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New York Times to buy the Athletic in $550-million deal

People walk past the New York Times building.
The Athletic will remain a standalone product, Times Chief Executive Meredith Kopit Levien said Thursday in a statement. Above, people walk past the New York Times building.
(Mike Coppola / Getty Images)
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The New York Times Co. has agreed to buy the Athletic, a sports news website with more than 1 million subscribers.

The newspaper publisher is paying $550 million for the Athletic, which will remain a standalone product, Times Chief Executive Meredith Kopit Levien said Thursday in a statement. The deal is expected to close by the end of March.

“Strategically, we believe this acquisition will accelerate our ability to scale and deepen subscriber relationships,” she said.

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The Times has more than 8 million paid subscriptions across its digital and print products. The publisher is “now in pursuit of a goal meaningfully larger than 10 million subscriptions” and believes “the Athletic will enable us to expand our addressable market of potential subscribers,” Levien said.

While the purchase will add to revenue growth immediately, the Times expects the acquisition to reduce its operating profit for about three years.

Started six years ago, the Athletic established itself by poaching big-name sportswriters from news outlets across the country, including Ken Rosenthal in baseball and Shams Charania in basketball.

The Athletic’s co-founder, Alex Mather, told the New York Times in 2017, “We will wait every local paper out and let them continuously bleed, until we are the last ones standing. We will suck them dry of their best talent at every moment.” He later apologized.

The company raised about $50 million two years ago at a valuation of around $500 million. In November, it had about 1.2 million subscribers, who pay for access to articles about professional sports in the U.S. as well as pro soccer abroad. In June 2020, the Athletic cut 46 employees, or 8% of its staff.

The Athletic also held talks with the online news site Axios. Negotiations broke down over a variety of issues, including price and who would lead the combined company, according to people familiar with the matter.

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The deal with the New York Times was reported earlier Thursday by the Information.

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