SEATTLE (AP) — The Seattle Kraken will move their games to an over-the-air broadcaster and have a streaming partnership with Amazon’s Prime Video beginning with the 2024-25 season, the team announced Thursday.
The Kraken will be the first NHL team to have a streaming deal with Prime Video for all non-nationally televised games and will be available to Amazon Prime members in Washington, Oregon and Alaska.
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has a minority stake in the ownership group of the Kraken.
Seattle will partner with TENGA for the over-the-air component, with most of the broadcasts airing on KONG-TV in Seattle. Some of the games will be on KING, the NBC affiliate in Seattle, with games also broadcast on TENGA-owned stations in Portland, Oregon (KGW), and Spokane, Washington (KREM).
The team said TENGA is working on other over-the-air options for broadcast partners in the three states.
Sweden beats France, Britain relegated after losing to Norway at hockey worlds
Australia to open the Formula 1 season in 2025 as Bahrain and Saudi races shift for Ramadan
Speaker Johnson to meet with Trump, offers Marjorie Taylor Greene advisory role as own job teeters
Forsberg gets 10th career hat trick, sets Nashville scoring record as Predators beat Blackhawks 5
'The Apprentice,' about a young Donald Trump, premieres in Cannes
Democrats Daniels and Figures stress experience ahead of next week's congressional runoff
CJ McCollum scores 28 points as Pelicans hold off Warriors 114
Trump declines to endorse national abortion ban
What's next for Iran after death of its president in crash?
Republicans debate ahead of runoff for Alabama congressional seat
Kristin Cavallari, 37, ignores critics of her age
Paurova becomes eighth Oregon State player to enter the portal