Sportradar AG has largely completed the integration of rights acquired from IMG Arena last November, a move that significantly expands the company’s official data portfolio and positions it for growth across new sports and markets. The acquisition delivered rights to some of the most famous properties in world sport, as well as a broad portfolio of lower-tier content, according to Sportradar’s Chief Commercial Officer Ed Blonk. It also takes the company into sports like golf and mixed martial arts that it had not previously covered, facilitating the expansion of innovations into new areas.
The deal, which gave Sportradar 30,000 new streams and grew the company’s portfolio of events, is expected to enhance content distribution, fuel more innovation and expand products across new sports and leagues. Sportradar now has official coverage of Roland Garros, Wimbledon and the U.S. Open tennis Grand Slams, as well as MLS soccer in the U.S. and EuroLeague Basketball. With the integration of IMG Arena’s rights into Sportradar’s tech stack largely complete, the company can now turn to generating revenue from it, which it said will be accretive to its bottom line.
Converting the acquisition into material new revenue is being driven by the co-option of the IMG Arena rights into Sportradar’s existing tech stack, which delivers more ways to monetize content. The new content will be made available to the company’s larger distribution network of clients, while also offering upsell opportunities to existing Sportradar clients. Following competitor Genius Sports’ diversification through its announced $1.2 billion acquisition of digital media and gambling company Legend, Sportradar remains the only pure-play sports technology business, enabling expansion in soccer, tennis and basketball and building on what it said is already a broad array of engagement tools.
One area Sportradar is hopeful of developing further is the integration of iGaming products into its extensive sportsbook offerings. With a principal focus on APAC, EMEA and North America, Sportradar is betting the new IMGA rights will deliver high-volume content in core revenue-driving markets. The blend of premium events with high-volume longtail content supports continuous, 24/7 coverage with key additions in soccer across Europe, North America and Australia.
At the same time that IMGA content deepens Sportradar’s coverage and its data for innovation, the company said it is also a reciprocal process, with Sportradar’s existing tech stack now being wrapped into the newly acquired properties. For example, the 4Sight Streaming fan-engagement tool and the player-tracking Virtualized Live Match Tracker are both being rolled out to the prime IMGA content. With IMGA integration complete, Sportradar is focused on growing, innovating and generating revenue as it expands its position in the sports technology landscape.
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