NEW YORK — The ink has barely dried on the NFL’s massive equity deal with ESPN, but the league isn’t done dealing yet. While the “Worldwide Leader” swallowed up NFL Network and RedZone earlier this month, the NFL shrewdly held back four international games from the package—and YouTube is already lining up at the scrimmage line to snap them up.
The Battle for the “Leftover” Four
In the wake of the NFL-ESPN media acquisition, where the league exchanged its media assets for a 10% stake in the Disney-owned giant, a specific clutch of inventory remains unsold: four international broadcasts previously aired by NFL Network. These games are now free agents, and YouTube is making it known they have the cap space to sign them.
YouTube, which currently holds the exclusive rights to the Sunday Ticket package (up for renewal in 2029), sees these standalone games as the perfect opportunity to deepen its bench. The platform’s aggressive posture isn’t just about maintaining status quo; it’s about expansion.
Christian Oestlein, YouTube’s V.P. of subscription products, didn’t mince words regarding their intentions. “We really value our partnership with the NFL,” Oestlein told Bloomberg’s Lucas Shaw. “Everything we’ve done with them so far has been really successful. And so we’re very excited about the idea that we could be doing more with them.”
Flashback: The Brazil Experiment
YouTube has already dipped its toes into exclusive live game broadcasts. In Week 1 of the 2025 season, the platform streamed the historic Friday night clash between the Kansas City Chiefs and Los Angeles Chargers live from São Paulo, Brazil.
While the game was available globally for no extra fee, industry insiders noted that the viewership numbers underperformed relative to initial expectations. However, the technical delivery was stable, and the “free to watch” model placated fans who are increasingly weary of paywalls. For YouTube, acquiring these four new available games would be a chance to refine that strategy and prove they can drive massive live audiences outside of the Sunday Ticket ecosystem.
The “Fracture” Strategy: A Shield Against Rivals
The NFL’s decision to peel off these games rather than bundling them all with ESPN highlights a newer, more ruthless strategy: market fracturing.
According to recent comments from NFL executive V.P. of media distribution Hans Schroeder, the league is actively looking to pepper its games across a wider variety of platforms. The days of exclusive, monolithic packages are fading. Instead, the NFL wants a boat in every port—Amazon, Netflix, YouTube, ESPN, and broadcast networks.
This approach does two things:
- Maximizes Revenue: Bidding wars for smaller packages drive up the price per game.
- Eliminates Competition: By partnering with every major media player, the NFL effectively blocks any potential rival league from finding a broadcast home.
If the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF) ever decided to launch a competitor to the NFL—similar to LIV Golf—they would find the broadcast cupboard bare. With every major streamer and network already financially bedfellows with 345 Park Avenue, a rival league would have zero “high-profile” platforms left to air their games. It also neutralizes the NFLPA’s “nuclear option” during a work stoppage; players trying to stage their own games would find no network willing to air them for fear of alienating the NFL.
“We really value our partnership with the NFL… We’re very excited about the idea that we could be doing more with them.” — Christian Oestlein, YouTube V.P. of Subscription Products
What’s Next: The Bidding War
Expect a swift auction for these four games. YouTube is the frontrunner given their public interest and deep pockets, but don’t count out Amazon or even Netflix, who have both shown increased appetite for live sports inventory in 2026. For the fans, this likely means checking yet another app to watch their team play, but for the NFL, it means total media dominance.

