Apple is taking its sports production to a new level: On Saturday, May 23, 2026, Apple TV will broadcast the MLS match between LA Galaxy and Houston Dynamo FC – recorded entirely on the iPhone 17 Pro. It's the first major live professional sports broadcast to use an iPhone as the sole recording device. The match also marks the final MLS weekend before the FIFA World Cup break in North America.
Apple has been consistently pushing forward with the integration of the iPhone into its own sports production for months – initially as a supplementary camera perspective, now as a complete recording platform. This coming Saturday in Carson, California, the iPhone 17 Pro cameras will handle all the imaging for an entire MLS broadcast. This aligns with the strategic expansion of its sports offerings: Since the beginning of this season, all MLS games have been included in the Apple TV subscription at no extra cost, significantly increasing the reach of such broadcasts. Dignity Health Sports Park will be the stage for a premiere that Apple has been systematically preparing since the initial test integration in September 2025.
What Apple will be showing in Carson on Saturday
The broadcast begins at 7:30 PM Pacific Time, which in Germany is Sunday morning, May 24, 2026, around 4:30 AM CEST. The match between LA Galaxy and Houston Dynamo FC takes place shortly before the season's suspension – Major League Soccer will then pause for the 2026 FIFA World Cup in North America.
Unlike traditional sports productions with broadcast cameras, Apple relies exclusively on iPhones positioned around the stadium. This eliminates the biggest technical hurdle of such broadcasts – the availability of sufficiently small cameras for unusual perspectives. The iPhone brings its own form factor advantage.
What perspectives does the iPhone 17 Pro capture?
Apple specifically names four image areas that are covered by the iPhone:
- Warm-ups on the pitch – the players' warm-up phase immediately before kick-off
- Player entrance – the lineup and the teams' entry
- Goal net perspectives – cameras directly in or on the goal, a position that classic broadcast cameras can hardly reach.
- Stadium atmosphere – footage of the fans and the atmosphere in the stadium
This very mix of close-ups and stadium-wide mood shots is considered a strength of small cameras: they are inconspicuous, mobile and deliver perspectives that are difficult to achieve with large broadcast setups.
What's technically behind it?
The iPhone 17 Pro features three 48-megapixel Fusion cameras, which together cover the equivalent of eight lenses. Crucial for professional video production is Apple Log 2 – a flat color profile that allows significantly more flexibility for color grading in post-production than standard video formats. Apple is using precisely this profile for Saturday's broadcast.
This fundamentally distinguishes the recording from smartphone videos produced by end users. Apple Log 2 delivers essentially "raw" image data, which is then adjusted in terms of color and contrast within the broadcast workflow to achieve the desired broadcast image. The final image quality is therefore less a matter of the iPhone alone than of the production team behind it.
The journey there began in baseball
The idea of incorporating an iPhone into a regular live sports broadcast isn't new for Apple. In September 2025, Apple first used the iPhone 17 Pro during a "Friday Night Baseball" game between the Boston Red Sox and the Detroit Tigers. At the time, the iPhone provided individual scenes and cinematic stadium footage, not the entire broadcast. The initiative garnered so much attention that the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum included one of the iPhones used in its permanent exhibit—an unusual accolade for a piece of consumer electronics.
This success was followed in 2025 by the expansion to the MLS Cup and in 2026 by its permanent inclusion in the production rotation. "Friday Night Baseball" and MLS games have since been regularly broadcast with iPhone content.
Why the complete transfer is the crucial step
Until now, the iPhone has been a supplementary source for Apple's sports productions – providing creative perspectives here, a cinematic shot there. That changes on Saturday. The entire broadcast will run using iPhone cameras, without any additional traditional broadcast technology. With this move, Apple is demonstrating not only the image quality but also the workflow efficiency: control center, video mixing, synchronization, live streaming – everything must function using iPhones as the source signal.
Should the experiment succeed, it opens the door for Apple to offer significantly cheaper production models for sports broadcasting. Professional broadcast cameras are expensive and large; iPhones are neither.
A marketing moment for the iPhone camera
For Apple, this isn't just a technical demonstration, but a solid marketing campaign for its Pro line. Anyone watching an MLS broadcast in the highest picture quality on Saturday will see the results of what the iPhone 17 Pro is truly capable of outside of commercials. The message to amateur filmmakers and creatives is clear: the same camera that's broadcasting a Bundesliga-equivalent live match is in the pockets of millions of Apple customers.
Where to watch the broadcast in Germany
Apple TV broadcasts every MLS game without interruptions in more than 100 countries and regions – including Germany. New subscribers can try the MLS Season Pass with a one-week trial. Due to the time difference, broadcasts in Germany begin in the early morning hours of May 24.
Apple's sports production is getting a new flagship discipline
With the MLS game filmed entirely on the iPhone, Apple is positioning its smartphone as a serious tool for professional live broadcasting. This is more than just a marketing ploy: it's the logical consequence of two years of quiet integration, starting with individual baseball scenes and culminating in a complete live production. How the industry reacts – and whether traditional broadcast manufacturers need to take this move seriously – will become clear in the coming months. (Image: Apple)
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