Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Android Central
Android Central
Technology
Jay Bonggolto

YouTube TV's ESPN Unlimited win has one major catch for baseball fans

YouTube TV and Disney Plus apps.

What you need to know

  • YouTube TV is keeping ESPN after its dispute with Disney, but the deal specifically excludes the MLB.TV package.
  • Starting in 2026, MLB.TV will be integrated into the ESPN app, not offered through third-party distributors like YouTube TV.
  • MLB’s new rights setup gives ESPN full control over out-of-market streaming, letting the league centralize pricing, distribution, and bundling.

Enjoy our content? Make sure to set Android Central as a preferred source in Google Search, and find out why you should so that you can stay up-to-date on the latest news, reviews, features, and more.

YouTube TV subscribers just wrapped up a two-week standoff with Disney that ended with what looked like a massive win: free access to ESPN Unlimited by the end of 2026. But baseball fans celebrating the deal could end up disappointed.

Puck's John Ourand reports that MLB.TV, a key sports add-on for cord-cutters, will not be included in the new bundle. It appears that while YouTube TV and Disney were ironing out their deal, Major League Baseball made a separate plan to move MLB.TV into the ESPN app starting in 2026.

That move lets MLB consolidate its out-of-market games under ESPN’s direct-to-consumer umbrella, rather than relying on third-party distributors like YouTube TV. So, even though YouTube TV now carries more ESPN content, it doesn’t gain access to MLB.TV.

This is a real setback for people who use YouTube TV to watch out-of-market baseball. MLB.TV has been an important part of sports streaming, and many subscribers thought that adding more ESPN channels to YouTube TV would also bring MLB’s package.

A deliberate power play?

Instead, YouTube TV gets the broader ESPN catalog, but the one piece baseball fans wanted most is now being tucked away behind ESPN’s own app. The technical reason is pretty simple: MLB’s new rights structure gives ESPN the keys to out-of-market streaming, letting the league manage distribution, pricing, and bundling more directly.

The bigger picture is that sports streaming is getting even more fragmented. A single subscription rarely covers everything anymore, and even highly publicized carriage deals come with fine print that can reshape what you actually get.

The next step is watching how MLB prices the new setup inside the ESPN app and whether it stays a standalone add-on or becomes part of a larger bundle.

Meanwhile, it remains to be seen whether YouTube TV pursues a separate agreement for MLB.TV or leave the baseball die-hards to subscribe elsewhere. Either way, subscribers looking for complete MLB coverage will soon need more than just YouTube TV, no matter how many ESPN channels the service adds.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.