We’ve been through this before.
Other carriers have dropped Bally Sports North (some of them long enough ago that it was still branded Fox Sports North when it happened), prompting anger and frustration from Minnesota fans.
But when Comcast, a huge cable carrier in Minnesota and the second largest in the United States, dropped Bally Sports channels in a pricing tier dispute with parent company Diamond Sports last week, it felt different.
The channels went dark last Tuesday night, and so far subscribers have missed four Twins games (with a fifth on tap Monday night). Many avid Twins fans who stuck with cable even as prices escalated in recent years had decided the cost was worth it to avoid the hassle and potential confusion associated with searching for cheaper cord-cutting options.
My sense is this round of a multiple-year dispute is affecting many long-term Twins fans, as Patrick Reusse and I talked about on Monday’s Daily Delivery podcast.
But I wanted to get a more well-rounded perspective on how Comcast Xfinity subscribers are dealing with the loss of the Twins. A query on X (formerly Twitter) reveals some fans who are proactively seeking out creative solutions. But it also shows plenty who are cutting off their cable service and quickly putting the Twins out of sight and mind.
Here is a sampling of the more than 100 responses that have come in since the question was posted Monday morning:
Alternative TV options: A handful of people said they have started seven-day free trials of Fubo, one of two streaming services (DirecTV Stream is the other) that carries Bally Sports North, although one fan amusingly noted, “Subscribed to Fubo yesterday and the winning streak ended.”