ESPN's new streaming service is aimed at a very specific kind of sports fan

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Last week, ESPN launched its much-anticipated over-the-top (OTT) subscription service, ESPN Plus. It costs $4.99 per month and does not have a separate mobile app: subscribers access ESPN Plus through the newly redesigned main ESPN app.

To put it bluntly: Most typical sports fans will not be particularly thrilled about ESPN Plus. It is not the product the average person hopes for when they hear that ESPN is finally going “over the top” and offering something for cord-cutters, for one glaring reason: it is not a way to watch ESPN the television channel without cable.

In fact, it’s the opposite. ESPN Plus only houses live games that are not airing on ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, Longhorn Network, or SEC Network. If you want live games from the four major sports, ESPN Plus is a disappointment. It has no NFL or NBA; it gives you one live MLB game per day (not of your choosing) and one live NHL game per day (not of your choosing).

Of course, ESPN can’t yet give people the thing everyone wants: everything that airs on ESPN the network, without cable, a la HBO Go. Its long-entrenched contracts with leagues and networks won’t allow it.

Two screens from the new ESPN+ section of the ESPN mobile app
Two screens from the new ESPN+ section of the ESPN mobile app

And yet there is a lot to love about ESPN Plus, for very specific groups of people: big fans of college sports like baseball, softball, tennis, lacrosse, volleyball, wrestling, swimming and diving, and track and field—but not from Power Five conferences (no ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12, or SEC); big MLS fans (more than 250 live games, huge for an out-of-market MLS fan); big boxing fans (Top Rank fights only); rugby fans (hundreds of international matches and all 18 regular season matches of the inaugural season of Major League Rugby); golf fans (coverage of 20 PGA Tour events like the Players Championship and WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, but no Majors, and mostly just Rounds 1 and 2); and devotees of ESPN’s award-winning “30 For 30” documentary series (ESPN Plus has the entire “30 For 30” library).

To be sure, there has been some backlash to the fact that some of the content on ESPN Plus has been removed from ESPN3, the streaming “channel” that any ESPN cable subscribers can access with their cable credentials. In other words, ESPN is taking away some content its cable subscribers already got for free and asking them to pay to get it on ESPN Plus.