ESPN has been off the air since October 30 for YouTube TV subscribers due to a carriage dispute with Disney.
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The YouTube-ESPN dispute is wreaking havoc for sports fans. On Friday night, ESPN aired one of the most anticipated matchups of the young college basketball season, with North Carolina and ballyhooed freshman Caleb Wilson taking on Kansas and its own first-year phenom, Darryn Peterson.
The game was a good one, but YouTube TV subscribers couldn’t access it. ESPN has been off the air on the service since October 30, and subscribers are getting more and more frustrated with the issue.
ESPN has tried to find workarounds. For the second straight week, it aired Monday Night Football simultaneously on Disney sister network ABC to give YouTube TV subscribers a way to watch the game—this week, a much-anticipated NFC showdown between the Philadelphia Eagles and Green Bay Packers. That workaround was imperfect—ABC is also unavailable on YouTube TV due to the Disney dispute, so subscribers had to have a digital antenna to catch the game from the local airwaves.
Analysts say a deal must be reached soon to avoid alienating customers.
“The window for resolution is shrinking fast,” says Julie Clark, vice president of Media & Entertainment at TransUnion. “Missing one marquee event is a nuisance, but missing multiple weekends of live sports or primetime content like Dancing with the Stars becomes a tipping point. Consumers are savvy and find workarounds like antennas and app-hopping, but long-term loyalty erodes when personalization and seamless access break down. The longer this issue lingers, the more it normalizes churn and workarounds, ultimately undermining the subscription value proposition for both parties.”
YouTube TV recently offered customers a $20 credit for their pains, likely cold comfort for sports fans who have a limited window each year to watch their teams. Clark says that right now, no one is winning the dispute, especially on the public relations side.
“Neither side walks away with a clear win as long as viewers and advertisers are in a state of limbo,” she says. “Disney may experience more risks in terms of audience reach and ad delivery during peak sports season, while YouTube TV may see increased subscriber churn due to prolonged loss of high-demand content, despite offering the $20 credit. In today’s streaming-first world, loyalty is fluid, and viewers move quickly across apps or services. The company that can re-establish consistency, communicate transparently, and restore seamless access to premium content first will see the most gain.”
5 YouTube-Disney Workarounds To Watch Sports
In the past when carriage-induced blackouts occurred, customers had little alternative but to wait until the dispute ended. That’s no longer the case, Clark says.
“What’s different now is the speed and savviness of consumer reaction. In the linear era, a blackout might have meant frustration and waiting, but today’s consumers immediately toggle to alternate services or devices,” she says. “The pressure is amplified because the streaming ecosystem is built on convenience, not contracts. When platforms fall short of that expectation, the consequences are immediate: subscribers shift, sentiment sours, and content value gets recalculated in real time.”
Here are three workarounds people are using to watch sports as they await a YouTube-Disney deal.
1. Subscribing To ESPN’s New Standalone Streaming Service
In August, ESPN launched a $30/month standalone streaming service, which offers all of its sporting events.
2. Buying A One-Day Sling Pass
For those targeting just a single event, like the UNC-Kansas game, purchasing a single-day pass allowing access to Sling programming is an alternative. However, the price can add up if you need to do it more than once or twice.
3. Signing Up For A Free Trial
DirecTV, fubo and other streaming services offer limited-time free trials of three to seven days. Signing up for them can be a way to watch sports programming—but if subscribers plan to stay with YouTube TV in the long term, they need to remember to cancel those new subs within the proper window to avoid charges.
4. Subscribing To A New Service
Of course, as Clark mentions, churn generally is high now—people don’t mind shopping around for better service since it’s digital and easy to load a new app vs. getting new cable equipment installed. A fair number will likely just leave YouTube TV for Hulu+ Live TV, Disney+ or others.
5. Getting A Digital Antenna
As mentioned, ESPN has simulcast some events on ABC, and that will likely continue. Digital antenna costs start at $15, so it can be an inexpensive, though less effective due to the limited programming, way to watch sports.