Sounds like MLB's lawyer led the charge at today's hearing. from Sportico:
Speaking during a Wednesday afternoon status conference in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas, Major League Baseball counsel James Bromley raised concerns about the Diamond Sports Group’s loss of carriage on Comcast’s cable systems.
Bromley’s address to the court came on the heels of a motion filed by MLB in which the league went the worst-possible-scenario route. “Without incoming revenue from Comcast, the debtors (along with their non-debtor affiliates) face a substantially increased risk of shutting down altogether,” the May 14 motion read. “If this were to happen, MLB and [its] clubs would once again find themselves in the untenable situation of having to address the failures of the debtors, likely with little or no advance notice.”
As was reflected in Bromley’s court appearance, MLB is pressing for details about the duration and fee structures underpinning Diamond’s recent renewals with DirecTV and Charter. “How in the world are we going to be able to have a hearing, which I think is going to be contested, with respect to the viability of a plan of reorganization … when we simply have no information?” Bromley said.
Attorneys for the NHL and NBA expressed similar concerns on Wednesday afternoon. NBA lawyer Vincent Indelicato encouraged the court to maintain the June 18 hearing date, “at which point this matter will finally be resolved, one way or the other, on definitive terms.” The attorney went on to paint the hearing as an ultimatum of sorts, suggesting that a failure to win approval for the proposed re-org would necessarily lead to an “orderly wind-down.”
“It is imperative that we have certainty, one way or the other, by June 18,” Indelicato said.
--in other news, an attorney for Diamond said the company is close to finalizing a new naming-rights agreement to replace the deal with Bally. the Bally deal ends after the current baseball season.