If you’re at the table, would you take the deal… or walk away?
That’s the question we’re asking you in the second blog of our Deal or No Deal series, where we break down headline-making transactions, unpack the stakes, and then hand the final call to you.
Let’s begin.
The Deal
As Winter Olympics coverage pulled millions into the world of sport earlier this year, another kind of competition was playing out behind the scenes. This one in private equity.
GTCR, the Chicago-based private equity firm, reportedly acquired youth sports streaming service LiveBarn. While the exact terms remain private, the price tag does not. The deal is valued at approximately $400 million.
The Details
LiveBarn, founded in 2015, provides live and on-demand streaming for youth and amateur sports. Think early-morning hockey tournaments, weekend travel baseball, and figure skating competitions all broadcast to grandparents, traveling parents, and die-hard fans who can’t be event-side.
The company partners with more than 1,900 facilities and operates in 49 U.S. States and 10 Canadian provinces. While it covers multiple sports, hockey is its heartbeat (the name being a giveaway).
If you’ve ever sat in a freezing rink at 6:00 am like some of our Gibraltar youth-hockey parents, you understand the value proposition.
LiveBarn reportedly explored a sale on and off for months before landing with GTCR this year. Which begs the question, why now?
The Opportunity
Youth sports are a machine in the market. The Aspen Institute reports that parents spend an estimated $40 billion annually on youth athletics, with an uptick in participation during and after the pandemic. The youth sports ecosystem has evolved into something far more structured including things like travel teams, elite leagues, and specialized training.
Streaming fits seamlessly into that world. Recurring subscription revenue, a highly engaged audience, a fragmented market with consolidation potential, and technology that scales? Check, check, and check.
And the $400 million investment suggests strong confidence that this growth story is far from over.
The Risk
However, you know the old saying about great rewards and risks.
Participation in youth sports could cool if economic conditions tighten. Rising costs already price some families out of competitive program and could cause more to reconsider the investment. If participation dips, ancillary spending, including streaming subscriptions, could follow.
Then there’s competition. Subscription-based media is facing constant pressure from every direction. Free and low-cost platforms like YouTube and TikTok continue to chip away at paid media models. If “good enough” content replaces premium, margins compress.
Timing matters, too. Buying into momentum often means paying a premium. If growth normalizes, valuations can, too.
In other words: this could be a breakout play… or a barn burner of a different kind.
The Final Question
GTCR is betting that youth sports isn’t a moment, it’s a long-term movement. Families will keep investing and streaming will remain embedded in the experience.
But conviction looks different when it’s your capital on the table. So, we’ll ask you:
With $400 million on the line, would you say deal or no deal?
