By next year, if you want to watch something other than a Rogers-owned-and-operated team in Toronto, you have two ...
Rogers Communications Inc.'s landmark deal to acquire rival telecom BCE Inc.'s share of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment ...
If its $4.7-billion deal to snap up Bell Canada’s 37.5 per cent stake in MLSE is completed, Rogers will control 75 per cent ...
For over a decade, all of Toronto’s sport teams were owned by two telecommunications companies: Bell and Rogers. But that has ...
MLSE owns the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Toronto Raptors, the Toronto Argonauts, Toronto FC and the American Hockey League’s Toronto Marlies. Rogers already owns the Toronto Blue Jays ...
In buying out Bell's ownership share of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, Rogers Communication is going all-in.
plus Raptors 905 and the Toronto Marlies, as well as venues like Scotiabank Arena, for more than a decade. Larry Tanenbaum owns 20% of MLSE after recently selling 5% to The Ontario Municipal ...
After its $4.7 billion buyout of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment from Bell, Rogers now controls all men's pro sports in ...
The Canadian telecommunications giant will become the controlling owner of the multi-team corporation with a 75% stake.
In addition to Rogers’ existing stake in MLSE, of which it currently owns 37.5 per cent, the Toronto-based telecom’s sports portfolio includes the Toronto Blue Jays, Rogers Centre and Sportsnet. It ...
For Rogers, it opens the door to "potentially bring every major Toronto sports franchise under one umbrella," especially because the MLSE ownership agreement reportedly allows the telecoms to buy ...