Here’s a quick update on Don Garber, MLS, and the MLS-Apple deal based on recent reporting.
- The MLS-Apple streaming deal, announced in 2022 and extended through the 2032 season, remains a central pillar of MLS’s media strategy under Garber’s leadership. In late 2024 and 2025, Garber continued to defend the deal’s long-term value, noting that it aims to maximize global reach, data insights, and revenue-sharing opportunities for MLS [cite ].
- Garber has repeatedly highlighted the deal’s role in global expansion, including international viewership and cross-market marketing initiatives, even as analysts note ongoing work to optimize subscriber uptake and engagement on Apple TV’s platform [cite ][cite ].
- In 2025–2026 coverage, Garber acknowledged that granular engagement data from Apple TV has influenced roster planning and player evaluation for MLS teams, illustrating how the partnership informs on-field decisions beyond traditional rights value [cite ].
- Critics have pointed to gaps in local-market performance or subscriber counts, but Garber argues the model is forward-looking, with ongoing investments in marketing, international programming, and technology to broaden MLS Season Pass reach [cite ][cite ].
Key context and takeaways:
- The Apple deal is positioned as a “joint business venture” rather than a traditional rights agreement, with emphasis on revenue, data, and international distribution [cite ][cite ].
- Messi’s presence in MLS helped boost early exposure, but Garber stresses the broader strategic benefits of Apple as a partner for global reach and data-driven growth [cite ][cite ].
- The deal’s success is framed around long-term growth metrics (subscriber growth, international audience, data insights) rather than short-term broadcast-only gains [cite ][cite ].
If you’d like, I can pull more precise quotes from Garber and summarize the latest publicly reported figures (e.g., subscriber counts, revenue share expectations) and provide links to the exact passages.