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why is the pacers game blacked out

The Pacers game is blacked out because of NBA broadcasting rights rules that protect certain TV partners in your area, not because your service is “broken.”

The core reason

NBA blackouts are about who has the rights in your zip code , not about your specific app or cable provider.

In practice, that usually means:

  • A local regional sports network (like a Bally/FanDuel–type channel) holds exclusive rights in the Pacers’ “home market,” so national outlets (NBA TV, League Pass, sometimes even ESPN/TNT alternates) must block the game there.
  • If you live inside the Pacers’ defined market area (which includes more than just Indianapolis), the national feed will be blacked out and you’re expected to watch via that local channel instead.
  • Some fans in Indiana report they are blacked out on NBA TV or League Pass even though they don’t have access to the local RSN package, leaving them with no legal way to watch.

One Pacers fan noted that being in the Indianapolis market meant the game was blacked out because the local broadcaster also held rights.

How this shows up for fans

From recent fan discussions, a few typical patterns come up:

  • People using YouTube TV or similar services find:
    • Local games may work fine on the RSN or local channel when the service carries it.
* The same game is blocked on NBA TV or League Pass, showing a blackout message instead.
  • Some in wider Indiana markets say the game is blacked out on NBA TV, but their TV provider does not offer the local Pacers channel at all.
  • Others in nearby regions (still inside the Pacers “territory”) get hit with blackouts even though they feel they are “not really local.”

This is all driven by how the NBA and networks draw the team’s territory maps, which often extend across big chunks of neighboring regions, not just the city.

Why the NBA uses blackouts

Blackout rules exist to honor exclusive contracts:

  • Local RSNs pay for the right to be the only channel showing that team in their territory for most regular-season games.
  • National broadcasters (ESPN, TNT, ABC, NBA TV) get their own exclusivity windows for some games.
  • To satisfy these deals, League Pass and some national channels must blackout games in areas where a local or national partner already has exclusive rights.

So if you are seeing a blackout:

  1. You’re probably inside the Pacers’ home TV territory.
  1. A local Pacers broadcaster (or a national network) owns exclusive rights to this particular game in your area.

What you can try

While it doesn’t fix the underlying rules, here are the usual practical steps fans take:

  1. Check which channel “officially” carries Pacers games in your region.
    • Look up the Pacers’ TV partner list or check local listings to see which RSN or local channel has rights.
  1. Confirm if your TV/streaming package actually includes that channel.
    • Some fans discover their provider doesn’t offer the Pacers network in their zip code, even though they’re in the blackout zone.
  1. If you’re on a streaming service (like YouTube TV, Hulu Live, etc.):
    • Verify if that service carries the Pacers’ local channel in your area and whether the game is scheduled there instead of on NBA TV/League Pass.
  1. If you truly have no legal option to watch:
    • Unfortunately, that’s a known pain point: several Pacers fans report being blacked out on NBA TV/League Pass while having zero access to the local RSN.
 * At that point, all you can really do is contact your provider or the team/NBA to complain about the blackout map and carriage issues.

TL;DR: Your Pacers game is blacked out because you’re in a region where a local or national broadcaster owns exclusive rights to that game, so services like NBA TV or League Pass have to block it, even if you don’t actually get that local channel.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.