NHLhas officially joined the world of streaming.

Amazon Prime Video's new National Hockey LeaguebroadcastPrime Monday Night Hockey the league's first exclusive national broadcast package with a digital-only streaming service in Canadakicked offMonday night.

It's part of a new deal that saw Amazon acquirethe rights to broadcast all national, regular-season Monday night NHL games for the next two seasons through an agreement with Rogers.

The first streamingbroadcast featured a game between the Montreal Canadiensand Pittsburgh Penguins, in which the Penguins defeatedthe Canadiens 6-3.

Some fans are already reacting positively.

A 'simplistic' and focused broadcast

JordonJohnson, a self-described "die hard" Montreal Canadiens fan, was watching the game Monday night.

He described the broadcast as "high quality" and "simplistic."

Thefocused discussion of the panel between periods was also a highlight for Johnson, who saysbroader discussions about the league can take away from his viewing experience.

"I'm used to a big broadcast team that's very vocal about all the teams and all the games," he said."This one felt very geared toward this game."

Amazon Prime's broadcast primarily featured a three-person panel consisting of former NHLer Mark Messier, broadcasterAdnan Virk and Blake Bolden, a former player in the Premier Hockey Federation/National Women's Hockey League (NHWL).Other analysts, including Andi Petrillo, were featured throughout.

A 'play for the future'

Amazon Prime Video is also working with the NHL in other ways.

Earlier this month, the platform premieredFACEOFF: Inside the NHL,adocuseriesthat follows some of the league's biggest starsat different stages of their careers.

"Behind the scenes stuff I think is very smart and popular," said David Hardisty, an associate professor ofMarketing and Behavioural Science at the University of British Columbia's SauderSchool of Business. "There's a lot of people that are hardcore fans and just want more."

He described the NHL's partnership with Amazon as a "play for the future."

"I thinkthe NHL has kind of bet that it's worth it to have reduced viewership, some upset fans now, in exchange for growing their younger audience."

WATCH | Why watching hockey is becoming more complicated:

Its never been more complicated or expensive to watch NHL hockey

1 month ago
Duration 2:04
Its never been more complicated, or expensive, to watch NHL hockey as the multiyear Rogers broadcast deal winds down. To watch every game of the 2024/2025 season fans will need to subscribe to Sportsnet, TSN, TVA and Amazon Prime.

In addition to Amazon Prime, hockey fans will need to subscribe to Sportsnet, TSN and TVAif they want to watchallNHL games this season.

Hardistypoints to the MLSSeason Pass deal with Apple TV as a potential model the NHL could mirror in the future. The deal allows Apple TV subscribers to access every MLS game, including playoffs.

Amazon's move to acquire Monday night NHL broadcastshas fuelled speculation that the platform will bid for the Canadian broadcasting rights to all NHL games when they become available after the 2025-26 season.

When asked about the NHL broadcasting rights, Mark Shopiro, head of Prime Video Canada, said he "can't speculate on future deals."

Pro sports and streaming

In addition to upping its ice time by streaming hockey, Amazon has already made its presence known on the gridiron.The platform is entering its third season as the streaming home for NFL games on Thursday nights.

Last season, Thursday Night Football averaged 11.86 million viewers,a year-over-year increase of 24 per cent, according to Sports Media Watch.

Prime Video will also be live streaming NBA games starting with the 2025-26 season.

Other streaming services are also streaming pro sports.

There's been a surge in popularity for Formula Oneamong younger fans, thanks to Netflix's Drive to Survive series, which premiered in 2019. The docuseries follows drivers andkey players in the world of F1racing.

Average viewership of F1 races in the U.S. almost doubled from 554,000in 2018 to 1.11 million in 2023,according toESPN, which airs the sport on several of its platforms.

A shot of a professional race car mid-race.
Since Netflix's Drive to Survive debuted in 2019 featuring behind-the-scenes footage of the usually secretive Formula One racing teams the audience for F1 has skyrocketed. In May, it was confirmed that the series had been renewed for its fifth and sixth seasons. (Netflix)

Part of that success is likely due to the crossover effect thatDrive to Survivehad on the actual sport.

According to a May 2022 report by viewership analytics firm Nielsen, 2.3 per cent more people wereinspiredbyDrive to Surviveto watch an F1 event that year. Thirty-four per cent of respondents said they became a fan of the sport after watching the series.

The NHL is hopingto eventually have the same kind of success with FACEOFF.

"I think everybody has seen the effects thatDrive to Survivehad on Formula Oneracing,Full Swinghas done a lot for golf, and obviously the storytelling that's involved is unique and very different," NHLexecutive Steve Mayer said in a mediarelease when the show was first announced in June.

Amazon has secured at least one repeat viewerin Johnson.

"I definitely think I'llbe tuned in to watch it more," he said. "It's something to look forward to on Monday."

With files from The Canadian Press and Jenna Benchetrit