We built StreamCaddy because watching sports shouldn't be this complicated.
Sports fans have never had more ways to watch their favorite teams. And somehow, it's never been harder to figure out whether you can actually watch the game.
A few years ago, the answer was usually simple. Turn on the TV, find the game, and watch your team.
Today, the same season might be split across local channels, regional sports networks, national broadcasts, streaming exclusives, league packages, and half a dozen different apps. The answer to “Can I watch this game?” depends on where you live, which teams you follow, what services you subscribe to, and the constantly evolving mix of broadcast rights, streaming exclusives, regional restrictions, and blackout rules that change from season to season.
For fans, it's become exhausting. And that's exactly why StreamCaddy exists.
The moment that sparked the idea
The idea for StreamCaddy didn't come from a boardroom or a business plan. It came from the couch.
One night, I was trying to watch a baseball game with my father. Between the two of us, we were already paying for multiple streaming services. We had cable alternatives. We had sports packages. We had more subscriptions than either of us wanted to admit. And yet, somehow, we still couldn't watch the game.
After checking one app, then another, then another, we discovered the game required yet another service that neither of us had. The frustrating part wasn't that the game required a different subscription. The frustrating part was that neither of us knew that ahead of time. That conversation wasn't unique. I kept having the same discussion with friends, family members, coworkers, and fellow sports fans:
- "What app is the game on?"
- "Can I watch it with YouTube TV?"
- "Why is it blacked out?"
- "How many services do I actually need to follow my teams?"
Everyone was asking the same questions, and nobody had a good answer.
That's when it became obvious: the problem wasn't a lack of options. The problem was that fans had no easy way to understand what those options actually meant for them.
The problem with every other solution
Most websites, apps, and search engines answer a different question than the one fans are actually asking.
They answer: “Where is the game available?”
But fans want to know: “Can I watch it?”
Those are not the same thing.
A game might be available on a channel you don't receive. A streaming service might carry the network nationally but not in your market. A blackout restriction might prevent you from watching. A package upgrade might be required. A regional sports network might not be included in your current subscription.
Knowing where a game is broadcast is only the beginning. The real question is whether you can watch it.
That's the question StreamCaddy was built to answer.
What makes StreamCaddy different
StreamCaddy doesn't just tell you where a game is. It evaluates every game against:
Then it gives you a personalized answer. Not a generic answer. Not a list of channels. Not a “check your provider” disclaimer. A real answer.
If you can watch the game, we'll tell you. If you can't, we'll explain exactly why. If you're missing games, we'll show you the smartest way to unlock them.
And if you're paying for subscriptions that aren't helping you watch the teams you care about, we'll help you find a better setup — whether that means adding a service, switching providers, or saving money with fewer subscriptions.
Because the goal isn't just to watch more games. It's to get the most value from every dollar you spend on sports.
Our mission
We believe sports fans deserve clarity. You shouldn't have to search five different websites, compare subscription packages, decipher blackout rules, or wonder whether you're paying for services you don't actually need.
Our mission is simple: Help every fan understand exactly what they can watch — and how to unlock more.
Because watching sports should be the fun part. Not figuring out where the game is.