In March 2022,
Apple Inc. signed a seven-year deal with MLB for the broadcast for US$85 million per year, a total value of $595 million. This includes an annual $55 million rights fee as well as $30 million for Apple advertising. Apple has the right to exit the agreement after the first or second year. The deal was the first sports broadcasting contract ever acquired by Apple. Plans for the broadcast were formally announced on March 8, 2022, at Apple's Peek Performance event and later in an online press release. The first broadcast date was initially made uncertain as the deal was signed amidst the
2021–22 MLB lockout and the threat of cancelled games. After the lockout was resolved, MLB announced that the first games would air on April 8, 2022, with a doubleheader of
New York Mets–
Washington Nationals and
Houston Astros–
Los Angeles Angels as the inaugural matchups. Apple also announced that
Friday Night Baseball will be free-of-charge for its first 12 weeks of broadcasts, although this was later extended for the rest of the inaugural season. On April 7, 2022, Apple announced that
Melanie Newman,
Chris Young, Hannah Keyser, and
Brooke Fletcher would be the inaugural broadcast crew for east coast games, while
Stephen Nelson,
Hunter Pence,
Katie Nolan, and
Heidi Watney would be the broadcast crew for west coast games.
Lauren Gardner was announced as the pregame and postgame studio host, along with a rotation of MLB Network studio analysts including
Carlos Peña,
Cliff Floyd, and
Yonder Alonso. Former MLB umpire
Brian Gorman was also hired as a rules analyst. All games feature both the road team and home team's radio broadcasts as a
second audio program option. On September 23, 2022,
St. Louis Cardinals designated hitter
Albert Pujols hit the 700th
home run of his career during a
Friday Night Baseball game against the
Los Angeles Dodgers. With the announcement of the
Friday Night Baseball schedule for the first half of the
2023 MLB season, Apple announced that they had signed a deal with
DirecTV to distribute
Friday Night Baseball to their commercial subscribers, ensuring availability to venues (such as bars and restaurants) that were not readily equipped to handle streaming-only broadcasts. DirecTV had previously signed similar deals with
Amazon Prime Video for their
Thursday Night Football broadcasts, as well as with Apple for
MLS Season Pass broadcasts. Apple also announced that they would add alternative audio feeds allowing viewers in the United States and Canada to listen to local radio broadcasts from the home team or the away team instead of the regular audio feed. It was also announced that, unlike the inaugural season, an Apple TV+ subscription would now be required to watch
Friday Night Baseball. For the
2024 MLB season, Apple announced that its studio coverage would be on-site for select games. On June 5, 2024,
The Athletic reported that Apple TV+ would not enforce its exclusivity for the June 7 Dodgers-Yankees matchup scheduled to air on the platform in order to allow
YES Network, in New York, and
Spectrum SportsNet LA, in Los Angeles, to air the game locally. The other two games in the three game series will be exclusively aired by
Fox and
ESPN respectively. In August 2025, it was reported that Apple will end its contract with MLB early, and discontinue Friday Night Baseball following the 2025 season. Subsequent reports stated that Apple TV would retain its current package of telecasts through the end of the existing contract. In September 2025, Apple TV+ and
Sportsnet in Canada, reached an agreement to allow the Apple TV+ broadcast of a Blue Jays game against the Royals, which could potentially see the Blue Jays clinch a playoff spot, to be simulcast on Sportsnet. In exchange, Apple TV+ will exclusively broadcast a Blue Jays game against the Rays a week later. ==Commentators==