Genius Sports [GENI] has completed its $1.2 billion acquisition of sports and gaming media group Legend, formally closing a deal first announced in February and marking the most significant transaction in the company’s history.
The agreement involves an upfront payment of $900 million, split between $800 million in cash and $100 million in stock, with a further earnout of up to $300 million payable over two years following completion. Genius financed the bulk of the upfront sum through an $850 million Term Loan B issuance, with the company projecting that leverage will remain below three times debt-to-EBITDA and will more than halve by 2028.
Legend is not a traditional affiliate business in the way many in the industry understand the term. It operates a large-scale media and marketing technology platform that powers owned and operated digital properties reaching sports fans and gamblers across multiple verticals. Its portfolio includes Covers.com, Casino.org, and Casino Guru, which together attracted 320 million annual visits from 118 million unique users during 2025. That reach gives Genius something it did not previously have: direct ownership of the audience at the top of the funnel, before a user decides where to place a bet.
Genius Sports CEO Mark Locke framed the deal as a natural extension of what the company has built over the past decade. The business has spent years constructing the data infrastructure that underpins official sportsbook integrations for operators including DraftKings and FanDuel. By adding Legend’s media network and marketing technology, the combined entity now occupies both ends of the value chain, controlling data pipelines into sportsbooks and the advertising platforms that drive customer acquisition.
The financial case rests on significant revenue synergies. With the acquisition factored in, Genius has guided for approximately $1.1 billion in group revenue and between $320 million and $330 million in adjusted EBITDA on a 2026 annualised pro-forma basis. Looking further ahead, the company has set a target of $1.6 billion in group revenue by 2028, representing a compound annual growth rate of around 21% over the two-year period, with an adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately 35% and at least 60% free cash flow conversion.
Investor reaction to the deal has been sharply negative. When the acquisition was first announced in February, Genius shares fell 27%, wiping out between $600 million and $700 million in market value. The stock continued to decline through March and early April, at one point leaving the company’s market capitalisation below the headline value of the deal itself. Locke has pushed back firmly on that assessment, arguing that critics have applied the word “affiliate” too loosely, failing to distinguish between low-quality traffic brokers and a scaled technology platform built on owned audiences and behavioural data.
The deal also sits within a wider consolidation trend reshaping the sports data and media space. Sportradar acquired affiliate media assets from XL Media in late 2024, but the Genius-Legend combination is considerably larger in both scale and ambition. It signals that data companies are no longer content to operate as silent infrastructure providers and are instead pushing to own the relationship with fans and bettors from the moment of first engagement through to the point of transaction.
Genius Sports is scheduled to provide further integration details and updated financial guidance during its Q1 2026 earnings call. The company enters that update in a considerably different position than it held just three months ago, now straddling the official sports data market and a media network with a nine-figure annual audience.
