Is Jeff Passan’s re-signing a new deal a signal of ESPN’s long-term MLB plans?

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Is Jeff Passan’s re-signing a new deal a signal of ESPN’s long-term MLB plans?

Jeff Passan (Image credits: Getty Images)

At a time when baseball broadcast footprint has narrowed, there’s one thing ESPN has made clear: it's not walking away from Major League Baseball. The network announced a multi-year contract extension with senior MLB insider Jeff Passan, a move that puts him even more centrally in the large scope of ESPN's baseball coverage.

The agreement involves the debut of a new baseball podcast in collaboration with Omaha Productions, founded by NFL Hall of Fame quarterback Peyton Manning.

Jeff Passan's contract details and the new podcast

Rather than simply retaining Passan as a reporter, ESPN seems to be building around Passan as a franchise voice. The new podcast will offer a separate space for in-depth reporting, interviews, and analysis, going beyond his appearances on studio shows and digital platforms that he regularly makes.

Burke Magnus, ESPN President, Content, said, “Jeff is one of the industry’s leading journalists and most-respected voices in baseball.

” He added, “We’re delighted that Jeff will expand his presence at ESPN with his own podcast and continue to lead our breaking news coverage of MLB.”

Passan, who joined ESPN in 2019 after more than a decade at Yahoo Sports, has grown to be one of baseball's most recognizable news-breakers.

Over the last seven years, he has steered conversations about free agency, labor bargaining, and league governance while still having a visible presence on prominent programs. “I came to ESPN seven years ago hoping to spend the rest of my career telling stories to the biggest and most passionate audience in the sports world,” said Passan.

“I’m extraordinarily lucky to work with a team of great reporters, editors, producers, hosts, and analysts.

And I can’t wait to deliver an entirely new kind of baseball show for those who love the best game in the world.”

The deal indicates changing the MLB blueprint at ESPN

The time of this extension is important as ESPN and Major League Baseball reshaped their national rights agreement after 2025, where the network would have a smaller live-game inventory. While it no longer has some marquee national broadcasts, ESPN has turned to a streaming-forward model and digital-first strategy.

By expanding Passan’s role, the company is making a statement that editorial authority and access to the inner workings of a team will continue to be central to its baseball coverage, even if the number of televised games has changed.Passan is also a recognized journalist in the industry for his work, including several national writing awards, and has not been afraid to criticize league policies when appropriate. The new podcast venture is another way to expand that role, one that would place ESPN in line with the growing demand for personality-driven, on-demand sports content. In an ever-more-fragmented sports media landscape, this investment by ESPN implies loss of distribution models without loss of authoritative voices to anchor coverage.

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