Here’s the thing about legacy in this business: it only lasts until someone outbids you. And right now, as ESPN preps for this week’s NFL Draft—the last one under its current deal—it’s doing what all longtime incumbents do when the lease is up: acting chill while quietly scanning the room for threats.
ESPN has been the NFL Draft’s on-air home since 1980, which in media years makes it the Betty White of sports rights. And yet, despite the vultures circling—Amazon, Fox, YouTube, Netflix, maybe even Chris Simms daydreaming out loud—Mollie Cahillane at Sports Business Journal reports that ESPN is feeling “optimistic” about keeping the gig.
Because nothing screams “secure rights deal” like optimism and no paperwork.
To be fair, ESPN has earned its keep. The Draft used to be a glorified corporate meeting with rotary phones. ESPN turned it into a full-blown content carnival—complete with dueling broadcasts, Mel Kiper’s hair, and enough human-interest fluff on ABC to make a Hallmark exec blush.
But optimism doesn’t ink contracts. The current rights deal ends with this year’s Draft, and the NFL, ever the capitalist machine, has actively fielded offers from multiple media players looking to take over.
Per previous reports, the league has taken bids from Amazon, Fox, Netflix, and YouTube—because if there’s one thing the NFL loves more than a good pass rush, it’s maximizing media dollars.
Meanwhile, according to John Ourand of Puck, the NFL is also exploring a deal to sell international draft rights to a U.S.-based streamer. What’s unclear is whether that arrangement would include any domestic component or be strictly for the global audience.
NFL Network’s fate in all this? That’s still murky. It could be bundled into a broader ESPN-NFL Media deal or slowly fade into the background like a Day 3 pick who never sees a snap.
Still, sources told SBJ it “would be a shocker” if ESPN didn’t retain at least some draft rights. Maybe that’s true. Or maybe we’ve all just gotten too used to the ESPN logo being part of our annual mock draft chaos.
But one thing’s sure: the NFL doesn’t do nostalgia. It does business.
And if someone walks in with more money, ESPN might find out what it feels like to get drafted… by another network.