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T-Mobile extends free MLB.TV deal for subscribers through 2028

T-Mobile and Major League Baseball (MLB) are renewing their partnership. In addition to sponsoring various pro-baseball events, the carrier announced today that its subscribers would continue receiving free MLB.TV subscriptions through 2028.

MLB and T-Mobile have offered the deal for the past eight years as part of its T-Mobile Tuesdays promotion, which gives subscribers access to weekly discounts and freebies. MLB.TV lets you stream home and away broadcast feeds around the league โ€” live or on-demand. (However, itโ€™s subject to dreaded regional blackouts, so you shouldnโ€™t count on it to watch teams nearby.) In addition, for the first time this season, the service lets you stream minor-league games for your favorite major-league teamโ€™s affiliates in the MLB app.

Speaking of the minor leagues, the two corporations are partnering on an automated ball-strike (ABS) system, which lets Minor League Baseball (MiLB) players and officials โ€œreview, challenge and analyze calls.โ€ This season, T-Mobile will power the system with a โ€œ5G Private Mobile Networkโ€ during some minor-league games. You may recall that MLB has been experimenting with robot umps in the independent Atlantic League since 2019. Last year, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said the league aims to introduce the system to the big leagues by 2024. From a labor perspective, itโ€™s hard not to see this as a first step toward automating umpiresโ€™ jobs, but at least fans can direct their vitriol over (perceived) bad calls to a machine instead of a human.ย 

T-Mobile says its baseball partnership will also include a little-league sponsorship, part of which consists of the carrier donating millions of dollars toward equipment and grants for aspiring young sluggers. Itโ€™s also continuing to sponsor the All-Star Week Home Run Derby and batting practice broadcast. Finally, T-Mobile plans to expand its 5G coverage in baseball stadiums across North America, envisioning eventual โ€œimmersive 5G-connected experiences for fansโ€ and better in-stadium speeds and reception for its subscribers.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/t-mobile-extends-free-mlbtv-deal-for-subscribers-through-2028-182807920.html?src=rss

MLB.TV / T-Mobile

A person's hands holding a smartphone (with a glowing magenta outline) displaying a Major League Baseball game stream on its screen. In the background, a sunny beach.

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Five years ago I wrote about giving up on baseball โ€” after a lifetime of fandom. Should the new pitch clock bring me back? Iโ€™m not sure it will. A speedier game โ€” which is to say, a return to the pace of the past โ€” will certainly be an improvement, but it wonโ€™t change the fact that running has largely disappeared from baseball, as pitchers go for strikeouts and batters are happy to oblige them if they can just increase their chances of hitting dingers. Itโ€™s a very static game now, and that seems unlikely to change.ย 

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