The Toronto Maple Leafs are Canada’s team. Or at least the CBC’s.
That much has been made abundantly clear this season. Every Saturday night, if the Leafs are playing, they’re on CBC (except when CBC was broadcasting the Olympics). With a market that encompasses a third of Canada’s population, it makes sense that this team would get more attention, but the one-sidedness has been particularly striking.
Habs fans too cheap to pay for Sportsnet have been complaining the past couple of seasons that Canadiens games on Hockey Night in Canada have been punted to Sportsnet rather than broadcast on free TV channels CBC or City. Sportsnet has admitted this was done mainly to drive subscriptions to Sportsnet.
And as the NHL playoffs begin tonight, and CBC devoting its entire primetime schedule to hockey, it seems they’re doing it again, this time to the Winnipeg Jets.
The Jets and Leafs are the only two Canadian teams to make the playoffs, and even though their games both start at 7pm ET (6pm in Winnipeg, but in the playoffs you need to be either an early game or a late game), not a single one of the up to 14 games involving the two teams overlap — they’re all scheduled on different nights.
But there won’t be any Jets games on CBC, at least not until Game 5 and likely not until next round at the earliest. Instead, all Leafs games will be broadcast on CBC but all Jets games are on Sportsnet. And while the Jets are on Sportsnet, CBC viewers will get to watch the all-American Philadelphia-Pittsburgh series instead. Even those in Winnipeg.
I asked Sportsnet about the decision, and this was the response I got:
As you can imagine, there are numerous factors taken into consideration when coordinating the broadcast schedule for the Stanley Cup Playoffs. In this case, with two series featuring Canadian teams in the first round, the decision was made that Sportsnet and CBC would each have the opportunity to broadcast one of those two series. Winnipeg is a key priority for Sportsnet and Sportsnet is thrilled to be broadcasting the entire Jets series to Canadians from coast-to-coast.
In other words, the Jets are on Sportsnet because Sportsnet wanted a Canadian series. Which sounds reasonable (similar to how CBC and TSN split playoff series before the Sportsnet/NHL deal) until you remember that Sportsnet controls the CBC broadcast as well.
So why keep the Jets off CBC during a time when lots of casual fans might tune in, and Sportsnet is looking to maximize ratings?
Because of money. Of the 82 regular-season Jets games, 60 are on TSN3. Casual Jets fans in Manitoba don’t have much incentive to subscribe to Sportsnet if they’re not otherwise interested in sports. So Sportsnet is hoping to drive subscriptions from those potential fans, even if it means many fans just won’t watch the games and they’ll lose potential ad revenue.
But, of course, that logic doesn’t apply to the Leafs. The Leafs are so popular that ad revenue is more important than subscription revenue. So the Leafs get CBC.
On one hand, Manitoba Jets fans should just subscribe to Sportsnet (it’s available over-the-top for $25 a month). On the other hand, this definitely does feel like a middle finger to a market that has had to suffer for a long time, and hasn’t seen a playoff game win in more than 20 years.
TVA Sports, by the way, is also not giving priority to the Jets. Of the first four matches, three will be broadcast on TVA Sports 2 because of conflicts with Flyers-Penguins or Capitals-Blue Jackets.
The NHL playoffs begin Wednesday with the Jets and Wild playing at 7pm on Sportsnet. The Leafs and Bruins play Game 1 on Thursday at 7pm on CBC. For channel assignments for these and other series, see sportsnet.ca/schedule.
Its 2018 and there are a MILLION other things to do with your eyes and ears. No audience is guaranteed.
Rogers overpaid for their TV deal with the NHL and now they expect to see market share growth by nickle & diming the viewers? Good luck with that… At a time when record amounts of people are “cord cutting” and traditional media markets are having a tough time attracting younger viewers, this kind of money grubbing is systematically going to drive more people away from NHL broadcasts and straight toward other types of free/interactive media instead.
Rogers greed has blinded them to this reality.
Worse yet, the NHL is going to end up facing the problem many sports face: What happens when the networks get tired of paying big money and losing their asses on your product?
Formula 1 is a good example, Greedy Bernie Ecclestone spent the last decade or more negotiating exclusive deals with channels that are often pay per view or “over the top” services, requiring fans to pay the price just to watch. New owners took over F1 and their first wise move has been to try to unwind deals that make it hard to get the product.
If fans cannot easily watch your sport, they learn to do something else with their time. Rogers may be losing their ass right now on hockey, but it’s the NHL that loses fan base in the long run.
Well, I bailed out of the Penguins game after the first period as it was pretty obvious this series is done. I cannot imagine the ratings for this series are not going to be in the tank.
I think it is wrong not to play canadaian teams on cbc in the playoffs no one wants to watch 2 American teams play and I will never pay u to watch a game I don’t care about the leafs I live in mb so I guess I’ll watch the oilers if the Canadian teams get eliminated I don’t watch cbc sucks they should play only Canadian teams at playoffs so I say screw u sportsnet