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Scott D’Amore’s Maple Leaf Pro lands global broadcast deal with Fight Nation TV, launch slated for February 2026

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Scott D’Amore’s Maple Leaf Pro Wrestling has secured a significant step toward its debut, announcing a broadcast partnership with Fight Nation TV that will carry Maple Leaf Pro (MLP) programming into 196 countries worldwide beginning in February 2026.

The agreement gives the new promotion a defined launch window and a global footprint well in advance of its first bell. For any start-up in the wrestling space, distribution is the pillar that determines visibility, revenue potential, and talent interest. Locking that in nearly a year ahead of launch signals that MLP intends to enter the market with infrastructure in place rather than building the plane mid-flight.

D’Amore is a familiar name to wrestling fans, long associated with Canada’s wrestling scene and known for executive leadership in major North American promotions. His involvement gives Maple Leaf Pro immediate industry credibility, but credibility alone does not place a new brand in front of fans. This partnership with Fight Nation TV provides a clear answer to the fundamental question of “Where can I watch?”—and the answer, at least geographically, is virtually everywhere.

Global reach matters. Wrestling thrives on week-to-week storytelling, and the ability to deliver those stories in a consistent, accessible format is what transforms a project into a promotion. A footprint spanning 196 countries positions MLP to court international audiences from day one, an approach that mirrors how modern wrestling properties build communities across borders and time zones. It also widens the funnel for live event markets, merchandising opportunities, and cross-promotional activity—areas where distribution and visibility are direct drivers of growth.

For fans, the headline is simple: a new promotion is coming with the infrastructure to be seen around the world. For the industry, the implications are broader. Wrestlers weigh more than money when choosing a home; they want certainty that their work will be seen and that a promotion’s content has a reliable pipeline to viewers. By announcing distribution this early, MLP positions itself as a contender for talent who might otherwise remain independent, stay regional, or seek roles with established companies.

The February 2026 timeline is noteworthy. A long runway affords MLP time to finalize production standards, secure venues, build out a taping and live event calendar, and sequence out how its television (or broadcast) format will flow. It also provides a cushion to refine identity—what Maple Leaf Pro looks and feels like on screen—before asking fans to add another weekly show to their viewing routine. In a crowded content environment, that preparation can be the difference between a splash and a silent launch.

Fight Nation TV’s involvement points to a strategic choice: align with a platform already positioned to carry combat sports and wrestling to international markets. While the announcement does not disclose distribution tiers, content windows, or pricing, the core takeaway is that MLP won’t be confined to a single country or delayed rollouts. Wrestling fans outside North America, who often face staggered release schedules or limited access, will note the promise of day-one availability across a wide map.

Without additional details on programming length, cadence, or event frequency, it’s premature to compare MLP’s content strategy to that of major players. However, the broader landscape underscores why this announcement matters. WWE has entrenched partnerships that unify its content under major streaming umbrellas and global networks. AEW has built its audience through a mix of cable and streaming distribution, supplemented by international partnerships. New Japan Pro-Wrestling maintains a strong direct-to-consumer service while licensing key events. Each model starts with the same principle: predictable, accessible distribution. MLP’s deal checks that foundational box.

For the Canadian scene, Maple Leaf Pro’s emergence—paired with a global partner—could become a focal point. Canada’s wrestling history is deep, with a legacy of regional strongholds and international stars. A domestically led promotion designed for worldwide delivery may amplify that tradition, offering a platform for Canadian markets while drawing in global audiences. It could also stimulate local ecosystems: training schools, production crews, arenas, and independent promotions often feel a ripple effect when a televised product is actively taping and touring.

There are still many practical questions ahead. The announcement does not specify the day of the week, time slot, whether programming will be live or taped, or how pay-per-view–style events will be handled. It also leaves open how archival access, highlights, and on-demand features will be structured. Those details matter to fans who plan their weekly viewing schedules and to talent who tailor their workloads around production cycles. Expect the next phase of announcements to focus on format, event calendar, and first markets.

What this partnership does communicate immediately is intent. Maple Leaf Pro is not teasing a soft rollout or a single-market experiment. By aligning with Fight Nation TV and targeting 196 countries, the promotion is setting expectations that it will compete on a stage that rewards consistent storytelling, production value, and brand clarity. That kind of positioning puts pressure on getting the fundamentals right: commentary teams that frame characters effectively, camera work that supports the in-ring product, and episodic hooks that encourage appointment viewing.

In terms of business strategy, early distribution clarity can also accelerate sponsorship conversations. Advertisers and brand partners plan against reach and frequency. A defined global footprint, even without a publicized weekly rating, gives MLP a basis to discuss inventory, integrations, and event activations as it approaches launch. It likewise offers potential synergy for international tours and special events, since partners know the product is available in their target markets.

Fans who want to follow the rollout should watch for milestones common to any major launch: brand reveals for championships, first talent signings, venue announcements, and production previews. Those markers typically appear in the months leading into a debut as a promotion transitions from vision to execution. Given the February 2026 target, the latter half of 2025 could be particularly active for news.

Bottom line: Maple Leaf Pro’s broadcast partnership with Fight Nation TV gives the new promotion a credible runway and a global address. The 196-country reach sets the stage for a high-visibility debut in February 2026, with the next waves of information likely to fill in format, talent, and schedule. In a wrestling landscape where distribution defines the ceiling, MLP has placed a strong early bet on access—now the work begins to turn that access into an audience.

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