Amazon nails the fundamentals with first NBA broadcast β with a sports betting twist

βIt is here, it is real, it is happening,β said play-by-play announcer Ian Eagle. βThe NBA on Prime.β
And with that, Amazonβs foray into live streaming NBA games tipped off.
Amazon marked a major milestone with its growing sports portfolio on Friday, broadcasting its first-ever live NBA game around the world. The matchup β Celtics vs. Knicks β was part of an 11-year dealΒ that gives Amazon exclusive rights to select regular season and playoff games.
We watched the game via Prime Video βΒ accessible with a $139/year Prime subscription βΒ and came away impressed.
The stream ran seamlessly across Fire TV, iPhone, and MacBook. The quality was crisp, load times near-instant, and there wasnβt a hint of lag βΒ at least on a home WiFi connection. Amazonβs 1080p HDR video and 5.1 surround sound were a slam dunk.
The broadcast looked and felt like a traditional national telecast. The graphics mirrored what fans expect from ESPN or TNT, the commentary came from familiar voices β Eagle and Stan Van Gundy β and the pregame show from featured a slick set with former NBA stars at Amazon MGM Studios.

But under the surface, Amazon quietly tested a new frontier: in-stream sports betting.
The most noticeable new feature was the FanDuel integration, Amazonβs latest experiment in blending live sports and interactive technology.
Fans watching on Fire TV could log into their FanDuel accounts through Prime Video to view real-time betting information and track wagers directly within the broadcast.
You canβt make actual bets on Prime Video βΒ not yet, at leastβ but it marks a subtle yet significant shift in how live sports may evolve on streaming platforms.
And it comes at a fascinating moment: the NBA is dealing with a major betting scandal that made headlines this week and involves the FBI.

I was surprisedΒ when NBA Commissioner Adam Silver joined the broadcast for a live interview. Sideline reporter Cassidy Hubbarth opened by asking about the scandal.
Silver said he was βdeeply disturbedβ upon hearing the news.
βThereβs nothing more important to the league and its fans than the integrity of the competition,β he said.
Silver also praised Amazonβs coverage: βI should have started [by saying] how excited we are to be on Amazon,β he said. βI guess I wouldnβt have predicted that my first interview on Amazon would be about sports betting.β
The interview underscored how Amazonβs coverage didnβt shy away from real-time news relevance β adding a traditional journalistic layer within a tech-powered broadcast.
It was also a surreal moment: the NBAβs top official discussing a sports betting scandal during the leagueβs debut on a platform now integrating betting tools into its stream.
Amazon has other new tech-fueled features including advanced NBA stats powered by Amazon Web Services β but I didnβt notice that during Fridayβs broadcast.
One of the only stumbles for me came on the Fire TV user experience, which feels clunky compared to mobile or desktop. Navigation wasnβt intuitive, and the remoteβs button mapping made simple actions harder than expected.
But overall, the whole experience felt less like a tech demo and more like a finished product.

Amazonβs sports strategy is crystalizing: use live sports to drive Prime signups and boost engagement across its ecosystem. The broadcast was promoted on Amazonβs homepage and apps. Live sports also helps fuel Amazonβs growing advertising business.
BloombergΒ reported that Amazon is paying $1.8 billion annually for the NBA rights.
AsΒ more people cut the cord, sports leagues are increasingly partnering with tech companies as their existing deals with traditional cable providers expire. Companies like Amazon, Apple, and Netflix are hungry for valuable content such as live sportsΒ to draw more subscribers to their respective platforms.
Amazon also aired the Timberwolves vs. Lakers game on Friday evening. It will stream 66 regular season games this year, along with some playoff games.
The company also separate deals to air the NFLβs Thursday Night Football, WNBA, and Premier League, among other sports-related programming on its Prime Video platform.
The NBA debut on Friday was a reminder of Amazonβs approach to live sports: combine the reliability of broadcast TV with subtle tech layers β such as betting, data, and e-commerce β built on its AWS cloud infrastructure and Prime membership model.
The prime crew nails it again π
β Oh No He Didn't (@ohnohedidnt24) October 25, 2025
More of this and fewer hot takes! https://t.co/G3IN2BOyFO pic.twitter.com/swHUtlVXXN