KEY POINTS
  • The National Football League said its "Sunday Ticket" package of out-of-market games would land on Google's YouTube.
  • The deal is valued at roughly $2 billion annually over the course of seven years. DirecTV had been paying $1.5 billion a year for the rights, losing about $500 million annually.
  • It isn't clear yet what "Sunday Ticket" will cost consumers, who will be able to subscribe without having a YouTube TV subscription.

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The National Football League announced Thursday its "Sunday Ticket" subscription package would go to Google's YouTube TV starting next season, marking the league's second media rights deal with a streaming service.

YouTube will pay roughly $2 billion a year for the residential rights of the "Sunday Ticket" package, according to people familiar with the matter. The deal runs for seven years.

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