
As the Fishers Freight wrap up their second Indoor Football League season with three regular season games remaining, the bigger story off the field is how — and how many — fans are watching. After two years of churn, from free YouTube streams to a paid league app to a national distribution deal, the IFL is reporting the largest television audiences in its history in 2026. Independent reviews of the new broadcasts are mostly favorable, with some technical caveats.
From YouTube to a national platform
Just two seasons ago, IFL games lived on YouTube, free to anyone but drawing modest crowds — a few thousand viewers per game by most accounts. In 2025 the league launched the subscription-based IFL Network through a partnership with Visaic, and in April 2025 announced the service had “surpassed 15,000 subscribers” during a record-setting weekend that also saw 14,729 fans pack Tulsa’s BOK Center.
The 2026 plan was more ambitious — and bumpier. In November 2025 the IFL announced a deal for FanDuel Sports Network to carry 60 games. Within months, financial instability at FanDuel’s parent, Main Street Sports Group, prompted the league to exit the agreement, joining several MLB, NHL and NBA teams scrambling for new homes. “What’s going on there is not good for anybody,” IFL President Jared Widman told Barrett Media, while crediting FanDuel for being upfront.
The league pivoted to two partners. Yahoo Sports Network — a free, ad-supported streaming channel operated by C15 Studio, for which the IFL is the first-ever live sports — expanded its slate to 64 games. To fill the gap, the IFL signed a multi-year deal in March 2026 with Overnght, a subscription streamer (about $12 a month) that becomes the exclusive home of at least 55 games annually through 2028. The league called it the largest media-rights agreement in the sport’s history. The old IFL Network, meanwhile, went free in 2026, repurposed for replays, highlights and team content rather than live games.
The audience numbers
For the first time, the IFL is also producing every broadcast itself — hiring the talent and controlling production rather than leaving home games to individual teams, as in past years. The league brought in CBS Sports veteran Brent Stover as lead play-by-play voice and Director of Broadcasting, paired with Yahoo personalities Jason Fitz, Nate Tice and Caroline Fenton and other national names including Dave Ryan, Mark May, Anthony Herron and Danny Kanell. Widman’s stated goal: three national broadcasters on every game for “the most polished look you can get.”
The early returns, by the league’s own measurement, are strong. According to figures the IFL released and that were reported by sports-media columnist Howie Hanson, an April 4 game between Tucson and New Mexico drew 220,000 viewers and 9.2 million minutes watched — both league records. Subsequent featured windows stayed in six figures: roughly 159,000 viewers on April 12, 116,000 on April 19 and 101,000 on April 26. Each topped 100,000, a consistency the league says it had never reached. The IFL characterized the jump as a “multi-thousand percent increase” over its YouTube-only model.
Those numbers deserve a caveat: they are league-supplied figures for marquee Yahoo windows, not independently audited Nielsen ratings, and they reflect the most-promoted broadcasts rather than a typical game. As Hanson noted, the leagues are reporting growth “at least through their own data.” Still, even discounted, the scale dwarfs the YouTube era.
What the critics say
On broadcast quality, the most substantive independent review came from Shady Sports Network, which assessed the inaugural IFL Cup at New Jersey’s American Dream in May. Its verdict was largely positive: “Other than the audio issues the broadcast of the games was amazing,” praising Stover and analyst Kurtis Riggs in the booth alongside three sideline reporters who made it “feel like they had every angle covered.” Presentation, the field and the production “lived up to the standard the IFL has created for itself.”
The audio, though, was a real problem. The outlet described sideline reporters whose “lips [were] moving without any sound coming through,” plus intermittent distortion in the booth — issues it attributed partly to the venue but called “certainly avoidable.”
The trade outlet Barrett Media framed the effort favorably, while indoor-football site Off The Wall credited the IFL’s multi-year investment in raising broadcast standards and adding commentary talent.
The bottom line for fans in Fishers: the games are easier to find and free to watch on Yahoo Sports, the audiences are demonstrably larger, and the production has drawn solid early marks — with the league’s own audience claims still awaiting independent verification, and a few audio gremlins to iron out.