Another year of Root Sports, no streaming, same' ol same ol'?

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Fire Stick or Android TV.
-Install "Downloader" app
-Using "Downloader" app navigate to Sportsfire.tv and click "Download App"
-Install sportsfire from Downloader downloads

Enjoy pretty much all sports.
 
Fox 12 has announced that they would be broadcasting all Remix games this year on Fox 12 Plus. Does anyone know how to stream fox 12 Plus?
Pretty sure Fox12+ is something that you get over the airwaves. Need an antenna.
 
Fire Stick or Android TV.
-Install "Downloader" app
-Using "Downloader" app navigate to Sportsfire.tv and click "Download App"
-Install sportsfire from Downloader downloads

Enjoy pretty much all sports.

that doesn't require any kind of subscription?
 
that doesn't require any kind of subscription?
Nope. Google doesn't like it and calls it a fake or dangerous app when you install it (and may even hide it from your menu every day), but you don't have to give it any personal information and I've not seen anybody report any problems.

If Google does remove it from your menu you just go back into the Downloader app under "files" and go through the 10 second Install process. It will be added back to your menu with all of your history and preferences saved.

*Edit*
If you disable the Google Play Store it stays on your menu.
 
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Nope. Google doesn't like it and calls it a fake or dangerous app when you install it (and may even hide it from your menu every day), but you don't have to give it any personal information and I've not seen anybody report any problems.

If Google does remove it from your menu you just go back into the Downloader app under "files" and go through the 10 second Install process. It will be added back to your menu with all of your history and preferences saved.

I downloaded it on my firestick. Wondering what it does when the Philma Kracken are playing
 
Fire Stick or Android TV.
-Install "Downloader" app
-Using "Downloader" app navigate to Sportsfire.tv and click "Download App"
-Install sportsfire from Downloader downloads

Enjoy pretty much all sports.
Got it - thanks. I don't know how you know this stuff but it sure helps tech idiots like me! :cheers:
 
I have found a less frustrating method, mostly same as above, except now I don't have to sign in again because I don't clear data anymore. Here it is.

NBA App: Blazer game blacked out

Surfshark VPN: Connect to non-local USA server.

Under Firestick Settings, Apps, NBA
(These are all in same page)
- Clear Cache
- Force Stop
- Launch Application

NBA App: Blazer game no longer blacked out but frequent buffering

Surfshark VPN: Disconnect

NBA App: Blazer game still not blacked out and this time no more buffering.

Watch the massacre.
Are you doing this on your tv or on a phone?
 
Is this effective this year?

Follow the link in the tweet for your answers >> https://pr.nba.com/nba-g-league-and-tubi-announce-streaming-partnership/

NBA G League and Tubi announce streaming partnership
Official Release | November 8, 2023

Tubi, Fox Corporation’s (NASDAQ: FOXA, FOX) ad-supported video-on-demand service, and the NBA G League, the NBA’s official development league, today announced a multi-year partnership to make NBA G League games available on the Tubi platform. The partnership tips off with NBA G League Ignite vs. Ontario Clippers game at 10 p.m. ET on Friday, Nov. 10. As part of the collaboration, an array of live exclusive G League games and real-time coverage of rising, influential players via a new FAST Channel will be available on Tubi Game Days: “NBA G League TV”.

“We are thrilled to team up with the NBA G League for the next two seasons, delivering an exciting new basketball experience to our audience at no cost,” said Adam Lewinson, Chief Content Officer at Tubi. “Tubi is committed to providing diverse, high-quality content to its subscribers, including the NBA G League, ultimately bringing more sports entertainment to our viewers and enhancing the fan experience.”

“We are excited to further expand access and deepen engagement with our fans through this partnership with Tubi,” said NBA G League Chief Operating Officer Portia Archer. “The G League is filled with tomorrow’s NBA stars and we can’t wait for Tubi’s audience to experience the elite competition and exceptional talent in our league.”

NBA G League TV will feature more than 75 live games each season, including more than a dozen G League Ignite games and select G League Playoff games, all available exclusively on Tubi. Each Friday and Saturday throughout the season, NBA G League TV will air a doubleheader, offering fans four exclusive live games per weekend, in addition to a wide array of all-access behind-the-scenes content, original series, studio programming, classic games and highlights. The channel will be available for 48 hours on Fridays and Saturdays for Tubi Game Days, beginning every Friday at 9:00 a.m. ET.

Tubi will have big games, filled with rising stars and fan-favorite teams, including (schedule subject to change):
  • Friday, Nov. 17: Santa Cruz Warriors vs G League Ignite
  • Saturday, Dec. 12: Windy City Bulls vs Wisconsin Herd
  • Friday, Jan. 19: G League Ignite vs Mexico City Capitanes
  • Saturday, Feb. 10: Delaware Blue Coats vs Austin Spurs
  • Friday, March 29: South Bay Lakers vs Mexico City Capitanes
  • April 2024: First Round and Conference Semifinals of the NBA G League Playoffs
The NBA G League is a proven developer of NBA talent while also acting as the league’s research and development laboratory, testing out innovative rules now used at the NBA level, including the Coach’s Challenge and the 14-second shot-clock reset rule. A record 50 percent of players on 2023-24 NBA opening night rosters had G League experience and eight current NBA head coaches spent time honing their craft in the G League.

For a schedule of all the games airing on Tubi, visit https://gleague.nba.com/. To watch the NBA G League and other free content, go to https://tubitv.com/.
 


Sea Times Article:

https://www.seattletimes.com/sports...ditch-root-sports-and-show-tv-games-for-free/

Inside the NHL

“Back to the Future” was a 1985 science fiction comedy film starring Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd released the final decade most sports fans last saw all of their favorite team’s televised games on free antenna channels.

Of course, those free games were limited to one or two a week. But free nonetheless. Pay TV was still fledgling, but by the 1990s’ onset of the regional sports network (RSN) model, fans willing to pay could watch most games on their favorite team’s schedule.

Unfortunately, even viewers unwilling to pay were often forced to through cable package bundling. That led to an inflated valuing of the RSN model itself — not to mention escalating sports salaries paid by teams to star players built largely off revenue from those cable packages.

Fast forward three decades, and it’s all imploding, with TV viewers deserting cable in favor of streaming and leaving teams and RSN operators scrambling to find a future. One option increasingly eyed by teams — especially NHL squads such as the Kraken in search of broader audiences — is what’s been likened to a “Back to the Future” approach of showing games on free channels as in the 1980s and prior.

The difference now being, instead of one or two weekly games, it would be the majority freely accessed. Sounds great, right? Well, there are obstacles. But right now, the current RSN model is unsustainable and as sports fans you should be very concerned.

Here in Seattle, we’re seeing the not-so-pretty ramifications of RSN model demise on two team fronts with ROOT Sports Northwest.

With the Kraken, who are paid an annual TV rights fee by ROOT Sports said to be within the standard $15 million-$30 million for NHL teams, they haven’t grown their product as well as they’d like. We’ve mentioned previously that Kraken ticket demand has lagged on online resale exchanges, reflecting a lack of demand that goes beyond a poorly performing team.

A great way for any new team to increase interest is through television. But with fewer people willing to pay for packages that include ROOT Sports, the “eyeballs” on Kraken games haven’t been there.

Despite last spring’s strong playoff run, this season’s first eight Kraken games on ROOT Sports in October averaged just 13,781 viewers and a 0.7 rating. Last season, the Kraken in October averaged 15,103 viewers and the same 0.7 rating on ROOT Sports over nine games.

So, viewership remained flat from year to year. Given it wasn’t great to begin with, this is not the exposure a third-year franchise needs.

Sure, an optimist might see flat viewership as a bonus given how Comcast-owned Xfinity pulled a fast one on fans the eve of the season opener by moving ROOT Sports to its highest cost tier. That forced fans to pay $18.50 more per month.

Still, die-hard sports fans will usually pay whatever it takes. Given Kraken games were already being viewed mostly by hockey die-hards, it isn’t too surprising the numbers held despite the higher cost.

But it’s more “casual” or “new” hockey fans the Kraken desperately need. And Xfinity’s hike hasn’t helped.

The Kraken broadcast is among the league’s finest — headlined by John Forslund, Ed Olczyk and JT Brown, with analysis by Alison Lukan and Nick Olczyk and reporting by Piper Shaw. But all that talent hasn’t translated to viewers.


So, why not make the broadcasts free? Put the same crew entirely under the team’s umbrella, partner with a local antenna channel or two and show games there? NHL teams are more apt to explore this route since they already make far less in local rights fees than MLB or NBA counterparts.

Sure, they likely won’t get the same rights money as previously from subscription-based RSN services. At least not right away. Instead, the money made and split with channel operators would come from advertising sold on free broadcasts.

But new viewers? Wow, those would be there.

Just ask the Vegas Golden Knights, who went to free broadcasts this season after their AT&T Sportsnet RSN partner folded up shop. Vegas partnered with Scripps Sports to show 69 Golden Knights games for free throughout a multistate territory.

Through five October games, they’d already exceeded all national cable TV numbers for their games last season on ESPN and TNT by 135% — averaging a whopping 8.5 rating in the Las Vegas market.


“The viewership and engagement we are seeing for the Golden Knights this year have grown incredibly and should dispel any doubts about the power of an over-the-air broadcast channel to serve sports fans,” Scripps Sports president Brian Lawlor said last month in a release. “The Golden Knights wanted to reach more of their fans, and they clearly are.”

And reaching new fans generates money beyond TV — through sales of future tickets, merchandise, increased sponsorships and more. So, what’s stopping the Kraken?

Well, they have two more seasons on their ROOT Sports deal after this one. The NBA Portland Trail Blazers have one more.

What nobody will say openly, but plenty within the sports industry are wondering, is whether those deals survive.

The other Seattle-based team directly impacted by the RSN model meltdown is, of course, the Mariners, majority owners of ROOT Sports with AT&T Sportsnet as minority partners.

When Xfinity hiked prices, both the Mariners and Kraken howled equally. As badly as the Kraken worried about lost viewer potential, the Mariners were the ones paying millions of dollars in rights fees to generate and grow NHL viewership.

With growth potential now stunted, you’d have to think the Mariners are looking for a way out of those Kraken and Blazers deals.

When the Mariners were sold to a group fronted by John Stanton in 2016, the value of ROOT Sports was pegged at about $175 million for purposes of the sale. Various industry valuation standards later estimated it closer to $300 million or $400 million.


And the Mariners, armed with that asset, increased spending on player payroll accordingly. Not as much as many fans wanted, but to a level they were comfortable with.

Now, though, with the RSN model bleeding subscribers and value nationwide, that comfort is gone. You expected the Mariners to commit massive long-term funds to free agent Shohei Ohtani? Sorry. The smart money ruled that out last February when RSN bankruptcies and closures began.

The Mariners right now have to worry about what happens if their nine-figure-valued ROOT Sports asset and accompanying revenue goes the way of Blackberry phones and Kodak film.

As for the Kraken, they need more fans. Their next step, beyond the obvious of winning more games, should be to go “Back to the Future” and get as far away from the RSN model mushroom cloud as quickly as possible.


Geoff Baker: gbaker@seattletimes.com; on Twitter: @GeoffBakerTimes. Geoff Baker covers hockey and is a sports enterprise and investigative reporter for The Seattle Times.
 
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