OneSoccer
OneSoccer is a Canadian soccer-oriented sports channel and subscription streaming service. The service was first established in 2019 as part of a 10-year agreement between Canadian Soccer Business—a company that represents the commercial rights of the Canadian Soccer Association (CSA) and Canadian Premier League (CPL)—and Mediapro. Initially distributed as a streaming service only, the network began to pursue linear television distribution as a discretionary specialty channel in September 2021. The network serves as the main Canadian broadcaster of the CPL and Canada's men's and women's national teams, as well as CONCACAF competitions such as the CONCACAF Gold Cup and Champions Cup. In 2024, amid contractual disputes between Canadian Soccer Business and Mediapro, the organization reached a settlement to unwind its agreement with Mediapro, who divested OneSoccer to a company controlled by a chairman of the CPL. HistoryOn March 28, 2019, the Canadian Premier League and the Canadian Soccer Association announced the creation of Canadian Soccer Business (CSB), an organization "representing commercial assets and inventory for marquee soccer properties in Canada", including "all corporate partnerships and broadcast rights related to Canada Soccer's core assets including its national teams, along with all rights associated with the CPL".[1] On February 21, 2019, it announced a 10-year agreement with Mediapro, under which it holds all media rights associated with Canada Soccer, including rights to the Canadian Premier League, the Canadian Championship, and rights to national team matches.[2] In April, Mediapro announced that its rights would be housed in a new subscription service known as OneSoccer,[3][4] which launched as an online-only live and on-demand subscription service through its website on April 26, 2019, with its first live match airing the next day.[5] In August 2019, OneSoccer acquired rights to the 2019–20 CONCACAF Nations League season.[6] In January 2020, OneSoccer acquired exclusive Canadian rights to various CONCACAF championships through 2023, including the CONCACAF Gold Cup.[7][8] In September 2021, Mediapro Canada announced OneSoccer's first third-party launch of the service via FuboTV's streaming package in Canada.[9] Later that month, Mediapro Canada announced that it had reached its first deal for carriage of OneSoccer as a linear television channel, with Telus TV.[10] On August 5, 2022, OneSoccer filed a complaint with the CRTC against Rogers Communications, alleging that Rogers refused to carry OneSoccer in order to protect its own Sportsnet service from competition.[11] On March 23, 2023, the CRTC found that Rogers had indeed given undue preference to Sportsnet, as well as other independent broadcasters BeIN Sports and EuroWorld Sport.[12][13] In January 2024, five years into the ten-year agreement, CSB withdrew its contract from Mediapro alleging violations of contractual obligations, including missed rights payments for 2023, and insufficient efforts to sublicense linear television rights to other broadcasters to widen availability.[14] Mediapro contrarily accused CSB of not meeting targets for expansion of the CPL and the provision of matches.[15] The dispute did not interrupt OneSoccer's programming; in June, the legal dispute was settled out of court. As a result of the settlement, Mediapro divested OneSoccer to CPL and CSB chairman Scott Mitchell via his company Timeless Inc., and committed to continue producing Canadian national team and CPL matches through the end of the year.[15][16] Broadcasting rightsClubs
National teams
StaffAs of 2023,[update] OneSoccer's commentary and analysis team features Andi Petrillo, Kristian Jack, Gareth Wheeler, Oliver Platt, Jordan Wilson, Adam Jenkins, Armen Bedakian, Josh Deming and Alexandre Gangué-Ruzic.[18][19][third-party source needed] References
See also
External links
|