Stack to Win: A Powerful Solution for Sports Media Production

A decorative image showing the text Stack to Win with Boomer Esiason. In the background, the logos for Backblaze, Suite Studios, and Iconik are displayed on media screens.

I recently joined an incredible group of thought leaders for a panel discussion on the future of sports media. Hosted by sports commentator and former NFL MVP Boomer Esiason, our Stack to Win panel featured Jeremy Strootman from Iconik, Jay Maxwell from Suite Studios, the NFL’s VP of Broadcasting Mike North, and me—Dave Simon from Backblaze. Together, we explored the complexities of modern sports content creation and how our integrated cloud-native solutions from Backblaze B2, Iconik, and Suite offer a powerful blueprint for radically streamlining workflows and unlocking new opportunities for efficiency, speed, and monetization.

The traditional, linear model of sports media production is a thing of the past. It’s been completely changed by new technology and a shift in what fans expect. Today, media teams are in a real-time battle for attention against every other form of entertainment. This new world demands a different kind of setup, one that’s built for the cloud and designed to handle the entire media lifecycle. The solution we’ve built, a powerful combination of Backblaze, Iconik, and Suite Studios, is exactly that. It’s the playbook for staying ahead.

Watch the full interview

There’s so much more that we could summarize in just one blog post. Check out the full video below:

The (data) problem

Game day content is immense—we’re talking 6–7TB of data nightly. In the past, this was a logistical nightmare. As Jeremy Strootman from Iconik pointed out, “It used to be we’d get a hard drive and I’d get a hard drive, and we made sure that we just took different flights on the way home. It was literally that archaic.” When speed is everything, old methods like shipping hard drives are a huge liability.

This pressure comes from fans who have an insatiable appetite for content across every platform imaginable. They expect teams to produce their own content in real-time for streaming and social media. For many, the “second screen” is now the main screen, with 73% of fans using mobile apps for real-time updates during live events. If your workflow is slow, you’ve already lost the competition.

The definition of sports content has also expanded. It’s no longer just about the game itself, but also the stories around it—the players’ lives and the team’s entire ecosystem. Jay Maxwell of Suite Studios captured this perfectly:

The product is not just what’s on the field anymore. It’s also what’s going on in these, you know, athletes lives, what’s going on in the peripheries of the team and the organizations.
—Jay Maxwell, Co-Founder and Chief Product Officer, Suite Studios

This includes pop culture crossovers, fantasy sports, and in-game betting, all of which demand instant video highlights.

A great example of this is when Eagles wide receiver AJ Brown was spotted reading a book called “Inner Excellence” on the sidelines. The moment went viral, and the book, which was previously ranked 585,000 on the bestseller list, vaulted to number one instantly. As the NFL’s Mike North noted, this is how fans can instantly “go deeper” and connect with their favorite players. The ability to capture and distribute these moments instantly is a fundamental requirement for success.

A modern technology stack

An integrated, cloud-native tech stack provides a seamless workflow that removes risk and speeds up the content pipeline. It’s a powerful combination of three key layers:

1. Foundation: The active cloud archive

Modern media workflows are built on a cloud storage foundation that replaces old systems like tape libraries and shelves full of hard drives. The key is an active cloud archive that gives you instant access to your footage. This eliminates the costly delays of older solutions and offers predictable costs, so you never get hit with surprise fees when you need to access your own content.

2. Intelligence: Media Asset Management (MAM)

This is the smart layer that makes your vast archive searchable and valuable. Instead of producers manually sifting through hours of footage, a multimodal AI search engine can find the exact clip they need in seconds. As Dave Simon explained, you can use a natural language search to describe exactly what you’re looking for, such as “Jerry Rice catching a ball over his left shoulder wearing a white jersey”. AI tools in a media stack can automatically transcribe interviews, search for specific quotes, and even identify abstract concepts like emotion or reframe a video for different social media platforms.

3. Accelerator: Real-time cloud editing

This component handles the final stage of production, allowing editors to access high-resolution media without a download delay. This technology streams data directly from the cloud, so editors can start working immediately. This is how a remote team can instantly cut and create content from footage uploaded on the field. 

The real magic is all of these elements combined: A clip is only useful if an editor can work with it right away, and a huge archive is only valuable if you can find what’s in it. This is a single, cohesive system that manages the entire media lifecycle from start to finish.

Reshaping the business of sports

Adopting a modern tech stack empowers rights holders—leagues, teams, and athletes—to manage and distribute content on a massive scale. They can bypass traditional media gatekeepers and build direct relationships with their fans. This opens up several possibilities, such as: 

  • Archive monetization. Vast archives, once a simple cost center, have now become a major source of revenue. With an accessible, intelligent archive, organizations can unlock new revenue streams.
  • Licensing storefronts: You can create B2B portals for broadcasters and filmmakers to license and download footage, which essentially creates a self-service revenue engine.
  • Direct-to-consumer (DTC) fan platforms: Launch your own subscription services with exclusive access to historical games and behind-the-scenes content.
  • Free Ad-supported Streaming TV (FAST) channels: Program and launch FAST channels using repurposed archival content.
  • Creator economy partnerships: License parts of your archive to creators to reach new audiences and share in the revenue.
  • Enable the athlete as a media entity. This same technology is behind the rise of athletes as media producers. Today’s players are actively shaping their own stories and building media businesses. The low barrier to entry for these cloud workflows is the foundation of this movement, giving athletes the same scalable tools once reserved for major networks. A great example of this is Peyton Manning’s Omaha Productions, which started as a player-led media company and became a leader in the space.

The future fan experience

This revolution is transforming the fan experience from a one-way broadcast to something personal, interactive, and instant. The future of sports consumption is personalized feeds tailored to individual interests. As Mike North noted, “You don’t really need to watch the game anymore to still be a fan.” For a fan who wants to know everything about a player, a custom feed can be created. For a fantasy football enthusiast, clips and highlights related to their team can be pushed to them in real time.

The experience will also be interactive. Streaming platforms are already using augmented reality (AR) overlays and multi-angle camera views. The next step, powered by AI and accessible archives, is allowing fans to directly ask for content, like, “‘Show me all the Hail Mary plays from this season?’” and instantly get a custom playlist. This shifts passive viewing into active exploration.

For any sports organization, the biggest risk is standing still and maintaining the status quo. As Jay Maxwell put it, “The barrier to entry to try is, you know, cheap if not free.” An integrated, cloud-native workflow isn’t just a competitive advantage—it’s the fundamental requirement for survival and success.

Check out the full solution below:

About Dave Simon

Dave Simon is the Senior Director of Media & Entertainment Alliances at Backblaze, where he drives strategic partnerships to advance hybrid cloud workflows, media transformation initiatives, and scalable storage solutions. With over three decades of experience in the media supply chain space, he has helped broadcasters, studios, and enterprises modernize content supply chains. His expertise bridges the gap between technology and business strategy. Reach out on LinkedIn to connect with him.