The SoftConstruct owned supplier adds the Romanian FA Cup, Super Cup, lower leagues, women’s competitions and futsal to its European betting content portfolio in its sixth major rights deal of 2026.

FeedConstruct has signed a strategic agreement securing the exclusive data and video streaming rights to a comprehensive portfolio of Romanian football competitions, expanding the European football content it supplies to betting operators. The deal grants the SoftConstruct owned company exclusive rights across the full 2026/27 season.
Building a Deeper European Football Book
The strategic logic is content depth. Betting operators increasingly differentiate on the breadth of their in play and pre match offering, and exclusive rights to a full national football pyramid, including cup competitions, lower leagues, women’s football and futsal, give FeedConstruct a distinctive package to license. Exclusivity matters because it prevents competitors from offering the same official feeds, turning the Romanian portfolio into a proprietary asset rather than a commoditised one.
A Pattern of Rights Accumulation
Six major rights deals in the first half of 2026 points to a deliberate accumulation strategy. By assembling exclusive rights across multiple sports and regions, FeedConstruct is positioning itself as a one stop content source for operators that would otherwise need to negotiate with many rights holders. The Romanian deal, with its full season exclusivity and coverage extending from the FA Cup down to futsal and women’s competitions, exemplifies the breadth that strategy is designed to deliver.
GC Analysis: The Long Tail of Football Is the New Battleground
The marquee leagues were carved up years ago, so the contest among data and streaming suppliers has shifted to the long tail: cup competitions, lower divisions, women’s football and futsal. These properties are cheaper to secure but collectively meaningful for operators chasing always on betting content across time zones and calendars. FeedConstruct’s Romanian package is a textbook example of locking up an entire national pyramid on an exclusive basis.
For operators, the takeaway is that comprehensive coverage increasingly means signing with suppliers who have quietly cornered these secondary rights.

