The Walt Disney Co. is having a hard time finding a buyer for all of the 22 regional sports networks it is acquiring from 21st Century Fox, so the Burbank, California-based studio may end up selling them off in pieces.

The networks, which include the New York-based YES Network that broadcasts Yankees games, are part of Disney’s $71 billion acquisition of 21st Century Fox’s entertainment assets. The U.S. Department of Justice OKed that deal as long as Disney (NYSE: DIS) divests Fox’s regional sports networks (RSNs) since it already owns the sports network ESPN.

The New York Post first reported Disney’s plans to divvy up the RSNs.

Only Sinclair Broadcast Group (NASDAQ: SBGI), partnering with CVC Capital Partners, has made a serious bid for all 22 RSNs, per the report, but sources told the Post it’s a lowball offer for a package estimated to be worth around $20 billion.

There are other interested parties for almost all of the RSNs in Apollo Global Management and Nexstar Media Group, but Apollo will need a partner to make the deal, and Nexstar just announced another multi-billion dollar acquisition of Tribune Media.

Other possible suitors for all 22 RSNs include Fox (NASDAQ: FOXA, FOX) buying back its own networks for its post-merger “New Fox” and Major League Baseball.

In the meantime, the Yankees, which owns 20 percent of the YES Network, is reportedly interested in exercising its right of first refusal to acquire full ownership of the channel and is talking to potential partners including Amazon, which sources said is only interested in YES.

In addition, Charter Communications has bid for Fox Sports South, while Minnesota Twins owner Jim Pohlad is reportedly interested in Fox Sports North.

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