MLB Home Run Derby 2025 Scores Big for ESPN — Despite Looming Rights Exit

Cal Raleigh may have taken home the trophy at the 2025 MLB Home Run Derby, but the real win might belong to ESPN. The network’s broadcast of the annual power-hitting spectacle delivered solid viewership gains — even as it prepares to exit its long-standing Major League Baseball media deal.

ESPN’s coverage averaged 5.73 million viewers, marking a 5% year-over-year increase. That total includes both the primary feed on ESPN and a Statcast-powered alternate stream on ESPN2. The improved numbers reflect a cleaner programming window compared to 2024, when the Derby went head-to-head with the Republican National Convention.

While ESPN may be heading into its final season of MLB coverage — unless a rights renegotiation materializes — the network leaned into innovation for this year’s show. From drone-assisted visuals mimicking PGA-style ball-tracking to a high-energy live crossover from Pat McAfee, ESPN treated the Derby like a marquee event rather than a lame-duck property.

“Got a chance to do something new with a different sport,” McAfee posted after co-hosting the show, underlining the network’s cross-sport, cross-platform ambitions.

Still, the broadcast didn’t escape criticism. ESPN’s split-screen format, which simultaneously showed batter contact and landing zones, frustrated some viewers who missed the flight of the ball — often the most exhilarating part of a home run derby swing.

Breakdown of Viewership:

  • Main ESPN broadcast: 5.23 million viewers
  • ESPN2 Statcast feed: 499,000 viewers

Meanwhile, coverage of the MLB Draft’s opening day drew 776,000 viewers across ESPN and MLB Network — slightly down from last year’s 861,000 but still outperforming 2023’s numbers.


The Value of Sports Spectacle in a Fragmented Media Landscape

ESPN’s performance with the Home Run Derby highlights a fundamental truth: Live sports events — especially visually thrilling ones — remain some of the last appointment-viewing content in media. Even in the face of cord-cutting, media fragmentation, and rising rights fees, when done right, these spectacles still deliver.

Here’s what stands out:

  • Multicast strategy is working: Offering traditional and data-rich presentations brings in new demographics — particularly younger, analytics-savvy fans.
  • Star power matters: McAfee’s crossover from football to baseball brought social media buzz and likely drove incremental reach.
  • Production innovation is now table stakes: Drone cams, mic’d-up segments, and alt-feeds are no longer “nice to have” — they’re must-haves in the battle for attention.

Join the 365247 Community

IMAGE: Imagn Images

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top