The Future of Live Sports on Netflix: Lessons Learned From Problems With the Tyson-Paul Event

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Media-streaming pioneer Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) tried its hand at live sports coverage last Friday. The company learned some hard lessons from an event pitting boxing legend Mike Tyson against YouTuber and rising ring warrior Jake Paul. After a night plagued by video buffering and the occasional outage, this event raised questions about Netflix's upcoming live sports coverage.

Chart showing Netflix network outages on the evening of Friday, Nov. 15, 2024.
Chart source: Downdetector.com.

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When Netflix met live sports streaming

Streaming high-definition and 4K video on a massive scale turns out to be difficult.

You can tell when this live event took place by looking at networking problem monitors such as Downdetector.com. Thousands of Netflix viewers ran into slow connections; pixelated, low-quality video; or "try again later" errors during the warm-up fights. Bigger names hit the ring around 10 p.m. ET, and Netflix wasn't ready for the resulting influx of both casual and lifelong boxing fans.

I know nothing about boxing, but I was trying to watch for research purposes. I mean, maybe there would be something to write about. Using advanced network tools, I tried my luck with Netflix services around the world. The connection trouble persisted almost everywhere, including in Western Europe, where the prize fights were scheduled in the middle of the night.

Anecdotally speaking, the situation improved as the main event drew closer. My Roku TV saw fewer disconnections and "buffering" messages after the initial spike. Not zero, mind you, but fewer -- Netflix's network engineers were clearly doing something helpful behind the scenes. And the Tyson versus Paul battle itself was quite watchable from a video performance point of view. Again, I can't say much about the boxing action.

Can Netflix handle these events?

At first blush, this wasn't a great viewing experience. Is Netflix really ready to enter the world of live sports coverage?

The company started promoting this Tyson fight eight months ago. Originally scheduled for July, the bout was moved back to November for medical reasons, and Netflix used that extra time to boost the marketing message. The event involved a true titan of boxing facing off against a master of media exposure who also happens to have a pretty serious boxing career these days. Ten wins (including seven knockouts) and one loss before the Tyson fight looks good to me, though I can't judge the quality of his opposition.

Would the fresh challenger take down a boxing colossus more than twice his age, or was he due for an Iron Mike knockout? Tune in around midnight to find out!