The sports media industry has been hit hard this year amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, with major layoffs and furloughs taking place across many companies, and the latest ones are at streaming company DAZN. DAZN already furloughed many of their events staff back in March and April, also saying then that they wouldnât make further rights payments until those events returned. They made further programming and executive changes this summer amidst discussions of various plans to obtain more funding. Now, theyâve laid off dozens of staffers.
Awful Announcing has learned that these latest layoffs primarily involve people in production and marketing, that theyâve hit the U.S. particularly hard, and that theyâve been described as a consolidation towards DAZNâs planned global service rather than the current country-specific model. John Ourand of Sports Business Journal has more on these cuts:
Two percent of global staff would be 52 people, going by the 2,600 number given for DAZNâs global staff back in March, and that fits with what AA has learned about the scale of these layoffs. So this is a pretty big cut. And itâs also interesting to see it affecting the U.S. business so heavily, as thatâs once where DAZN had planned on major expansion, with the splashy May 2018 hire of former ESPN president John Skipper and his subsequent âItâs time to bring DAZN to Americaâ remarks illustrating the thinking along those lines.
But while DAZN was able to gain some ground in the U.S. in combat sports, theyâve faced challenges picking up other rights in the U.S., with so many top-tier rights already locked up long term. And that situation has perhaps gotten worse since 2018. The U.S. NFL Sunday Ticket rights, which Skipper confirmed interest in last year, never actually came up (despite a lot of speculation that they would). And the highlyâpromoted MLB ChangeUp deal (featuring ex-Fox Sports executive Jamie Horowitz as a prominent advisor and later DAZN head of content) may well have âhung up a signâ of DAZNâs interest in U.S. rights beyond combat sports, but that sign was abruptly removed this year when the deal was cancelled after just one season (it had been set to run for three years). So this fits with an apparent larger shift at DAZN, moving away from a focus on U.S. expansion and towards a global push where theyâre looking to expand to more than 200 countries.
At the same time, though, just where DAZN is going appears rather uncertain. In August, David Hellier and Crystal Tse of Bloomberg reported that the company was looking to raise up to $1 billion, and speaking with advisors about âoptions including a stock-market listing or divestment of assets.â That fits with a May discussion about them looking for a further cash infusion, but also possibly selling the whole company.
While DAZN principal owner Len Blavatnik has quite a bit of money (that Bloomberg report from last month valued his net worth at $33 billion), heâs certainly not committed to fund the company indefinitely (otherwise, they wouldnât be looking for outside investment). And their overall approach faces even more questions now than the numerous ones that were raised before the pandemic struck. Weâll see whatâs ahead for DAZN, but these latest layoffs are definitely another twist to their story, and one that seems to have them moving further away (at least for the moment) from a focus on U.S. expansion.
Update: Tuesday night also saw the news that DAZNâs financial dispute with boxer Saul âCaneloâ Alvarez has now escalated into a lawsuit.
Thatâs likely not directly related to these layoffs, but itâs an interesting part of the overall story of the challenges at DAZN.
[John Ourand on Twitter]