A battle between New York-area regional sports networks had a surprising victor this baseball season. According to Bloomberg’s Scott Soshnick, Sportsnet New York (SNY)’s Mets coverage not only posted its own significant gains, it surpassed the ratings of Yankees’ coverage on YES Network for the first time:
.@SNY averaged 2.73 household rating (+4% vs. 2015) and 263,850 total viewers (+9% vs. 2015); topping @YESNetwork for first time #sportsbiz
— Scott Soshnick (@soshnick) October 3, 2016
The latest

- AA Podcast: Chris Fallica on Lee Corso, ‘College GameDay,’ ‘Big Noon Kickoff,’ and more
- Scott Hanson says ‘the process is ongoing’ on ‘RedZone’ extension, talks NFL Draft
- Bleacher Report’s Tyler Price on NFL Draft show, new league partnership: ‘This is our Super Bowl’
- ‘Celtics City’ director on working with Bill Simmons, Connor Schell: ‘We were surrounded by some of the most incredible minds’
Part of what’s at issue in that dispute is the per-subscriber fee (it was a substantial $5.36 last year, and Comcast reportedly wanted it cut, while YES reportedly wanted it raised by about 30 per cent), but another part of the problem is apparently about a “most-favored-nation clause” that would protect Comcast if YES wound up striking a better deal with someone else. The dispute’s significant enough that it’s still dragging on, and given the large numbers of households involved, that undoubtedly had an impact on YES’ ratings.
Of course, there were other factors involved here too. It’s possible interest in the Mets (which own 65 per cent of SNY) rose relative to that in the Yankees this year. The Mets made the World Series last year and generated plenty of excitement about their young pitching staff in particular in the process, and while they fell from last year’s 90-72 mark to 87-75, they still had a good campaign and earned a wild-card berth. Meanwhile, the Yankees went from 87-75 with a wild-card berth in 2015 to 84-78 and out of the playoffs this year. SNY has also been closing the gap on YES a bit over the last few years, so this is part of that larger trend. Still, it seems likely the YES carriage dispute with Comcast played a significant role in this ratings shift.
These ratings are good news for Comcast on several fronts, too. For one, they might provide ammunition in the fight with YES, as Comcast’s main point is that not enough of their subscribers watch YES regularly to justify the fees the channel wants. They also help out SNY, which Comcast holds a minority 8 per cent stake in. For Comcast on this front, at the moment, everything truly is awesome.
[Scott Soshnick on Twitter]
Comments are closed.