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Wikipedia

Major League Baseball on ABC

National television broadcasts of Major League Baseball (MLB) games have aired on ABC in various formats.[8] The network first aired Saturday Major League Baseball Game of the Week games between 1953 and 1955, in 1960, and in 1965. ABC then televised MLB games from 1976 to 1989, airing Monday Night Baseball, Thursday Night Baseball, and Sunday Afternoon Baseball in various years during that period.

Major League Baseball on ABC
Also known asMonday Night Baseball
Sunday Afternoon Baseball
Thursday Night Baseball
Baseball Night in America
ESPN Major League Baseball
GenreMajor League Baseball game telecasts
Developed byABC Sports
Directed bySteve Danz[1]
Chet Forte
Ken Fouts
Craig Janoff[2]
Larry Kamm
StarringMajor League Baseball on ABC broadcasters
Theme music composerCharles Fox
Robert Israel[3]
Lillian Scheinert[4][5]
Kurt Bestor[6]
Scott Schreer[7]
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producersRoone Arledge
Geoffrey Mason
ProducersBob Goodrich
Curt Gowdy Jr.
Chuck Howard
Peter Lasser
Dennis Lewin
EditorsDean Hovell
Conrad Kraus
Pamela Peterson
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time180 minutes (or until game ends)
Original release
NetworkABC
ReleaseApril 12, 1976 (1976-04-12) –
October 28, 1989 (1989-10-28)
ReleaseJuly 16, 1994 (1994-07-16) –
October 26, 1995 (1995-10-26)
ReleaseSeptember 29, 2020 (2020-09-29) –
present (present)
Related
Major League Baseball on NBC
Major League Baseball Game of the Week
Monday Night Baseball
Sunday Afternoon Baseball
Thursday Night Baseball
Baseball Night in America
ESPN Major League Baseball
Sunday Night Baseball

MLB games aired on ABC again in 1994 and 1995 as part of The Baseball Network, the short-lived time-brokered package of broadcasts produced by Major League Baseball and split with NBC. After not televising MLB since The Baseball Network folded, and after the ABC Sports division merged with ESPN in 2006, ABC has aired selected games as part of its sister cable network's contract since 2020. The broadcasts since 2020 have been produced by ESPN, and have primarily used the ESPN Major League Baseball branding and graphics instead of the Major League Baseball on ABC branding.

History edit

 
The former logo for ABC Sports' coverage of Major League Baseball, circa 1989.

From 1953 until 1955, and again in 1960, ABC aired Major League Baseball Game of the Week telecasts, usually on Saturdays.[9] In 1959, ABC broadcast the best-of-three playoff series[10][11][12] (to decide the National League pennant) between the Milwaukee Braves and Los Angeles Dodgers.

In 1965, ABC returned to Game of the Week broadcasting with 28 regional Saturday and Holiday games.[13]

In 1976, ABC began a new four year rights deal with MLB that included 16 new Monday night games, which increased to 18 in the next three years of the deal, as well as half the postseason (both League Championship Series in even numbered years and World Series in odd numbered years) and the All-Star Game in even numbered years.[14] This contract was modified for the 1980, Monday Night Baseball telecasts were reduced to just five, with the rest of the games moved to Sunday afternoons.[15]

In 1984, ABC agreed to a new six year rights deal with MLB. The playoff and All-Star Game television structure remained the same, while ABC increased their regular season games to 20.[16] In 1989, the final season of ABC's deal before CBS took over, ABC moved their games to Thursday nights.[17]

In 1994, ABC returned to MLB coverage with another six year rights deal. Under the deal, as part of The Baseball Network, ABC would air six weeks of regular season games on Saturday and Monday nights. In even numbered years, ABC had the rights to the World Series and Division Series, while in odd numbered years ABC had the rights to the All-Star Game and League Championship Series.[18] However, these plans changed because of the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike. Because of the strike, which began on August 12, a significant amount of games were cancelled, including the 1994 World Series. ABC and NBC consequently, wound up sharing the rights to the 1995 World Series. Also because of the strike, The Baseball Network, a joint production between NBC and ABC, collapsed, and ABC ended their MLB rights following the 1995 season.[19]

In 2020, ABC returned to MLB coverage once again. This time it was part of ESPN's Wild Card Series coverage, which was expanded due to the COVID-19 pandemic (ESPN and ABC are both primarily owned by The Walt Disney Company, and Disney integrated the ABC Sports division with ESPN in 2006). ABC aired three Wild Card Series games as part of this coverage. All coverage primarily used ESPN or ESPN on ABC branding.[20] In 2021, ABC aired their first regular season game since 1995, an August 8 Sunday Night Baseball game between the Chicago White Sox and Chicago Cubs.[21] That same year, ESPN and Major League Baseball agreed to a contract extension that included the exclusive rights to a new Wild Card Series. ABC will have the rights to air select games from the Series, as well as the rights to air select ESPN regular season games.[22][23] ABC aired one game from the 2022 Wild Card Series.[24]

List of games since 1995 edit

Year Date Teams Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Field reporter(s) Significance Viewership (millions)
2020 September 29 Astros/Twins Karl Ravech Tim Kurkjian and Eduardo Pérez Game 1 of the AL Wild Card Series 2.20[25]
September 30 Marlins/Cubs Jon Sciambi Chipper Jones Jesse Rogers Game 1 of the NL Wild Card Series 1.54
October 2β Game 2 of the NL Wild Card series 2.19
2021 August 8 White Sox/Cubsα Matt Vasgersian Alex Rodriguez[26] Buster Olney First regular season game since 1995 1.63[27]
2022 October 7[28] Phillies/Cardinals Michael Kay Alden Gonzalez Game 1 of the NL Wild Card Series 3.12
2023[29] October 3 Rangers/Rays Sean McDonough Jessica Mendoza and Tim Kurkjian Coley Harvey Game 1 of the AL Wild Card Series 2.21
October 4 Game 2 of the AL Wild Card Series 2.24[30]

Notes edit

Al Michaels,[31] who was the lead play-by-play announcer for ABC's Major League Baseball coverage in the 1980s and their brief return to the sport from 1994 to 1995, would join in on the broadcast via FaceTime during the fourth inning. Vasgersian, Rodriguez, and Olney wore special ABC Sports patches during the Sunday Night Baseball telecast on August 8, 2021. Special graphics were also used in conjunction with the standard ESPN MLB graphics.
ABC cut away[32] from their broadcast Miami-Chicago Cubs game during the top of the 9th inning to deliver a special report on U.S. president Donald Trump being taken to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for COVID-19 treatment. The conclusion of the game would be seen on ESPN.

Production overview edit

In 1965, ABC brought forth such innovations[33] like isolated instant replay, field microphones, and a separate camera for each base runner. After ABC's contract for the Game of the Week expired after a single season, NBC felt compelled to dramatically alter their own baseball coverage. So for NBC's coverage of the 1965 World Series, it featured videotaped replays, prerecorded audio analysis from key players, and enhanced animated graphics.

When ABC resumed broadcasting Major League Baseball games in 1976 after an eleven-year hiatus, they were immediately accused of having ill-prepared production crews and announcers on their Monday Night Baseball[34] telecasts. William Leggett of Sports Illustrated would in particular, note[35] that ABC seemed to try to hoodwink viewers with commentary that may sound insightful, but was often dead wrong, and with fancy camera work that was frequently used at inappropriate times during the action. Leggett also criticized ABC for far too often losing batted balls and base runners from view and employing split screens with the wrong men on base. Not only that, but the starting lineups were not being given at the beginning of the games.

According to James Walker, professor in the department of communication at Saint Xavier University and co-author of the book Center Field Shot: A History of Baseball on Television, ABC brought the techniques it had perfected in its football coverage, including far more extensive use of replays, isolated cameras, and different angles. In contrast, when looking at NBC's production of the 1969 World Series, very few replays were utilized and it was a much more static broadcast than what you saw later.[36]

For their coverage of the 1979 World Series[37] in Baltimore,[38] ABC brought two trucks (and rented a third), 14 cameras, a helicopter and nearly 100 technicians. According to producer Chuck Howard, that was just about twice the number of cameras used during the regular season, and at twice the cost. Director Chet Forte's team of cameramen was, in his words, "built around the camera position high behind home plate (C-2)." Their "coverage camera" was designed to follow the flight of the ball. ABC intended on using this camera 75 percent of the time and was according to Forte, the toughest camera in TV sports.

1980s edit

ABC, under the watch of director Joe Aceti, brought some innovations[39] in time for their coverage of the 1980 National League Championship Series between the Houston Astros and Philadelphia Phillies, such as putting the camera in the gondola in the Astrodome looking straight down on the field. For tight shots, Aceti wanted to see the face of the pitcher and the face of the batter. He didn't want them shown in a split screen but separately in a close-up. He also didn't want to shot players head to toe in a long shot, not even in a medium shot.

Chet Forte's directing performance would come under scrutiny when ABC next broadcast the World Series in 1981.[40] For one thing, ABC's replay cameras, which were placed strategically around the park, don't always catch the play. For example, ABC only showed one replay from the main feed camera of New York Yankees third baseman Graig Nettles making a diving, eighth-inning catch of Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Steve Garvey's liner in Game 1. ABC was also criticized for frequently showing all those players' wives cheering instead of giving viewers a wide- angle view of how the outfielders are playing the hitters.

David Remnick of the Washington Post felt[41] that Howard Cosell[42][43] while broadcasting the 1983 World Series alongside Al Michaels and Earl Weaver,[44][45] developed a few "human interest" tags and rammed them home in his inimitable ecclesiastical rhythms instead of actually sharing his knowledge with viewers. To put things into perspective, Remnick noted that Cosell had more to say about the way the Baltimore groundskeepers combated the outfield's "slippage factor" with a miraculous "drying agent" than about Mike Boddicker's pitching. Remnick also said that Cosell had more to say about the refurbished buildings in downtown Baltimore and along the Schuylkill River than about Mike Schmidt's hitting. Or Cosell would talk about John Denny's family problems more often than his ability to strike out Eddie Murray. Remnick in particular, criticized ABC for featuring interviews interspersed with the game action, which would sometimes cause them to miss a double off the wall while a prerecorded player is gabbing up in the corner of the screen. Not only that, but Remnick accused Howard Cosell of did his best to ruin a great camera shot of John Lowenstein's theft of a home run in Game 1 by simultaneously praising the shot and rapping other networks for praising their own shots.

Game 6 of the 1985 World Series[46] would become rooted in controversy when the bottom of the ninth, Jorge Orta, the leadoff batter for the Kansas City Royals, hit a slow roller to St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Jack Clark, who tossed the ball to the pitcher, Todd Worrell, who was covering first base. Umpire Don Denkinger called Orta safe, even though television replays and photographs clearly showed that he was out by half a step.[47] The Royals went on to win Game 6 by the score of 2–1.[48] The first replay that ABC showed[49] was a faraway shot from high along the third base side that froze upon Worrell's catch, with Orta's foot still seemingly in the air.

NBC Sports executive producer Michael Weisman said[50] that while he thought that ABC's coverage of the 1986 League Championship Series was overall fine, he didn't think that they held on with the stories long enough. For instance, Weisman thought that ABC should have kept a camera on California Angels third-base coach Moose Stubing longer in Game 2 of the American League Championship Series. Weisman thought that the camera should've followed Stubing into the dugout to see how his teammates reacted to him after he failed to give Bobby Grich a sign. Weisman also felt that ABC should have stayed with New York Mets first baseman Keith Hernandez longer after he was called out on strikes in Game 1 of the National League Championship Series against the Houston Astros and argued vehemently with umpire Doug Harvey.

Meanwhile, Harry Coyle, NBC's coordinating producer and director of baseball also said that while he thought that ABC's 1986 LCS coverage was for the most part fine, he also said "A shot of a wife can be a great shot, if you use it once or twice a game, like in the ninth inning of a close game and the pitcher is in trouble. But to show a batter, then his wife, then the batter, then his wife, then the batter, then his wife . . . well, that's ridiculous." When asked about ABC's use of a roof camera at the Astrodome, Coyle said "If that shot is so great, why don't they sell seats up there."

In June 1987, ABC director Craig Janoff said that[51] they didn't do quite the same thing as NBC since they would go two months without doing a game that season, and then they would do the World Series[52] in October. Janoff added that baseball was the most challenging sport that he has directed for television because timing is critical. In other words, you have to think about where a fan's eyes move, and constant cutting from camera to camera is necessary.

Come the World Series in 1987, Norman Chad of the Washington Post said[53] that ABC's cameras miss nothing and offered unmatched replays.[54] Meanwhile, ABC's graphics in Chad's eyes, provided better reading than some best sellers, while the announcers knew the game and talked intelligently about it. Furthermore, Chad said that ABC's cameras always showed runs as they were scored. In contrast, NBC sometimes failed to show players crossing the plate during their coverage of the League Championship Series. And whereas ABC's announcers almost always pulled back when the Metrodome crowd went into a frenzy in Minnesota, NBC's announcers according to Chad, sometimes added to the noise (except to go silent at game's end). Chad even believed that ABC captured the quirky nature of the Metrodome better than NBC, from intriguing camera shots to Al Michaels' play-by-play.

When assessing ABC's coverage of the 1988 NLCS between the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets, the Chicago Tribune's Steve Nidetz praised their camera work.[55] Nidetz in particular, gave credit to producer Curt Gowdy Jr., who was responsible for calling all the shots for ABC's NLCS coverage. Instead of subjecting viewers to long-range angles of baseballs floating into the air, ABC had closeups everywhere, from the dugout to the field to the stands. In contrast, ABC's production of the 1988 ALCS between the Oakland Athletics and Boston Red Sox under director Steve Danz, cameramen kept missing plays and according to Jim Sarni of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel,[56] seemed to be preoccupied showing the Harvard rowing crew on the Charles.

Again as previously mentioned, Game 3 of 1989 World Series was scheduled to begin at San Francisco's Candlestick Park on October 17 at 5:35 PDT, ABC began its pre-game show at 5:00 PDT. When the Loma Prieta earthquake struck at approximately 5:04 PDT, Tim McCarver was narrating taped highlights of Game 2, which had been played two days prior across the Bay Bridge in Oakland. Television viewers saw the video signal begin to break up, heard McCarver repeat a sentence as the shaking distracted him, and heard Al Michaels exclaim, "I'll tell you what, we're having an earth – ." At that moment, the signal from Candlestick Park was lost.[57] The network put up a green ABC Sports "World Series" technical difficulties telop graphic[58] while it scrambled to repair the video feed (the broadcast cameras and mics were powered by the local power supply), but audio from the stadium was restored after a few seconds via a telephone link:

Al Michaels: Well, heh, I don't know if we're on the air... We are in commercial, I guess.

Jim Palmer: Yes, yes, we hear you.

Tim McCarver: I guess...

Michaels: I don't hear a thing.

McCarver: I guess Dave Parker...

Michaels: Well, heh, I don't know if we're on the air or not, and I'm not sure I care at this particular moment but we are. Well, folks, that's the greatest open in the history of television! Bar none!

McCarver: Started with a bang!

Michaels: Yes, it certainly did! Heh! We're still here! Heh! We are still, as we can tell, on the air, and I guess you are hearing us, even though we have no picture and no return audio, and we will be back, we hope, from San Francisco, in just a moment.[59]

The combined screams of excitement and panic from fans who had no idea of the devastation elsewhere could be heard in the background.[60] ABC then switched to episodes of Roseanne and The Wonder Years, which was on standby for a rain delay situation, while attempting to restore electricity to its remote equipment. With anchorman Ted Koppel in position in Washington, D.C., ABC News began continuous coverage of the quake at 5:32 p.m. PDT, with Al Michaels, in the process, becoming a de facto on-site reporter for ABC. The Goodyear Blimp had already been overhead to cover the baseball game, and ABC used it to capture images of damage to the Bay Bridge and other locations.

1995 edit

Jerry Trecker of the Hartford Courant praise ABC's production of the 1995 All-Star Game[61] in Arlington. He said that the broadcast crew of Al Michaels, Tim McCarver, and Jim Palmer paced their broadcast as if they had never been away, and the different looks, especially ground level cameras, had always been a trademark of effective work by ABC. ABC also according to him, made effective use of graphics to recap season leaders. ABC Sports' technical coverage as a whole, included[62] 21 cameras from all vantage points, including one in the Goodyear Blimp, and an unmanned camera directly above home plate. Coaches would wear wireless microphones.

Trecker did, however, point out that times, the broadcasters seemed to be ahead of the production people, especially when they wanted to talk about Raul Mondesi's speed getting to a drive into the right field corner. They never showed it. Trecker also believed that ABC's usage of dugout reporters (in this case, Lesley Visser, John Saunders, and Rick Dempsey), even in showcase games like the All-Star Game, was overkill. Visser in particular, was singled out for asked such lengthy questions of Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Hideo Nomo that it was almost farcical when his answers came back in translation.

For the 1995 World Series,[63] ABC and NBC shared 17 cameras and 13 tape machines, two of the "Super Slo-Mo" variety.

Major League Baseball coverage on ABC's owned-and-operated television stations edit

Historically, KTRK was the original television home of the Houston Astros, from the team's inaugural season in 1962 until 1971; however, the station only aired the team's Sunday afternoon road games. It also broadcast any Astros games that were part of ABC's broadcast contract with Major League Baseball from 1976 to 1989.

On December 12, 2014, WLS-TV signed a new five-year broadcast agreement with the Chicago Cubs, in which WLS would televise 25 of the Major League Baseball team's games per year, starting with the 2015 season. The arrangement partially replaced one with WGN-TV (which had broadcast Cubs games since its inception in April 1948), which voluntarily pulled out of its existing broadcast deal with the team for the 2015 season and subsequently agreed to carry a reduced slate of 45 games. The WLS broadcasts were seen on DirecTV's version of MLB Extra Innings, and the feed provided is the WLS signal seen in the Chicago market (unlike with the feeds of WGN broadcasts, where public service announcements were seen in place of local commercials and station promos). As ABC had a limited sports programming schedule during the Major League Baseball season prior to September (when the MLB regular season and college football season overlap), the station mainly carried the team's weekend daytime games in order to limit pre-emptions of the network's prime time programming.[64][65][66][67]

Announcers edit

References edit

Inline citations
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  2. ^ "1989 World Series". Turner Classic Movies.
  3. ^ ABC Monday Night Baseball Theme 1984 (NO V/O) - Robert Israel on YouTube
  4. ^ ABC Sunday Afternoon Baseball 1980 - Open - Lillian Scheinert, Robert Israel on YouTube
  5. ^ ABC's Monday Night Baseball (1983 Season) - no voiceover on YouTube
  6. ^ The ABC baseball theme, 1988-'89 on YouTube
  7. ^ Baseball Network Theme 1994 1995 (Various Cuts) on YouTube
  8. ^ Walker and Bellamy Jr., James Robert and Robert (June 2008). Center Field Shot: A History of Baseball on Television. ISBN 978-0803248250.
  9. ^ Buck, Jack (May 6, 2014). Jack Buck: ÒThat's a Winner!Ó. Sports Publishing. ISBN 9781613216798.
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  11. ^ Lowry, Cynthia (September 29, 1959). "Crosby Sings Plenty". Kentucky New Era. Associated Press. p. 18.
  12. ^ United Press International (September 30, 1959). "Vet, Rookie Combine for LA Playoff Win". The Modesto Bee. p. C10.
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  16. ^ Copyright Royalty Fees for Cable Systems: Hearings Before the Subcommittee ... October 19, 1983. p. 703.
  17. ^ Warner, Rick (November 12, 1988). "It's 'Let's Make a Deal' time for networks, cable". Gadsden Times. Associated Press. p. B5.
  18. ^ "ABC 'Baseball Night' takes ratings beating". USA Today. July 19, 1995. Retrieved May 31, 2011.
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  20. ^ Fisher, Eric (September 28, 2020). "MLB to be seen on ABC for first time since 1995". SportsBusiness.
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  25. ^ Lucia, Joe (October 6, 2020). "MLB Wild Card round averages 1.609 million viewers across 18 games". Awful Announcing.
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  27. ^ "Ratings: Olympics wrap, MLB-ABC, racing, golf". August 11, 2021.
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  32. ^ Bucholtz, Andrew (October 2, 2020). "ABC punted Marlins-Cubs to ESPN in the middle of the ninth for coverage of President Trump being taken to hospital". Awful Announcing.
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  35. ^ Leggett, Williams (May 10, 1976). "ABC HAS THE MONDAY BLAHS". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  36. ^ Wilkerson, David B. (October 24, 2012). "TV's 10 highest-rated World Series games". Market Watch.
  37. ^ Cohen Hagerstown, Steven (April 12, 2020). "Sports Memories: 'Sports writers' witness World Series". The Journal.
  38. ^ Leavy, Jane (October 13, 1979). "Pictures Worth a Million". Washington Post. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  39. ^ Goldstein, Richard (October 10, 2011). "Joe Aceti, Director Who Shaped TV Sports, Dies at 76". The New York Times.
  40. ^ Taafe, Bill (October 24, 1981). "SBC's Cosell: Up Close and Too Personal". Washington Post. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  41. ^ Remnick, David (October 14, 1983). "This Dignity Is Deadly". Washington Post. Retrieved February 9, 2016.[permanent dead link]
  42. ^ Deford, Frank (August 8, 1983). "'I've Won. I've Beat Them'". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  43. ^ Berk, Josh. "October 11, 1983: Phillies take World Series opener from Orioles in pitchers' duel". SABR.
  44. ^ Boswell, Thomas (October 7, 1983). "Weaver Resigned, but Orioles Aren't". Washington Post. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  45. ^ Anderson, Dave (June 28, 1983). "Sports of the Times; Weaver Remains an Old Oriole". The New York Times. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  46. ^ Chass, Murray (October 29, 1985). "Royals Inspired at Right Time". The New York Times.
  47. ^ "WS1985 Gm6: Denkinger calls Orta safe at first base". MLB.com. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved September 2, 2018 – via YouTube.
  48. ^ Royals win to force Series into 7th game
  49. ^ Greene, Dan (October 26, 1985). "After The Call". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  50. ^ Stewart, Larry (October 17, 1986). "There's a Game Behind the Cameras, Too". Los Angeles Times.
  51. ^ Harasta, Cathy (June 5, 1987). "Baseball Proves As Tough to Show As It is to Play". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  52. ^ Hochman, La Russa, Benjamin, Tony (May 2018). Big 50: St. Louis Cardinals: The Men and Moments that Made the St. Louis. ISBN 9781633199866.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  54. ^ Newhan, Ross (October 27, 1987). "Baseball / Ross Newhan: Bad Umpiring Hurts Twins and Cardinals". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  55. ^ Nidetz, Steve (October 11, 1988). "ABC Deserves Kudos for NL Show But Barbs for AL Coverage". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  56. ^ Sarni, Jim (October 7, 1988). "ABC Is Good Or Bad, Depending On Series". Sun Sentinel. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  57. ^ News report on MLB.COM, 1:50 minutes in. Retrieved August 29, 2009.
  58. ^ Keown, Tim (October 16, 2014). "When the earth moved the Series". ESPN. Retrieved April 14, 2019.
  59. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "ABC 1989 World Series Game 3 Earthquake". YouTube.
  60. ^ . Time. Monday, October 30, 1989. Ed Magnuson. p. 3. Retrieved September 5, 2009.
  61. ^ Kent, Milton (July 11, 1995). "Gowdy Jr., behind scenes, provides All-Star touch". The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  62. ^ Nelson, John (July 9, 1995). "ABC's All-Star Telecast Is Beginning Of End For Tbn -- But Baseball Wants New Pact By November 1". The Seattle Times. Seattle, Washington. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  63. ^ Kent, Milton (October 20, 1995). "NBC and ABC split Series, throwing fans a changeup". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  64. ^ Robert Channick (November 6, 2013). "Cubs exercise option to end WGN-TV contract after next season". Chicago Tribune. Tribune Publishing. Retrieved September 1, 2014.
  65. ^ Robert Channick (December 12, 2014). "It's official: WLS-Ch. 7 to air 25 Cubs games". Chicago Tribune. Tribune Publishing. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  66. ^ "Cubs reach deal with WGN-TV for remaining 45 broadcasts". Chicago Business Journal. American City Business Journals. January 7, 2015. Retrieved September 5, 2015.
  67. ^ Ed Sherman (February 19, 2015). "White Sox add WPWR-Ch. 50 to station rotation". Chicago Tribune. Tribune Publishing. Retrieved September 5, 2015.
Bibliography

External links edit

  • Monday Night Baseball at IMDb  
  • Official website

major, league, baseball, national, television, broadcasts, major, league, baseball, games, have, aired, various, formats, network, first, aired, saturday, major, league, baseball, game, week, games, between, 1953, 1955, 1960, 1965, then, televised, games, from. National television broadcasts of Major League Baseball MLB games have aired on ABC in various formats 8 The network first aired Saturday Major League Baseball Game of the Week games between 1953 and 1955 in 1960 and in 1965 ABC then televised MLB games from 1976 to 1989 airing Monday Night Baseball Thursday Night Baseball and Sunday Afternoon Baseball in various years during that period Major League Baseball on ABCAlso known asMonday Night BaseballSunday Afternoon BaseballThursday Night BaseballBaseball Night in AmericaESPN Major League BaseballGenreMajor League Baseball game telecastsDeveloped byABC SportsDirected bySteve Danz 1 Chet ForteKen FoutsCraig Janoff 2 Larry KammStarringMajor League Baseball on ABC broadcastersTheme music composerCharles FoxRobert Israel 3 Lillian Scheinert 4 5 Kurt Bestor 6 Scott Schreer 7 Country of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishProductionExecutive producersRoone ArledgeGeoffrey MasonProducersBob GoodrichCurt Gowdy Jr Chuck HowardPeter LasserDennis LewinEditorsDean HovellConrad KrausPamela PetersonCamera setupMulti cameraRunning time180 minutes or until game ends Original releaseNetworkABCReleaseApril 12 1976 1976 04 12 October 28 1989 1989 10 28 ReleaseJuly 16 1994 1994 07 16 October 26 1995 1995 10 26 ReleaseSeptember 29 2020 2020 09 29 present present RelatedMajor League Baseball on NBCMajor League Baseball Game of the WeekMonday Night BaseballSunday Afternoon BaseballThursday Night BaseballBaseball Night in AmericaESPN Major League BaseballSunday Night Baseball MLB games aired on ABC again in 1994 and 1995 as part of The Baseball Network the short lived time brokered package of broadcasts produced by Major League Baseball and split with NBC After not televising MLB since The Baseball Network folded and after the ABC Sports division merged with ESPN in 2006 ABC has aired selected games as part of its sister cable network s contract since 2020 The broadcasts since 2020 have been produced by ESPN and have primarily used the ESPN Major League Baseball branding and graphics instead of the Major League Baseball on ABC branding Contents 1 History 1 1 List of games since 1995 1 2 Notes 2 Production overview 2 1 1980s 2 2 1995 3 Major League Baseball coverage on ABC s owned and operated television stations 4 Announcers 5 References 6 External linksHistory editMain article History of Major League Baseball on ABC nbsp The former logo for ABC Sports coverage of Major League Baseball circa 1989 From 1953 until 1955 and again in 1960 ABC aired Major League Baseball Game of the Week telecasts usually on Saturdays 9 In 1959 ABC broadcast the best of three playoff series 10 11 12 to decide the National League pennant between the Milwaukee Braves and Los Angeles Dodgers In 1965 ABC returned to Game of the Week broadcasting with 28 regional Saturday and Holiday games 13 In 1976 ABC began a new four year rights deal with MLB that included 16 new Monday night games which increased to 18 in the next three years of the deal as well as half the postseason both League Championship Series in even numbered years and World Series in odd numbered years and the All Star Game in even numbered years 14 This contract was modified for the 1980 Monday Night Baseball telecasts were reduced to just five with the rest of the games moved to Sunday afternoons 15 In 1984 ABC agreed to a new six year rights deal with MLB The playoff and All Star Game television structure remained the same while ABC increased their regular season games to 20 16 In 1989 the final season of ABC s deal before CBS took over ABC moved their games to Thursday nights 17 In 1994 ABC returned to MLB coverage with another six year rights deal Under the deal as part of The Baseball Network ABC would air six weeks of regular season games on Saturday and Monday nights In even numbered years ABC had the rights to the World Series and Division Series while in odd numbered years ABC had the rights to the All Star Game and League Championship Series 18 However these plans changed because of the 1994 95 Major League Baseball strike Because of the strike which began on August 12 a significant amount of games were cancelled including the 1994 World Series ABC and NBC consequently wound up sharing the rights to the 1995 World Series Also because of the strike The Baseball Network a joint production between NBC and ABC collapsed and ABC ended their MLB rights following the 1995 season 19 In 2020 ABC returned to MLB coverage once again This time it was part of ESPN s Wild Card Series coverage which was expanded due to the COVID 19 pandemic ESPN and ABC are both primarily owned by The Walt Disney Company and Disney integrated the ABC Sports division with ESPN in 2006 ABC aired three Wild Card Series games as part of this coverage All coverage primarily used ESPN or ESPN on ABC branding 20 In 2021 ABC aired their first regular season game since 1995 an August 8 Sunday Night Baseball game between the Chicago White Sox and Chicago Cubs 21 That same year ESPN and Major League Baseball agreed to a contract extension that included the exclusive rights to a new Wild Card Series ABC will have the rights to air select games from the Series as well as the rights to air select ESPN regular season games 22 23 ABC aired one game from the 2022 Wild Card Series 24 List of games since 1995 edit Year Date Teams Play by play Color commentator s Field reporter s Significance Viewership millions 2020 September 29 Astros Twins Karl Ravech Tim Kurkjian and Eduardo Perez Game 1 of the AL Wild Card Series 2 20 25 September 30 Marlins Cubs Jon Sciambi Chipper Jones Jesse Rogers Game 1 of the NL Wild Card Series 1 54 October 2b Game 2 of the NL Wild Card series 2 19 2021 August 8 White Sox Cubsa Matt Vasgersian Alex Rodriguez 26 Buster Olney First regular season game since 1995 1 63 27 2022 October 7 28 Phillies Cardinals Michael Kay Alden Gonzalez Game 1 of the NL Wild Card Series 3 12 2023 29 October 3 Rangers Rays Sean McDonough Jessica Mendoza and Tim Kurkjian Coley Harvey Game 1 of the AL Wild Card Series 2 21 October 4 Game 2 of the AL Wild Card Series 2 24 30 Notes edit a Al Michaels 31 who was the lead play by play announcer for ABC s Major League Baseball coverage in the 1980s and their brief return to the sport from 1994 to 1995 would join in on the broadcast via FaceTime during the fourth inning Vasgersian Rodriguez and Olney wore special ABC Sports patches during the Sunday Night Baseball telecast on August 8 2021 Special graphics were also used in conjunction with the standard ESPN MLB graphics b ABC cut away 32 from their broadcast Miami Chicago Cubs game during the top of the 9th inning to deliver a special report on U S president Donald Trump being taken to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for COVID 19 treatment The conclusion of the game would be seen on ESPN Production overview editIn 1965 ABC brought forth such innovations 33 like isolated instant replay field microphones and a separate camera for each base runner After ABC s contract for the Game of the Week expired after a single season NBC felt compelled to dramatically alter their own baseball coverage So for NBC s coverage of the 1965 World Series it featured videotaped replays prerecorded audio analysis from key players and enhanced animated graphics When ABC resumed broadcasting Major League Baseball games in 1976 after an eleven year hiatus they were immediately accused of having ill prepared production crews and announcers on their Monday Night Baseball 34 telecasts William Leggett of Sports Illustrated would in particular note 35 that ABC seemed to try to hoodwink viewers with commentary that may sound insightful but was often dead wrong and with fancy camera work that was frequently used at inappropriate times during the action Leggett also criticized ABC for far too often losing batted balls and base runners from view and employing split screens with the wrong men on base Not only that but the starting lineups were not being given at the beginning of the games According to James Walker professor in the department of communication at Saint Xavier University and co author of the book Center Field Shot A History of Baseball on Television ABC brought the techniques it had perfected in its football coverage including far more extensive use of replays isolated cameras and different angles In contrast when looking at NBC s production of the 1969 World Series very few replays were utilized and it was a much more static broadcast than what you saw later 36 For their coverage of the 1979 World Series 37 in Baltimore 38 ABC brought two trucks and rented a third 14 cameras a helicopter and nearly 100 technicians According to producer Chuck Howard that was just about twice the number of cameras used during the regular season and at twice the cost Director Chet Forte s team of cameramen was in his words built around the camera position high behind home plate C 2 Their coverage camera was designed to follow the flight of the ball ABC intended on using this camera 75 percent of the time and was according to Forte the toughest camera in TV sports 1980s edit ABC under the watch of director Joe Aceti brought some innovations 39 in time for their coverage of the 1980 National League Championship Series between the Houston Astros and Philadelphia Phillies such as putting the camera in the gondola in the Astrodome looking straight down on the field For tight shots Aceti wanted to see the face of the pitcher and the face of the batter He didn t want them shown in a split screen but separately in a close up He also didn t want to shot players head to toe in a long shot not even in a medium shot Chet Forte s directing performance would come under scrutiny when ABC next broadcast the World Series in 1981 40 For one thing ABC s replay cameras which were placed strategically around the park don t always catch the play For example ABC only showed one replay from the main feed camera of New York Yankees third baseman Graig Nettles making a diving eighth inning catch of Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Steve Garvey s liner in Game 1 ABC was also criticized for frequently showing all those players wives cheering instead of giving viewers a wide angle view of how the outfielders are playing the hitters David Remnick of the Washington Post felt 41 that Howard Cosell 42 43 while broadcasting the 1983 World Series alongside Al Michaels and Earl Weaver 44 45 developed a few human interest tags and rammed them home in his inimitable ecclesiastical rhythms instead of actually sharing his knowledge with viewers To put things into perspective Remnick noted that Cosell had more to say about the way the Baltimore groundskeepers combated the outfield s slippage factor with a miraculous drying agent than about Mike Boddicker s pitching Remnick also said that Cosell had more to say about the refurbished buildings in downtown Baltimore and along the Schuylkill River than about Mike Schmidt s hitting Or Cosell would talk about John Denny s family problems more often than his ability to strike out Eddie Murray Remnick in particular criticized ABC for featuring interviews interspersed with the game action which would sometimes cause them to miss a double off the wall while a prerecorded player is gabbing up in the corner of the screen Not only that but Remnick accused Howard Cosell of did his best to ruin a great camera shot of John Lowenstein s theft of a home run in Game 1 by simultaneously praising the shot and rapping other networks for praising their own shots Game 6 of the 1985 World Series 46 would become rooted in controversy when the bottom of the ninth Jorge Orta the leadoff batter for the Kansas City Royals hit a slow roller to St Louis Cardinals first baseman Jack Clark who tossed the ball to the pitcher Todd Worrell who was covering first base Umpire Don Denkinger called Orta safe even though television replays and photographs clearly showed that he was out by half a step 47 The Royals went on to win Game 6 by the score of 2 1 48 The first replay that ABC showed 49 was a faraway shot from high along the third base side that froze upon Worrell s catch with Orta s foot still seemingly in the air NBC Sports executive producer Michael Weisman said 50 that while he thought that ABC s coverage of the 1986 League Championship Series was overall fine he didn t think that they held on with the stories long enough For instance Weisman thought that ABC should have kept a camera on California Angels third base coach Moose Stubing longer in Game 2 of the American League Championship Series Weisman thought that the camera should ve followed Stubing into the dugout to see how his teammates reacted to him after he failed to give Bobby Grich a sign Weisman also felt that ABC should have stayed with New York Mets first baseman Keith Hernandez longer after he was called out on strikes in Game 1 of the National League Championship Series against the Houston Astros and argued vehemently with umpire Doug Harvey Meanwhile Harry Coyle NBC s coordinating producer and director of baseball also said that while he thought that ABC s 1986 LCS coverage was for the most part fine he also said A shot of a wife can be a great shot if you use it once or twice a game like in the ninth inning of a close game and the pitcher is in trouble But to show a batter then his wife then the batter then his wife then the batter then his wife well that s ridiculous When asked about ABC s use of a roof camera at the Astrodome Coyle said If that shot is so great why don t they sell seats up there In June 1987 ABC director Craig Janoff said that 51 they didn t do quite the same thing as NBC since they would go two months without doing a game that season and then they would do the World Series 52 in October Janoff added that baseball was the most challenging sport that he has directed for television because timing is critical In other words you have to think about where a fan s eyes move and constant cutting from camera to camera is necessary Come the World Series in 1987 Norman Chad of the Washington Post said 53 that ABC s cameras miss nothing and offered unmatched replays 54 Meanwhile ABC s graphics in Chad s eyes provided better reading than some best sellers while the announcers knew the game and talked intelligently about it Furthermore Chad said that ABC s cameras always showed runs as they were scored In contrast NBC sometimes failed to show players crossing the plate during their coverage of the League Championship Series And whereas ABC s announcers almost always pulled back when the Metrodome crowd went into a frenzy in Minnesota NBC s announcers according to Chad sometimes added to the noise except to go silent at game s end Chad even believed that ABC captured the quirky nature of the Metrodome better than NBC from intriguing camera shots to Al Michaels play by play When assessing ABC s coverage of the 1988 NLCS between the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets the Chicago Tribune s Steve Nidetz praised their camera work 55 Nidetz in particular gave credit to producer Curt Gowdy Jr who was responsible for calling all the shots for ABC s NLCS coverage Instead of subjecting viewers to long range angles of baseballs floating into the air ABC had closeups everywhere from the dugout to the field to the stands In contrast ABC s production of the 1988 ALCS between the Oakland Athletics and Boston Red Sox under director Steve Danz cameramen kept missing plays and according to Jim Sarni of the South Florida Sun Sentinel 56 seemed to be preoccupied showing the Harvard rowing crew on the Charles Again as previously mentioned Game 3 of 1989 World Series was scheduled to begin at San Francisco s Candlestick Park on October 17 at 5 35 PDT ABC began its pre game show at 5 00 PDT When the Loma Prieta earthquake struck at approximately 5 04 PDT Tim McCarver was narrating taped highlights of Game 2 which had been played two days prior across the Bay Bridge in Oakland Television viewers saw the video signal begin to break up heard McCarver repeat a sentence as the shaking distracted him and heard Al Michaels exclaim I ll tell you what we re having an earth At that moment the signal from Candlestick Park was lost 57 The network put up a green ABC Sports World Series technical difficulties telop graphic 58 while it scrambled to repair the video feed the broadcast cameras and mics were powered by the local power supply but audio from the stadium was restored after a few seconds via a telephone link Al Michaels Well heh I don t know if we re on the air We are in commercial I guess Jim Palmer Yes yes we hear you Tim McCarver I guess Michaels I don t hear a thing McCarver I guess Dave Parker Michaels Well heh I don t know if we re on the air or not and I m not sure I care at this particular moment but we are Well folks that s the greatest open in the history of television Bar none McCarver Started with a bang Michaels Yes it certainly did Heh We re still here Heh We are still as we can tell on the air and I guess you are hearing us even though we have no picture and no return audio and we will be back we hope from San Francisco in just a moment 59 The combined screams of excitement and panic from fans who had no idea of the devastation elsewhere could be heard in the background 60 ABC then switched to episodes of Roseanne and The Wonder Years which was on standby for a rain delay situation while attempting to restore electricity to its remote equipment With anchorman Ted Koppel in position in Washington D C ABC News began continuous coverage of the quake at 5 32 p m PDT with Al Michaels in the process becoming a de facto on site reporter for ABC The Goodyear Blimp had already been overhead to cover the baseball game and ABC used it to capture images of damage to the Bay Bridge and other locations 1995 edit Jerry Trecker of the Hartford Courant praise ABC s production of the 1995 All Star Game 61 in Arlington He said that the broadcast crew of Al Michaels Tim McCarver and Jim Palmer paced their broadcast as if they had never been away and the different looks especially ground level cameras had always been a trademark of effective work by ABC ABC also according to him made effective use of graphics to recap season leaders ABC Sports technical coverage as a whole included 62 21 cameras from all vantage points including one in the Goodyear Blimp and an unmanned camera directly above home plate Coaches would wear wireless microphones Trecker did however point out that times the broadcasters seemed to be ahead of the production people especially when they wanted to talk about Raul Mondesi s speed getting to a drive into the right field corner They never showed it Trecker also believed that ABC s usage of dugout reporters in this case Lesley Visser John Saunders and Rick Dempsey even in showcase games like the All Star Game was overkill Visser in particular was singled out for asked such lengthy questions of Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Hideo Nomo that it was almost farcical when his answers came back in translation For the 1995 World Series 63 ABC and NBC shared 17 cameras and 13 tape machines two of the Super Slo Mo variety Major League Baseball coverage on ABC s owned and operated television stations editSee also ABC Owned Television Stations Owned and operated television stations in the United States and Historical Major League Baseball over the air television broadcasters Team Stations Years Brooklyn Dodgers WABC TV 7 August 17 1953 October 1 1953 Chicago Cubs WLS TV 7 2015 2019 Houston Astros KTRK TV 13 1962 1972 Philadelphia Athletics WFIL TV 6 later WPVI 1949 1954 Philadelphia Phillies 1959 1970 Historically KTRK was the original television home of the Houston Astros from the team s inaugural season in 1962 until 1971 however the station only aired the team s Sunday afternoon road games It also broadcast any Astros games that were part of ABC s broadcast contract with Major League Baseball from 1976 to 1989 On December 12 2014 WLS TV signed a new five year broadcast agreement with the Chicago Cubs in which WLS would televise 25 of the Major League Baseball team s games per year starting with the 2015 season The arrangement partially replaced one with WGN TV which had broadcast Cubs games since its inception in April 1948 which voluntarily pulled out of its existing broadcast deal with the team for the 2015 season and subsequently agreed to carry a reduced slate of 45 games The WLS broadcasts were seen on DirecTV s version of MLB Extra Innings and the feed provided is the WLS signal seen in the Chicago market unlike with the feeds of WGN broadcasts where public service announcements were seen in place of local commercials and station promos As ABC had a limited sports programming schedule during the Major League Baseball season prior to September when the MLB regular season and college football season overlap the station mainly carried the team s weekend daytime games in order to limit pre emptions of the network s prime time programming 64 65 66 67 Announcers editMain article List of Major League Baseball on ABC announcersReferences editInline citations Sarni Jim October 7 1988 ABC Is Good Or Bad Depending On Series Sun Sentinel 1989 World Series Turner Classic Movies ABC Monday Night Baseball Theme 1984 NO V O Robert Israel on YouTube ABC Sunday Afternoon Baseball 1980 Open Lillian Scheinert Robert Israel on YouTube ABC s Monday Night Baseball 1983 Season no voiceover on YouTube The ABC baseball theme 1988 89 on YouTube Baseball Network Theme 1994 1995 Various Cuts on YouTube Walker and Bellamy Jr James Robert and Robert June 2008 Center Field Shot A History of Baseball on Television ISBN 978 0803248250 Buck Jack May 6 2014 Jack Buck OThat s a Winner o Sports Publishing ISBN 9781613216798 Reichler Joe September 29 1959 Dodgers Confident of National Flag Times Daily Associated Press p 5 Lowry Cynthia September 29 1959 Crosby Sings Plenty Kentucky New Era Associated Press p 18 United Press International September 30 1959 Vet Rookie Combine for LA Playoff Win The Modesto Bee p C10 Jay Robert June 5 2015 A Year in TV Guide June 5th 1965 Television Obscurities NBC splits MLB Rights NBC Sports History Page Major league baseball will once again be televised by UPI March 4 1981 Copyright Royalty Fees for Cable Systems Hearings Before the Subcommittee October 19 1983 p 703 Warner Rick November 12 1988 It s Let s Make a Deal time for networks cable Gadsden Times Associated Press p B5 ABC Baseball Night takes ratings beating USA Today July 19 1995 Retrieved May 31 2011 Shapario Leonard October 18 1995 CBS DENIES REPORT OF BROADCAST DEAL The Washington Post Fisher Eric September 28 2020 MLB to be seen on ABC for first time since 1995 SportsBusiness Pederson Erik July 7 2021 ABC To Air ESPN s Sunday Night Baseball For First Time Deadline ESPN MLB announce seven year extension running through 2028 ESPN com May 13 2021 Retrieved May 18 2021 MLB ESPN extend deal through 2028 MLB com Retrieved May 18 2021 Hipes Patrick October 5 2022 Baseball Sets TV Schedule For First Ever Wild Card Round Deadline Retrieved October 5 2022 Lucia Joe October 6 2020 MLB Wild Card round averages 1 609 million viewers across 18 games Awful Announcing Lucia Joe October 4 2022 ESPN announces broadcast teams for 2022 MLB Wild Card round Awful Announcing Retrieved October 5 2022 Ratings Olympics wrap MLB ABC racing golf August 11 2021 Lewis Errol October 3 2022 General Hospital To Be Preempted For Major League Baseball Wild Card Game Coverage Soap Opera Network Retrieved October 5 2022 Snyder Matt October 1 2023 2023 MLB playoffs schedule Game times TV channels postseason dates with Wild Card Series matchups set CBSSports com Retrieved October 1 2023 Lewis Jon October 10 2023 Weekly ratings Cowboys 49ers Red River Rivalry and more Sports Media Watch Retrieved October 29 2023 Rigdon Jay August 8 2021 The best moments from Al Michaels Sunday Night Baseball appearance on ABC Awful Announcing Bucholtz Andrew October 2 2020 ABC punted Marlins Cubs to ESPN in the middle of the ninth for coverage of President Trump being taken to hospital Awful Announcing Walker Bellamy James R Robert V June 2008 Center Field Shot A History of Baseball on Television p 279 ISBN 978 0803248250 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dow Bill June 27 2016 40 years ago Mark The Bird Fidrych was some kind of unbelievable Detroit Free Press Leggett Williams May 10 1976 ABC HAS THE MONDAY BLAHS Sports Illustrated Retrieved February 9 2016 Wilkerson David B October 24 2012 TV s 10 highest rated World Series games Market Watch Cohen Hagerstown Steven April 12 2020 Sports Memories Sports writers witness World Series The Journal Leavy Jane October 13 1979 Pictures Worth a Million Washington Post Retrieved February 9 2016 Goldstein Richard October 10 2011 Joe Aceti Director Who Shaped TV Sports Dies at 76 The New York Times Taafe Bill October 24 1981 SBC s Cosell Up Close and Too Personal Washington Post Retrieved February 9 2016 Remnick David October 14 1983 This Dignity Is Deadly Washington Post Retrieved February 9 2016 permanent dead link Deford Frank August 8 1983 I ve Won I ve Beat Them Sports Illustrated Retrieved February 9 2016 Berk Josh October 11 1983 Phillies take World Series opener from Orioles in pitchers duel SABR Boswell Thomas October 7 1983 Weaver Resigned but Orioles Aren t Washington Post Retrieved February 9 2016 Anderson Dave June 28 1983 Sports of the Times Weaver Remains an Old Oriole The New York Times Retrieved February 9 2016 Chass Murray October 29 1985 Royals Inspired at Right Time The New York Times WS1985 Gm6 Denkinger calls Orta safe at first base MLB com Archived from the original on December 21 2021 Retrieved September 2 2018 via YouTube Royals win to force Series into 7th game Greene Dan October 26 1985 After The Call Sports Illustrated Retrieved February 9 2016 Stewart Larry October 17 1986 There s a Game Behind the Cameras Too Los Angeles Times Harasta Cathy June 5 1987 Baseball Proves As Tough to Show As It is to Play Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 9 2016 Hochman La Russa Benjamin Tony May 2018 Big 50 St Louis Cardinals The Men and Moments that Made the St Louis ISBN 9781633199866 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Chad Norman October 20 1987 ABC Matching NBC in Baseball Washington Post Retrieved February 9 2016 permanent dead link Newhan Ross October 27 1987 Baseball Ross Newhan Bad Umpiring Hurts Twins and Cardinals Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 9 2016 Nidetz Steve October 11 1988 ABC Deserves Kudos for NL Show But Barbs for AL Coverage Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 9 2016 Sarni Jim October 7 1988 ABC Is Good Or Bad Depending On Series Sun Sentinel Retrieved February 9 2016 News report on MLB COM 1 50 minutes in Retrieved August 29 2009 Keown Tim October 16 2014 When the earth moved the Series ESPN Retrieved April 14 2019 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine ABC 1989 World Series Game 3 Earthquake YouTube Earthquake Time Monday October 30 1989 Ed Magnuson p 3 Retrieved September 5 2009 Kent Milton July 11 1995 Gowdy Jr behind scenes provides All Star touch The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Retrieved February 9 2016 Nelson John July 9 1995 ABC s All Star Telecast Is Beginning Of End For Tbn But Baseball Wants New Pact By November 1 The Seattle Times Seattle Washington Retrieved February 9 2016 Kent Milton October 20 1995 NBC and ABC split Series throwing fans a changeup The Baltimore Sun Retrieved February 9 2016 Robert Channick November 6 2013 Cubs exercise option to end WGN TV contract after next season Chicago Tribune Tribune Publishing Retrieved September 1 2014 Robert Channick December 12 2014 It s official WLS Ch 7 to air 25 Cubs games Chicago Tribune Tribune Publishing Retrieved December 12 2014 Cubs reach deal with WGN TV for remaining 45 broadcasts Chicago Business Journal American City Business Journals January 7 2015 Retrieved September 5 2015 Ed Sherman February 19 2015 White Sox add WPWR Ch 50 to station rotation Chicago Tribune Tribune Publishing Retrieved September 5 2015 Bibliography Fidrych Mark Tom Clark 1977 No Big Deal Lippincott ISBN 978 0 397 01233 6 Walker James R Bellamy Robert V 2008 Center field shot a history of baseball on television Omaha Ne University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0803248250 External links editMonday Night Baseball at IMDb nbsp Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Major League Baseball on ABC amp oldid 1218742170, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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