Venu Sports Launch in Peril After Fubo Wins Injunction

In a ruling poised to delay the release of Venu Sports to 2025 or beyond, U.S. District Judge Margaret M. Garnett on Friday granted FuboTV’s motion for a preliminary injunction to bar Walt Disney, ESPN, Fox, Warner Brothers Discovery and Hulu from moving forward with their sports-centric streaming platform.

The defendants will appeal Garnett’s ruling to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, the Venu consortium confirmed in an email. The ruling also doesn’t end the case at the trial court level. Fubo sued in April and the litigation in the Southern District of New York could remain in court for many months, if not years. Fubo’s stock jumped 20% on the news and closed Friday up nearly 17% at $1.53 per share.

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Venu Sports was expected to be released by this fall and cost $42.99 per month. It would be a “skinny” bundle of ESPN, Fox Sports, the SEC Network and other premium sports channels plus some mainstream channels like ABC, Fox and TNT that carry sports. While Venu Sports would offer a wide selection, it wouldn’t carry NFL games that air on CBS, NBC, Amazon Prime or Netflix and wouldn’t offer games carried by regional sports networks.

The ruling came as good news to others in the industry, including DirecTV, which supported Fubo’s motion in court. “We are pleased with the court decision and believe that it appropriately recognizes the potential harms of allowing major programmers to license their content to an affiliated distributor on more favorable terms than they license their content to third parties,” DirecTV spokesman Jon Greer said in an email.

Venu stakeholders said their product offers consumers more choice and that they would prevail in court.  “We respectfully disagree with the court’s ruling and are appealing it. We believe that Fubo’s arguments are wrong on the facts and the law, and that Fubo has failed to prove it is legally entitled to a preliminary injunction,” and ESPN representative said in an email. “Venu Sports is a pro-competitive option that aims to enhance consumer choice by reaching a segment of viewers who currently are not served by existing subscription options.”

By granting Fubo’s motion, Garnett has dispatched Venu Sports to the penalty box for the foreseeable future. Absent a successful appeal, early resolution to the case or an out-of-court settlement, the injunction will remain in place at least until a trial, which likely won’t occur until 2025 or later. It’s possible the companies behind Venu Sports might view the wait as incompatible with their business goals and nix the platform altogether.