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History of Major League Baseball on ABC

The following article details the history of Major League Baseball on ABC, the broadcast of Major League Baseball games on the ABC television network.

1950s edit

In 1953,[1] ABC-TV executive Edgar J. Scherick (who later created Wide World of Sports) broached a Saturday Game of the Week,[2] TV sport's first network series. At the time, ABC was labeled a "nothing network" that had fewer outlets than CBS or NBC. ABC also needed paid programming or "anything for bills" as Scherick put it. At first, ABC hesitated at the idea of a nationally televised regular season baseball program. ABC wondered how exactly the Game of the Week would reach television in the first place and who would notice if it did? Also, Major League Baseball barred the Game of the Week from airing within 50 miles of any ballpark.[3] Major League Baseball according to Scherick, insisted on protecting local coverage and didn't care about national appeal. ABC, though, did care about the national appeal and claimed that "most of America was still up for grabs."

In April 1953, Edgar Scherick set out to acquire teams rights but instead, only got the Philadelphia Athletics, Cleveland Indians,[4] and Chicago White Sox[5][6] to sign on.[7] These were not "national" broadcast contracts since they were assembled through negotiations with individual teams to telecast games from their home parks. It was until the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961, that antitrust laws barred "pooled rights" TV contracts negotiated with a central league broadcasting authority.

In 1953, ABC earned an 11.4 rating for its Game of the Week telecasts. Blacked-out cities had 32% of households. In the rest of the United States, 3 in 4 TV sets in use watched Dizzy Dean[8] and Buddy Blattner[9] (or backup announcers Bill McColgan and Bob Finnegan) call the games for ABC. CBS took over the Saturday Game in 1955 (the rights were actually set up through the Falstaff Brewing Corporation[10]) retaining Dean/Blattner and McColgan/Finnegan as the announcing crews (as well as Gene Kirby, who produced the Dean/Blattner games and alternated with them on play-by-play) and adding Sunday coverage in 1957. As Edgar Scherick said, "In '53, no one wanted us. Now teams begged for "Game"'s cash."

In 1959, ABC broadcast the best-of-three playoff series[11][12][13] (to decide the National League pennant) between the Milwaukee Braves and Los Angeles Dodgers. The cigarette company L&M sponsored the telecasts. George Kell[14] and Bob DeLaney were the announcers. ABC Radio also broadcast the playoff series with Bob Finnegan and Tony Flynn announcing.

1960s edit

1960–1961 edit

In 1960, ABC returned to baseball broadcasting with a series of late-afternoon Saturday games. Jack Buck[15] and Carl Erskine[16][17] were the lead announcing crew for this series, which lasted one season.[18] ABC typically did three games a week. Two of the games were always from the Eastern or Central Time Zone. The late games (no doubleheaders) were usually San Francisco Giants[19] or Los Angeles Dodgers' home games. However, the Milwaukee Braves[20] used to start many of their Saturday home games late in the afternoon. So if the Giants and Dodgers were both on the road at the same time, ABC still would be able to show a late game.

One other note about ABC baseball coverage during this period. Despite temporarily losing the Game of the Week package in 1961, ABC still televised several games in prime time (with Jack Buck returning to call the action). This occurred as Roger Maris[21][22] was poised to tie and subsequently break Babe Ruth's regular season home run record of 60. As with all Major League Baseball games in those days, the action was totally blacked out[23] of major league markets. As a matter of fact, as documented in the HBO film 61*, the Maris family was welcomed into ABC's Kansas City, Missouri affiliate KMBC-TV so they could watch the in-house feed of the game, which was blacked out of Kansas City.

On September 20, 1961, Bob Neal and Hank Greenberg called a baseball game for ABC in prime time between Maris' New York Yankees and the Baltimore Orioles.

1965 edit

In 1965, ABC provided the first-ever nationwide baseball coverage with weekly Saturday broadcasts[24] on a regional basis. ABC paid $5.7 million for the rights to the 28 Saturday/holiday Games of the Week. ABC's deal[25][26] covered all of the teams except the New York Yankees and Philadelphia Phillies[27] (who had their own television deals) and called for two regionalized games on Saturdays, Independence Day, and Labor Day.[28] Each Saturday, ABC broadcast two 2 p.m. games and one 5 p.m. game for the Pacific Time Zone. ABC blacked out the games in the home cities of the clubs playing those games.[29] Major League Baseball however, had a TV deal with NBC for the All-Star Game and World Series. At the end of the season, ABC declined to exercise its $6.5 million option for 1966, citing poor ratings,[30][31] especially in New York.

According to ABC announcer Merle Harmon's profile in Curt Smith's book Voices of Summer, in 1965, CBS' Yankee Game of the Week beat ABC in the ratings in at least Dallas and Des Moines. To make matters worse, local television split the big-city audience. Therefore, ABC could show the Cubs vs. the Cardinals in the New York market, yet the Mets would still kill them in terms of viewership. Harmon, Chris Schenkel, Keith Jackson,[32] and (on occasion) Ken Coleman[33] served as ABC's principal play-by-play voices for this series. Also on the network's announcing team were pregame host Howard Cosell and color commentators Leo Durocher, Tommy Henrich,[34] Warren Spahn (who worked with Chris Schenkel on a July 17, Baltimore-Detroit contest), and Hall of Fame Brooklyn Dodger great Jackie Robinson (who, on April 17, 1965, became the first black network broadcaster for Major League Baseball[35]). According to ABC Sports producer Chuck Howard, "(Robinson) had a high, stabbing voice, great presence, and sharp mind. All he lacked was time."

The announcing duos were generally, Chris Schenkel-Leo Durocher and Merle Harmon-Jackie Robinson. For instance, the team of Schenkel and Durocher called the San Francisco-New York Mets contest on April 17, Milwaukee-Pittsburgh contest on August 21, and the San Francisco-Los Angeles (alongside Jackie Robinson) on September 6. The San Francisco-Los Angeles game on Labor Day was the first meeting between those two clubs since a melee from about two weeks prior involving Giants pitcher Juan Marichal cracking Dodgers catcher John Roseboro on the head during a brawl. Jackie Robinson worked with Merle Harmon on at least, the St. Louis-Cincinnati contest on April 24.

It was around this time that ABC suggested that Major League Baseball reduce their regular season schedule to just 60 games.[36] ABC wanted the games to only be played on weekends. They also wanted to promote baseball in the same manner as football, as a major television event.

1970s edit

In March 1975, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn announced that ABC would join NBC in a new deal with Major League Baseball. The rights fees paid by the two networks were 29.3% higher than what MLB got in the 1971 deal, but adjusted for inflation, the money in the new deal was about the same as in the old one.[37][38] Under the initial agreement (1976–1979), both networks paid $92.8 million.

ABC paid $12.5 million per year to show 16 Monday night games in 1976, 18 in the next three years, plus 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. NBC paid $10.7 million per year to show 25 Saturday Games of the Week and the other half of the postseason (both League Championship Series in odd numbered years and World Series in even numbered years) and the All-Star Game in odd numbered years.

1976–1977 edit

ABC also picked up the television rights for Monday Night Baseball[39] beginning in 1976. For most of its time on ABC, the Monday night games were held on "dead travel days" when few games were scheduled. The team owners liked that arrangement as the national telecasts didn't compete against their stadium box offices. ABC on the other hand, found the arrangement far more complicated. ABC often had only one or two games to pick from for each telecast from a schedule designed by Major League Baseball. While trying to give all of the teams national exposure, ABC ended up with far too many games between sub .500 clubs from small markets. Reviewing the network's first two weeks of coverage for Sports Illustrated, William Leggett opined: "It may be unfair to say that Monday Night Baseball, as it has been presented by ABC so far this season, is the worst television treatment ever given a major sport, because by all odds somebody at sometime must have done something worse. But it is difficult to remember when or where that might have happened."[40]

On the flip side however, ABC Sports head Roone Arledge brought in then innovative concept of a center field camera.[41] This camera is behind the pitcher that looks at the batter's face. ABC Sports had to gain special permission from both Major League Baseball and the home team to put the camera in center field.

Just like with Monday Night Football, ABC brought in the concept of the three-man-booth (originally with Bob Prince, Bob Uecker, and Warner Wolf[42] as the primary crew) to their baseball telecasts. Al Michaels, then the radio announcer for the San Francisco Giants, was brought in by ABC as the back-up announcer for Monday Night Baseball. That year, Michaels called two no-hitters: by the Pirates' John Candelaria vs. Los Angeles on August 9 (for ABC) and the Giants' John Montefusco at Atlanta on September 29, 1976 (for Giants radio). Michaels initially worked in the booth alongside Bob Gibson and Norm Cash. The following year, Cash would be replaced by Bill White, who himself, would remain with ABC through the 1979 season.[43] All in all, the back-up telecasts were made available to an estimated 15% of the United States.[44]

Roone Arledge stated that "It'll take something different for it to work – i.e. curb viewership yawns and lulls with Uecker as the real difference", so Arledge reportedly hoped. Prince disclosed to his broadcasting partner Jim Woods about his early worries about calling a network series for the first time. Prince for one, didn't have as much creative control over the broadcasts on ABC as he did calling Pittsburgh Pirates games on KDKA radio. On the June 7, 1976, edition of Monday Night Baseball, Prince returned to Three Rivers Stadium, from which he had been exiled for over a year. Although Prince received a warm reception, he was confused when the next day the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette read: "Ratings are low, negative reviews rampant."[45] Critics ripped[46] ABC's coverage[47] for such things as its camera work[48][49] (they often followed fly balls like they did golf shots, keeping the focus on the ball) and its choice of announcers: Bob Prince was accused of a National League bias,[50] while Bob Uecker was considered to be just a Don Meredith[51][52][53] clone.

On June 28, 1976, the Detroit Tigers faced the New York Yankees on Monday Night Baseball, with 47,855 attending at Tiger Stadium and a national television audience, Tigers pitcher Mark "The Bird" Fidrych[54] talked to the ball and groomed the mound, as the Tigers won, 5–1 in a game that lasted only 1 hour and 51 minutes. After the game, the crowd would not leave the park until Fidrych came out of the dugout to tip his cap.[55]

For ABC's coverage of the 1976 All-Star Game from Philadelphia, the team of Bob Prince, Bob Uecker and Warner Wolf alternated roles for the broadcast. For the first three innings, Prince did play-by-play with Wolf on color commentary and Uecker doing field interviews. For the middle innings, Uecker worked play-by-play with Prince on color and Wolf doing the interviews. For the rest of the game, Wolf worked play-by-play with Uecker on color and Prince doing interviews.

Bob Prince was gone by the fall of 1976, with Keith Jackson, Howard Cosell,[56][57][58] and guest analyst Reggie Jackson calling that year's American League Championship Series. (Warner Wolf, Al Michaels and guest analyst Tom Seaver worked the NLCS.) On the subject of his dismissal from ABC, Bob Prince said "I hated Houston, and ABC never let me be Bob Prince."[59][60] MLB commissioner Bowie Kuhn strongly objected to ABC's recruitment of Howard Cosell[61][62] because of comments by Cosell in recent years about how dull baseball had become. But Roone Arledge[63] held the trump card as the contract he had signed with Major League Baseball gave ABC the final say over announcers. So Cosell worked the 1976 ALCS and became a regular member of Monday Night Baseball the next season.

Keith Jackson[64] was unavailable to call Game 1 of the 1976 ALCS because he had just gotten finished calling an Oklahoma-Texas college football game for ABC. Thus, Bob Uecker filled-in[65] for Jackson for Game 1. Uecker also took part in the postgame interviews for Game 5 of the 1976 ALCS, while Warner Wolf did an interview of George Brett in the Kansas City locker room.

Still on the disabled list toward the end of the 1977 season, Mark Fidrych worked as a guest color analyst on a Monday Night Baseball telecast for ABC; he was subsequently criticized for his lack of preparation, as when play-by-play partner Al Michaels tried talking with him about Philadelphia Phillies player Richie Hebner and Fidrych responded, "Who's Richie Hebner?"[66] As an American League player, Fidrych had never had to face Hebner, who played in the National League.

The 1977 World Series[67] marked the first time that the participating teams' local announcers were not used as the booth announcers on the network telecast of a World Series.[68][69] 1977 was also the first year in which one announcer (in this case, ABC's Keith Jackson) provided all of the play-by-play for a World Series telecast. In previous years, the play-by-play announcers and color commentators had alternated roles during each game. Meanwhile, New York Yankees announcer Bill White and Los Angeles Dodgers announcer Ross Porter alternated between pregame/postgame duties on ABC and calling the games for CBS Radio. White worked the ABC telecasts for the games in New York (including the clubhouse trophy presentation ceremony after Game 6) while Porter did likewise for the games in Los Angeles.

"The Bronx is Burning" edit

Howard Cosell was widely attributed with saying the famous phrase "The Bronx is burning". Cosell is credited with saying the quote during Game 2 of the 1977 World Series, which took place in Yankee Stadium on October 12, 1977. For a couple of years, fires had routinely erupted in the South Bronx, mostly due to low-value property owners setting their own properties ablaze for insurance money. During the bottom of the first inning, an ABC aerial camera panned a few blocks from Yankee Stadium to a building on fire, giving the world a real-life view of the infamous Bronx fires. The scene became a defining image of New York City in the 1970s. Cosell supposedly stated, "There it is, ladies and gentlemen, The Bronx is burning."[70] This was later picked up by candidate Ronald Reagan, who then made a special trip to the Bronx, to illustrate the failures of then-contemporary politicians to address the issues in that part of New York City.

In 2005, author Jonathan Mahler published Ladies and Gentlemen, The Bronx is Burning, a book on New York in 1977, and credited Cosell with saying the title quote during the aerial coverage of the fire. ESPN produced a 2007 mini-series based on the book called The Bronx is Burning. Cosell's comment seemed to have captured the widespread view held at the time that New York City was on the skids and in a state of decline.

The truth was discovered after Major League Baseball published a complete DVD set of all of the games of the 1977 World Series. Coverage of the fire begins with Keith Jackson commenting on the enormity of the blaze, while Cosell added that President Carter had visited that area just days before. As the top of the second inning began, the fire was once again shown from a helicopter-mounted camera, and Cosell commented that the New York Fire Department had a hard job to do in the Bronx as there were always numerous fires. In the bottom of the second, Cosell informed the audience that it was an abandoned building that was burning and no lives were in danger. There was no further comment on the fire, and Cosell appears to have never said "The Bronx is Burning" (at least not on camera) during Game 2.[70]

1978–1979 edit

In 1978,[71] Baseball Hall of Famer Don Drysdale joined ABC Sports with assignments such as Monday Night Baseball, Superstars, and Wide World of Sports. In 1979,[72] Drysdale covered the World Series Trophy presentation. According to Drysdale "My thing is to talk about inside things. Keith [Jackson] does play-by-play. Howard's [Cosell] role is anything since anything can happen in broadcasting." When ABC released and then rehired him in 1981, Drysdale explained it by saying "If there is nothing to say, be quiet." Ultimately, Drysdale seemed to be slowly phased out of the ABC picture as fellow pitcher Jim Palmer was considered ABC's new poster child "[of] superior looks and...popularity from underwear commercials." By 1989, Palmer would earn $350,000 from ABC for appearing on around ten regular season broadcasts and making a few postseason appearances.[73]

For a national television audience, the 1978 American League East tie-breaker game (New York Yankees/Boston Red Sox) aired on ABC with Keith Jackson and Don Drysdale on the call. Meanwhile, the game aired locally in New York City on WPIX and WSBK-TV in Boston with local announcers. Also in 1978, Keith Jackson called an Oklahoma-Texas college football game for ABC and then, flew to New York, arriving just in time to call Game 4 of the ALCS that same night (October 7).

In 1979, the start of ABC's Monday Night Baseball coverage was moved back to June, due to poor ratings during the May sweeps period. In place of April and May prime time games, ABC began airing Sunday Afternoon Baseball games in September.[74] The network also aired one Friday night game (the Yankees at the Angels) on July 13 of that year. On August 6, 1979, the entire Yankee team attended team captain/catcher Thurman Munson's funeral in Canton, Ohio. Teammates Lou Piniella and Bobby Murcer, who were Munson's best friends, gave eulogies. That night (before a national viewing audience on ABC's Monday Night Baseball) the Yankees beat the Baltimore Orioles 5–4 in New York, with Murcer driving in all five runs with a three-run home run in the seventh inning and a two-run single in the bottom of the ninth.[75]

For the 1979 World Series, ABC used play-by-play announcers Keith Jackson (in Baltimore) and Al Michaels (in Pittsburgh), and color commentators Howard Cosell and Don Drysdale. ABC's broadcast was also simulcast over the Orioles' and Pirates' respective local television outlets, CBS affiliates WMAR-TV in Baltimore and KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh, in addition to ABC's own affiliates WJZ-TV and WTAE-TV. After the sixth game, Howard Cosell in his limo was surrounded and attacked by angry Oriole fans with shaving cream, which prompted Baltimore police to complement his private security for Game 7.[76]

1980s edit

ABC hardly showed many baseball games during the regular season in the 1980s. And when they did, it was only on either Monday or Thursday nights from the end of Sweeps Week in late May until when the NFL Preseason started in the first week of August. After that, they typically would not broadcast baseball again until the playoffs. ABC also had a clause where they could air a game the last day of the regular season if it had playoff implications, such as in 1987 in regards to the Detroit Tigers' American League East pennant chase against the Toronto Blue Jays. The team of Al Michaels, Jim Palmer, and Tim McCarver called that game nationally.[77] However, in 1986, ABC did do a number of early season Sunday afternoon games before they went into Monday Night Baseball.

1980–1982 edit

ABC's contract was further modified prior to the 1980 season, with the network airing just five Monday Night Baseball telecasts in June of that year, followed by Sunday Afternoon Baseball in August and September. ABC did Sunday afternoon games late in the season to fulfill the number of games in the contract and to not interfere with Monday Night Football. Also in 1980, ABC (with Al Michaels and Bob Uecker on the call) broadcast the National League West tie-breaker game between the Houston Astros and Los Angeles Dodgers.[78] On October 11, 1980, Keith Jackson called an Oklahoma-Texas college football game for ABC in the afternoon, then flew to Houston to call Game 4 of the NLCS). In the meantime, Don Drysdale did the play-by-play for the early innings (up until the middle of the fourth inning). Meanwhile, ABC used Steve Zabriskie[79] as a field reporter during the 1980 NLCS.

In 1981, ABC planned to increase coverage to 10 Monday night games and eight Sunday afternoon[80][81][82][83][84][85][86][87][88][89][90][91] games, but the players' strike that year ended up reducing the network's schedule to three Monday night and seven Sunday afternoon telecasts. Also in 1981, as means to recoup revenue lost during a players' strike, Major League Baseball set up a special additional playoff round (as a prelude to the League Championship Series). ABC televised the American League Division Series while NBC televised the National League Division Series. The Division Series round wasn't officially instituted until 14 years later. Games 3 of the Brewers/Yankees series and Royals/Athletics series were aired regionally. On October 10, Keith Jackson called an Oklahoma-Texas college football game for ABC and missed Game 4 of the Milwaukee-New York series. In Jackson's absence, Don Drysdale filled-in for him on play-by-play alongside Howard Cosell. On a trivial note the ABC's affiliates, WTEN in Albany, New York and its satellite WCDC-TV in Adams, Massachusetts, as well as WIXT (now WSYR-TV) in Syracuse, New York, did not carry any of ABC's games at that time because of the New York Yankees games that were simulcast from New York City's WPIX, movies, and syndicated series and specials among others to provide advertising for those extra money.

In 1982, ABC aired 11 Monday night games and one Sunday afternoon game. Following his retirement, Steve Stone was hired by ABC[92] to serve as a color commentator[93] for their Monday Night Baseball[94] telecasts. Stone was normally paired with Al Michaels[95] and Bob Uecker[96] in the booth.

Also in 1982, Baltimore Orioles manager Earl Weaver announced he would retire at the end of the season, one which saw the Orioles wallow at the back of the pack for the first half of the year before climbing in the standings to just three games behind going into a season-ending four-game series against the division-leading Milwaukee Brewers at Baltimore's Memorial Stadium. The Orioles beat them handily in the first three games to pull into a first-place tie. The final game of the series, and the season, on October 3, would decide the AL East title. Televised nationally on a Sunday afternoon on ABC[97] (with Keith Jackson and Howard Cosell on the call), the Orioles suffered a crushing 10–2 loss. After the game, the crowd called for Weaver to come out. This tribute to the retiring Weaver provided intense emotion against the backdrop of the season-ending defeat, as Weaver, in tears, stood on the field and applauded back to the fans, and shared words and an embrace with Brewers manager Harvey Kuenn.

Game 1 of the 1982 NLCS had to be played twice. In the first attempt (on October 6), the Atlanta Braves led against the St. Louis Cardinals 1–0 behind Phil Niekro. The game was three outs away becoming official when the umpire stopped it. When the rain did not subside, the game was canceled.[98] Game 1 began from the start the following night in a pitching match-up of Pascual Pérez for the Braves and longtime Cardinal starter Bob Forsch. Howard Cosell did not broadcast Game 2 of the 1982 NLCS (alongside Al Michaels and Tommy Lasorda[99]) because of his commitment of hosting the Pittsburgh Steelers' 50th Anniversary dinner in Pittsburgh on October 9, 1982, which was broadcast live on Pittsburgh's ABC affiliate, WTAE-TV and Pittsburgh's NBC affiliate, WPXI-TV. ABC's Jim Lampley[100] interviewed the winners in the Cardinals' clubhouse after clinching the National League pennant in Game 3.

The ABC's coverage of 1982 American League Championship Series between the Milwaukee Brewers and California Angels, featured the broadcast team of Keith Jackson,[101] Jim Palmer, and Earl Weaver. In his final assignment as a member of ABC's baseball broadcasting team, Bob Uecker interviewed the victorious members of the Brewers from their clubhouse following Game 5. Meanwhile, Ted Dawson[102][103][104] interviewed 1982 ALCS Most Valuable Player Fred Lynn (the first player from the losing side to be awarded the MVP Award for a League Championship Series), Bobby Grich, and manager Gene Mauch from the Angels' clubhouse after Game 5. Following the 1982 ALCS, Keith Jackson wouldn't be assigned to broadcast further Major League Baseball games for ABC until the 1986 season.

1983–1989 television package edit

On April 7, 1983, Major League Baseball, ABC, and NBC agreed to terms of a six-year television package[105] worth $1.2 billion. The two networks continued to alternate coverage of the playoffs (ABC in even numbered years and NBC in odd numbered years), World Series (ABC televised the World Series in odd numbered years and NBC in even numbered years), and All-Star Game (ABC televised the All-Star Game[106] in even numbered years[107] and NBC in odd numbered years) through the 1989[108] season, with each of the 26 clubs receiving $7 million per year in return. The last package gave each club $1.9 million per year. ABC contributed $575 million for regular season prime time and Sunday afternoons and NBC paid $550 million for thirty Saturday afternoon games. ABC was contracted to televise 20 prime time regular season games a year in addition to other games (the aforementioned Sunday afternoon games). But ABC didn't come close to using that many, which meant they actually paid for games they weren't showing. To give you some perspective, ABC televised six prime time games in 1984 and eight 1985. They planned to again televise eight prime time games in 1986.

USA Network's coverage became a casualty of the new $1.2 billion TV contract between Major League Baseball, ABC and NBC. One of the provisions to the new deal was that local telecasts opposite network games had to be eliminated.[109]

1983 marked the last time that local telecasts of League Championship Series games were allowed. In 1982, Major League Baseball recognized a problem with this due to the emergence of cable superstations such as WTBS in Atlanta and WGN-TV in Chicago. When TBS tried to petition for the right to do a "local" Braves broadcast of the 1982 NLCS,[110] Major League Baseball got a Philadelphia federal court[111][112] to ban[113] them on the grounds that as a cable superstation, TBS couldn't have a nationwide telecast competing with ABC's.

On June 6, 1983, Al Michaels officially succeeded Keith Jackson as the lead play-by-play announcer for Monday Night Baseball. Michaels, who spent seven seasons working backup games, was apparently very miffed[114] over ABC Sports' delay in announcing him as their top baseball announcer. Unlike Jackson, whose forte was college football, Michaels had gigs with the Cincinnati Reds and San Francisco Giants before joining ABC in 1976. TV Guide huffed about Jackson by saying "A football guy, on baseball!" Jackson was unavailable for several World Series games in 1979 and 1981 because of conflicts with his otherwise normal college football broadcasting schedule. Thus, Michaels did play-by-play for games on weekends.

Earl Weaver was the lead ABC color commentator in 1983, but was also employed by the Baltimore Orioles as a consultant. At the time, ABC had a policy preventing an announcer who was employed by a team from working games involving that team. So whenever the Orioles were on the primary ABC game, Weaver worked the backup game. This policy forced Weaver to resign from the Orioles' consulting position in October so that he could work the World Series[115][116] for ABC.

The 1984 NLCS[117] schedule (which had an off day after Game 3 rather than Game 2) allowed ABC to have a prime time game each weeknight even though Chicago's Wrigley Field[118][119][120][121][122] did not have lights at the time (which remained the case until four years later). ABC used Tim McCarver as a field reporter during the 1984 NLCS. During the regular season, McCarver teamed with Don Drysdale (who teamed with Earl Weaver and Reggie Jackson for the 1984 NLCS) on backup games[123] while Al Michaels, Jim Palmer, and Earl Weaver/Howard Cosell formed ABC's lead broadcast team. For ABC's coverage of the 1984 All-Star Game, Jim Palmer only served as a between innings analyst.

Had the 1984 ALCS between the Detroit Tigers and Kansas City Royals gone the full five games (the last year that the League Championship Series was a best-of-five series), Game 5 on Sunday October 7, would have been a 1 p.m. ET time start instead of being in prime time. This would have happened because one of the presidential debates[124] between Ronald Reagan and Walter Mondale was scheduled for that night. In return, ABC was going to broadcast the debates instead of a baseball game in prime time. Al Trautwig[125] interviewed the Detroit Tigers from their clubhouse following their pennant clinching victory in Game 3.

Between his stints with the California Angels and Oakland Athletics in 1985, Tommy John[126] served as color commentator alongside Tim McCarver for a game between the Chicago White Sox and the Athletics in Oakland on Monday Night Baseball on June 24.[127] McCarver's normal broadcast partner in 1985,[128] Don Drysdale couldn't partake in the June 24 broadcast out of fear of it appearing as a "conflict of interest". Drysdale in addition to his ABC duties, was an announcer for the White Sox at the time. This situation was similar to the one with Earl Weaver being prohibited from taking part in ABC's broadcasts of Baltimore Orioles games in 1983.

In 1985, ABC announced that every game of the World Series[129] would be played under the lights for the biggest baseball audience possible. Just prior to the start of the 1985 World Series,[130][131] ABC removed Howard Cosell from scheduled announcing duties[132] as punishment for his controversial book I Never Played the Game. In Cosell's place came Tim McCarver[133] (joining play-by-play man Michaels and fellow color commentator Jim Palmer), who was beginning his trek of being a part of numerous World Series telecasts. Reportedly, by 1985, Cosell was considered to be difficult to work with on baseball telecasts. Apparently, Cosell and Michaels got into a fairly heated argument following the conclusion of their coverage of the 1984 American League Championship Series due to Cosell's supposed drunkenness among other problems.[134][135][136] Rumor has it that Michaels went as far as to urged ABC executives to remove Cosell from the booth. Ultimately, Michaels went public with his problems with Cosell.[137] Michaels claimed that "Howard had become a cruel, evil, vicious person."

In the end, the very last baseball game that Howard Cosell would help broadcast for ABC and his very last assignment for ABC Sports in general, was a game between the between the Kansas City Royals and Minnesota Twins[138] in Minneapolis on Sunday, September 29, 1985.

Perhaps Al Michaels's first historic call with ABC Sports while covering Major League Baseball occurred in what is now known by many as the Don Denkinger game on October 26, 1985. The Kansas City Royals trailed the St. Louis Cardinals 3–1 in a World Series that was panned for being low-scoring and dull. After a Royals win in St. Louis forced the action back to Kansas City, the sixth game was also low scoring. However, this contest grew into a tense pitcher's duel.

In the bottom of the 9th, pinch-hitter Jorge Orta led off for the Royals against Cardinals pitcher Todd Worrell with Kansas City trailing 1–0 and hit a ground ball to first baseman Jack Clark. Clark threw over to pitcher Worrell, who was running over to cover first base in time to beat the speedy Orta and did. Yet first base umpire Don Denkinger still called Orta safe at first. Steve Balboni then hit a pop-up to first which Jack Clark missed for an error, keeping Balboni's at-bat alive, and he promptly singled to put men on first and second.

The infamous and controversial leadoff single by Orta and the Jack Clark error eventually led to the Royals loading the bases and putting the tying run on third base and the winning run on second with one out for Dane Iorg. Iorg hit a 2-run single and the Royals came back to win 2–1. The Royals went on to win Game 7 11–0 and complete the comeback after being down 3 games to 1. However, it was Denkinger's dubious 'safe' call, and not Iorg's hit, Clark's error, Jim Sundberg's heroics (for his difficult slide past catcher Darrell Porter for the winning run) or the Game 7 blowout that were most remembered in years to come.

Little squibber to the right side, Worrell racing to cover and the throw doesn't get him!

— Al Michaels[139] describing Don Denkinger's infamous call in Game 6 of the 1985 World Series.

1986–1988 edit

By 1986, ABC only televised 13 Monday Night Baseball games.[140] This was a fairly sharp contrast to the 18 games to that were scheduled in 1978. The Sporting News believed that ABC paid Major League Baseball to not make them televise the regular season. No late season games in September[141] were scheduled in 1986. TSN added that the network only wanted the sport for October anyway. Going into 1987, ABC had reportedly purchased 20 Monday night games but only used eight of those slots.[142] More to the point, CBS Sports president Neal Pilson said "Three years ago, we believed ABC's package was overpriced[143] by $175 million. We still believe it's overpriced by $175 million."[144]

During the 1986 season, Don Drysdale did play-by-play ABC's Sunday afternoon games,[145] which aired until July, when Monday Night Baseball began. ABC's Monday night schedule in 1986, then started on July 7 and ran through August 25. Al Michaels did the main Sunday game usually with Jim Palmer, while Drysdale and Johnny Bench did the backup contests.[146] Keith Jackson,[147] working with Tim McCarver, did the secondary Monday night games. Bench took a week off in June (with Steve Busby filling in) and also worked one game with Michaels as the networks switched the announcer pairings. While Drysdale worked the All-Star Game in Houston as an interviewer, he did not resurface until the playoffs. Bench simply disappeared, ultimately going to CBS Radio.

On October 12, 1986, at Anaheim Stadium, Al Michaels[148] along with Jim Palmer called Game 5 of the American League Championship Series.[149][150] The California Angels[151] held a 3 games to 1 lead of a best-of-seven against the Boston Red Sox. In the game, the Angels held a 5–2 lead going into the ninth inning. Boston scored two runs on a home run by Don Baylor, closing the gap to 5–4.

When Donnie Moore came in to shut down the rally, there were two outs, and a runner on first base, Rich Gedman, who had been hit by a pitch. The Angels were one out[152] from their first-ever trip to the World Series. But Dave Henderson[153][154] hit a 2–2 pitch off Moore for a home run, giving the Red Sox a 6–5 lead. The Angels were able to score a run in the bottom of the ninth, pushing the game into extra innings. Moore continued to pitch for the Angels. He was able to stifle a 10th inning Red Sox rally by getting Jim Rice to ground into a double play. Nevertheless, the Red Sox were able to score off Moore in the 11th-inning via a sacrifice fly by Henderson. The Angels could not score in the bottom of the 11th and lost the game 7–6.

The defeat still left the Angels in a 3 games to 2 advantage, with two more games to play at Fenway Park. The Angels were not able to recover, losing both games by wide margins, 10–4 and 8–1. Game 7 of the 1986 ALCS ended with Calvin Schiraldi striking out Jerry Narron.

The Red Sox can go from last rites to the World Series...and they do!

— Al Michaels' call of Calvin Schiraldi's final strikeout in Game 7 of the 1986 ALCS.

On October 15, 1986, Game 6 of the NLCS ran so long (lasting for 16 innings, 5 hours and 29 minutes), it bumped up against the start time of Game 7 of the ALCS (also on ABC). That same game, color commentator Tim McCarver left the booth during the bottom of the 16th, to cover the expected celebration in the New York Mets' clubhouse. As a result, play-by-play man Keith Jackson was on the air alone for a short time. Eventually, McCarver rejoined the broadcast just before the end of the game, watching the action on a monitor in the Mets' clubhouse, then doing the postgame interviews with the Mets. Meanwhile, Corey McPherrin, a sports anchor with WABC (ABC's flagship station out of New York City) interviewed Mike Scott when he was presented with the 1986 NLCS MVP award after Game 6. During the late 1980s, McPherrin delivered in-game updates during ABC's Monday Night Baseball[155][156] and Thursday Night Baseball broadcasts.

Game 6 of the 1986 NLCS turned out to be the final Major League Baseball game that Keith Jackson would broadcast.[157] Meanwhile, in his last ever ABC assignment, Don Drysdale[158] interviewed the winners in the Boston clubhouse following Game 7 of the 1986 ALCS.

For the 1987 World Series between the Minnesota Twins and St. Louis Cardinals, ABC used 12 cameras and nine tape machines. This includes cameras positioned down the left field line, on the roof of the Metrodome, and high above third base. There have been a few occasions when two Monday Night Football games were played simultaneously. In 1987, a scheduling conflict arose when Major League Baseball's Minnesota Twins went to Game 7 of the World Series,[159] making the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome unavailable for the Minnesota Vikings' scheduled game (against the Denver Broncos) that Sunday. Game 6 of the 1987 World Series (played on Saturday, October 24) was the last World Series game to not be played in prime time. The game started at 4 p.m. Eastern Time. Another weekend afternoon sixth game was planned for 1988, however, since the World Series ended in five games, it was unnecessary.

The 1987 World Series was the final one that ABC aired that went the full seven games. The next time that ABC broadcast a World Series in 1989, the Oakland Athletics swept the San Francisco Giants in four games. For the final World Series that ABC broadcast to date, 1995, they split the coverage with NBC. ABC only covered Games 1, 4–5 and a seventh game had it been necessary. ABC overall, drew a 24.0 rating[160] for their coverage of the 1987 World Series.

In a February 2015 interview, Al Michaels alleged the Twins pumped artificial crowd noise into the Metrodome during the 1987 World Series. Responding to Michaels' theory, Twins President Dave St. Peter said that he did not think the Twins needed "conspiracy theories" in order to win the World Series. Instead, he argued that "appreciation and respect" should be paid to players like Frank Viola, Gary Gaetti, Kent Hrbek, and Kirby Puckett, who, he said, "came out of nowhere to win a championship."[161]

To Gaetti...for the first time ever, the Minnesota Twins are the World Champions!

— Al Michaels calling the final out of Game 7 of the 1987 World Series[162] on ABC.

During the 1988 Writers Guild of America strike, networks benefited from sports programming, including NBC, which relied on the Summer Olympics in September and the World Series in October, and ABC, which in addition to its postseason baseball coverage,[163][164] moved up the start time for the early weeks of Monday Night Football (when Al Michaels was unavailable to do play-by-play on Monday Night Football, which he had done for ABC beginning in 1986 due to his postseason baseball duties, Frank Gifford covered for him) from 9 p.m. ET to 8 pm. ET (MacGyver, which normally aired at 8 pm, was not yet ready with new episodes).

Come the 1988 League Championship Series,[165][166][167][168][169][170] ABC under the guidance of new executive producer Geoffrey Mason,[171] debuted fatter and wider graphics[172] that gave off a cleaner, sharper look complete with a black border. ABC also debuted a new energetic, symphonic-pop styled musical theme,[173][174] composed by Kurt Bestor,[175] which would become an all-compassing theme of sorts for ABC Sports during this time period. ABC also begun employing the services of Pinnacle Productions Inc.,[176] a video-production company based out of Spokane, Washington,[177] to create the opening title sequences for their sports telecasts.

ABC's coverage of Game 2[178] of the 1988 NLCS[168] didn't start until 10 pm. ET due to a presidential debate. This is the latest ever scheduled start for an LCS game.

Gary Bender did play-by-play for the 1988 American League Championship Series[179][180] between the Oakland Athletics and Boston Red Sox. Bender spent two years (1987–1988) as the No. 2 baseball play-by-play man for ABC behind Al Michaels. Bender worked the backup Monday Night Baseball broadcasts (with Tim McCarver in 1987 and Joe Morgan[181] in 1988) as well as serving as a field reporter for ABC's 1987 World Series coverage. After Bender spent an entire summer developing a team with Joe Morgan, ABC brought in Reggie Jackson[182] to work with the duo for the 1988 ALCS. According to Bender's autobiography Call of the Game (pages 118–120),[183] ABC's decision to bring in Jackson to work with Bender and Morgan caused problems:

Reggie is one of the strongest personalities I've ever met. He epitomizes the big-name athlete who has become a great player, in part because of his ego, but who does not have the sensitivity to let go of that ego when working with others. Consequently, Reggie demanded things he hadn't earned the right to demand. He wanted more attention. He insisted we adjust our way of doing things for him.

During the spare time of his active career, Reggie Jackson worked as a field reporter and color commentator for ABC Sports. During the 1980s (1983, 1985, and 1987 respectively), Jackson was given the task of presiding over the World Series Trophy presentations.

After wrapping up his play-by-play duties for ABC's coverage of the 1988 ALCS, in which Oakland swept Boston in four games, Gary Bender[184][185] covered the postgame interviews in the victorious Los Angeles Dodgers' clubhouse following Game 7 of the 1988 NLCS against the New York Mets. Three days earlier, Mike Barry[186] interviewed Boston manager Joe Morgan following their defeat to Oakland in Game 4 of the ALCS.

1989 edit

On December 14, 1988, CBS[187] (under the guidance of Commissioner Peter Ueberroth,[188][189][190] Major League Baseball's broadcast director Bryan Burns,[191][192][193] CBS Inc. CEO Laurence Tisch[194][195][196][197] as well as CBS Sports executives Neal Pilson[198] and Eddie Einhorn) paid approximately US$1.8 billion (equivalent to 2.46 billion in 2022)[191][199] for exclusive over-the-air television rights for over four years (beginning in 1990). CBS paid about $265 million each year[200] for the World Series, League Championship Series, All-Star Game, and the Saturday Game of the Week. It was one of the largest agreements[201] (to date) between the sport of baseball and the business of broadcasting. The cost of the deal between CBS and Major League Baseball was about 25% more[202] than in the previous television contract with ABC and NBC.[203]

According to industry insiders, neither NBC nor ABC wanted the entire baseball package—that is, regular-season games, both League Championship Series and the World Series—because such a commitment would have required them to preempt too many highly rated prime time shows. Thus, ABC and NBC bid thinking that two of the networks might share postseason play again or that one of the championship series might wind up on cable. Peter Ueberroth had encouraged the cable idea, but after the bids were opened, NBC and ABC found to their chagrin that he preferred network exposure for all postseason games. Only CBS, with its weak prime time programming, dared go for that.

In 1989 (the final year of ABC's contract with Major League Baseball), ABC moved the baseball telecasts to Thursday nights[204][205][206][207][208][209][210][211][212] in hopes of getting leg up against NBC's Cosby Show. Scott Muni, a disc jockey, who worked at the heyday of the AM Top 40 format and then was a pioneer of FM progressive rock radio, voiced promos for ABC's Thursday Night Baseball broadcasts. ABC was also still in-line to air a special Sunday afternoon telecast[213] on October 1 in the event that the American League East race between the Toronto Blue Jays and Baltimore Orioles still hadn't been decided. But since the Blue Jays managed to clinch the divisional title the day prior, it wasn't necessary.

After braving the traumatic Loma Prieta earthquake[214] and an all-time low 16.4 rating[215] for the 1989 World Series,[216] Al Michaels took ABC's loss of baseball to CBS[217][218][219] as "tough to accept." Michaels added that "baseball was such an early stepchild at ABC and had come such a long way."[220] Gary Thorne,[221] who served as ABC's backup play-by-play announcer[222] in 1989 and was an on-field reporter for the World Series[223] that year (and covered the trophy presentation in the process), simply laughed while saying "Great reviews, just as ABC baseball ends."[224] Meanwhile, Dennis Swanson, president of ABC Sports, noted in a statement that baseball had been a blue-chip franchise since 1976 for the network, which was disappointed to lose it.[140] After ABC lost the Major League Baseball package to CBS, they aggressively counterprogrammed CBS' postseason baseball coverage (like NBC) with made-for-TV movies and miniseries geared towards female viewers.[225]

I'll miss it. I've been involved with this (ABC) package since Day One (in 1976). Especially now, because beginning with our postseason coverage in 1985 [That's when analysts Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver permanently joined ABC's baseball crew, teaming with producer Curt Gowdy Jr.[226] and director Craig Janoff], I really felt we'd put it together the way I'd always dreamed about it. In the early years, we attempted to cover it in a different fashion. ABC had been gigantically successful with 'Wide World of Sports' and with covering the Olympic Games. A number of people in our company wanted to cover baseball (like) gymnastics and swimming and other 'Wide World' events. Attempting to do that was basically, in the early years, an abysmal failure. Baseball needs to be looked at in a certain manner. You need people in it who understand the game and truly love the game. It took us a while to get the right people and the right group together. I know some of the NBC people recently have talked about their cameramen, their audio men, the guys involved with their telecasts are baseball fans. They love baseball. It took us a while to get up to speed in that area. But once we did, we began to cover it as well as it's been covered. I'm tremendously proud of what we have done, especially from the 1985 postseason coverage on. We got to a point, especially in the last couple of years, (where) nothing can stop us now. And the only thing that stopped us was the fact we lost the rights.

— Al Michaels to the Chicago Tribune on October 17, 1989.

According to ABC broadcast engineer Dan Rapak in the book Brought to You by . . ., ABC's coverage of the 1989 World Series was about to become a case study in financial stupidity. By this point in time, ABC Sports was well into cost-cutting mode[227] and trying to avoid unnecessarily expenditure. ABC decided that to save money, there would be no satellite uplink trunk present at San Francisco's Candlestick Park. Instead, the feed from San Francisco back to ABC's headquarters in New York City would take a complex, circuitous route. For starters, the signal would go from the truck to a telephone company room (dubbed a "clamper room") at the third level of the stadium. From there, the signal would be transmitted over a fiber optic cable onto the local phone company switching office. From there, the signal would be sent to KGO, ABC's owned-and-operated station in the San Francisco Bay Area. The signal would then pass through KGO's Master Control Room and soon uplinked to a satellite which relayed the signal to a downlink in Connecticut. Finally, the signal would be sent to the ABC Television Complex in New York.

Rapak added that to save further costs, ABC decided that an on-site telephone company technician wasn't really necessary. As such, ABC wouldn't pay to have him on site just in case any problems might have arise with the phone company's equipment. Not only that, but ABC merely rented a small standby generator to protect them in the event of a power failure. ABC's management decided that it would be too costly to have a large "transfer switch" shipped in from ABC Sports' field shop in Lodi, New Jersey. This particular switch would be able to shift the entire load of all the mobile units from local utility power to the generator with a single pull of a large lever. But since ABC's engineers who were working at Candlestick Park during the 1989 World Series had no means of quickly putting the generator into service should the need arise, they would have to instead, kill the utility power sources for safety. They would then have to disconnect more than a dozen huge power cables from the power boxes inside of the stadium. Next, they would have to physically drag the power cables outside of the stadium and reconnect all of them to turn the generator on. This in effect, meant that the changeover would've taken approximately 10 minutes, when it could've simply taken less than a minute.

If you'll indulge us just another moment, this is the end of our association with baseball. I think as many of you may know, the primary package goes to CBS. And to our friends at what's known in the industry as "Black Rock", good luck in 1990 and beyond. To those of you at NBC, for 41 years you made this an art form! And to people especially like Curt Gowdy Sr., the fabulous announcer...to the Hall of Fame director Harry Coyle...and down through the years...to Tony Kubek and the people of the present like Bob Costas and all the men and women at NBC, at the peacock...take a bow, you were terrific![228] And we're done...for a while anyway after 14 years at ABC. We want to thank you for watching and we want to thank all the people that have come together to work on our telecasts. We have our own Curt Gowdy, Curt Gowdy Jr., who has been our terrific producer. And Craig Janoff and to the incomparable Steve Hirdt, it's been a great ride for 14 years. We're going to show you all the names right now, gentlemen...roll the credits as we say goodnight...from San Francisco![229]

— Al Michaels at the end of ABC's coverage of the 1989 World Series.

Prior to the start of the 1990 season, speculation arose that Al Michaels would move over to CBS in the event that he won an arbitration case against ABC. Tim McCarver[230][231][232] had already been hired by CBS to serve as their lead color commentator and they were in need of a play-by-play man[233][234][235][236][237] following the abrupt dismissal of[238][239] Brent Musburger[222][240][241] on April Fools' Day 1990. Michaels had been feuding[242] with the network over an alleged violation of company policy. Michaels' contract with ABC was originally set to expire in late 1992. Ultimately however, ABC announced a contract extension that sources said would keep Michaels at ABC through at least the end of 1995 and would pay him at least $2.2 million annually with the potential to earn more. That would make Michaels the highest-paid sports announcer in television. Meanwhile, CBS eventually settled on using the services of Jack Buck[243][244][245][246] for their top play-by-play man.

Loma Prieta earthquake edit

Game 3 of the 1989 World Series[247][248][249] (initially scheduled for October 17[174]) was delayed by ten days due to the Loma Prieta earthquake.[250] The earthquake struck at approximately 5:04 p.m. Pacific Time. At the moment the quake struck, ABC's color commentator Tim McCarver[251] was narrating taped highlights of the previous Series game. Viewers saw the video signal begin to break up, heard McCarver repeat a sentence as the shaking distracted him, and heard McCarver's colleague Al Michaels[252] exclaim, "I'll tell you what, we're having an earth—."[253] At that moment, the feed from Candlestick Park was lost.[254] The network put up a green ABC Sports telop graphic as the audio was switched to a telephone link. Michaels had to pick up a POTS phone in the press booth (phones work off a separate power supply) and call ABC headquarters in New York, at which point they put him back on the air. Michaels cracked, "Well folks, that's the greatest open in the history of television, bar none!" accompanied by the excited screams of fans who had no idea of the devastation elsewhere.[255]

After about a 15-minute delay (ABC aired a rerun of Roseanne[256][257] and subsequently, The Wonder Years[258] in the meantime), ABC was able to regain power via a backup generator.[259] ABC's play-by-play man, Al Michaels (who was familiar[247] with the San Francisco Bay Area[260] dating back to his days working for the San Francisco Giants from 19741976) then proceeded to relay reports to Ted Koppel[261][262][263][264][265] at ABC News' headquarters in Washington, D.C. Al Michaels was ultimately nominated for an Emmy for his on-site reporting at the World Series.

The Goodyear Blimp was aloft above the ballpark to provide aerial coverage of the World Series. Blimp pilot John Crayton reported that he felt four bumps during the quake.[266] ABC was able to use the blimp to capture some of the first images of the damage to the Bay Bridge.[267]

At this very moment ten days ago, we began our telecast with an aerial view of San Francisco; always a spectacular sight, and particularly so on that day because the cloudless sky of October 17 was ice blue, and the late-day sun sparkled like a thousand jewels.

That picture was very much a mirror of the feel and the mood that had enveloped the Bay Area...and most of Northern California. Their baseball teams, the Giants and A's, had won pennants, and the people of this region were still basking in the afterglow of each team's success. And this great American sporting classic, the World Series, was, for the time being, exclusively theirs.

Then of course the feeling of pure radiance was transformed into horror and grief and despair- in just fifteen seconds.[268] And now on October 27, like a fighter who's taken a vicious blow to the stomach and has groggily arisen, this region moves on and moves ahead.

And one part of that scenario is the resumption of the World Series. No one in this ballpark tonight- no player, no vendor, no fan, no writer, no announcer, in fact, no one in this area period- can forget the images. The column of smoke in the Marina. The severed bridge. The grotesque tangle of concrete in Oakland. The pictures are embedded in our minds.

And while the mourning and the suffering and the aftereffects will continue, in about thirty minutes the plate umpire, Vic Voltaggio will say 'Play Ball', and the players will play, the vendors will sell, the announcers will announce, the crowd will exhort. And for many of the six million people in this region, it will be like revisiting Fantasyland.

But Fantasyland is where baseball comes from anyway and maybe right about now that's the perfect place for a three-hour rest.[269]

— Al Michaels at the beginning of ABC's telecast of the resumption of Game 3 of the 1989 World Series.

1990s edit

After a four-year-long hiatus (when CBS exclusively carried the over-the-air Major League Baseball television rights, as previously mentioned), ABC returned to baseball[270] in (again, alongside NBC[271]) 1994.

Under a six-year plan,[272] Major League Baseball was intended to receive 85% of the first $140 million[219] in advertising in advertising revenue (or 87.5%[273] of advertising revenues and corporate sponsorship[274] from the games until sales top a specified level), 50% of the next $30 million, and 80% of any additional money. Prior to this, Major League Baseball was projected to take a projected 55% cut in rights fees and receive a typical rights fee from the networks.

After NBC's coverage of 1994 All-Star Game was completed, ABC would air[275] regular season games on Saturdays[276] or Mondays[277] for the next six-weeks. Joining the lead broadcast team of Al Michaels, Jim Palmer, and Tim McCarver was Lesley Visser, who served as the lead field reporter for the CBS' baseball coverage from 1990 to 1993. Visser was reuniting with McCarver, for whom she had worked with on CBS. The regular season games fell under the Baseball Night in America umbrella which premiered on July 16, 1994. On the subject of play-by-play man Al Michaels returning to baseball for the first time since the 1989 World Series, Jim Palmer said "Here Al is, having done five games since 1989 and steps right in. It's hard to comprehend how one guy could so amaze." Meanwhile, Brent Musburger,[278][279][280][281] CBS alumnus Jim Kaat, and reporter Jack Arute became the secondary team for ABC. Musburger[282] and Kaat called the rest of the 1995 American League Division Series between the Seattle Mariners and New York Yankees and the first two games of that year's American League Championship Series between Seattle and the Cleveland Indians.

No balls and a strike to Martínez. Line drive, we are tied! Griffey is coming around! In the corner is Bernie. He's going to try to score! Here's the division championship! Mariners win it! Mariners win it!

— Brent Musburger calling[279] Edgar Martínez's game winning double in Game 5 of the 1995 ALDS between the Seattle Mariners and the New York Yankees.

In even-numbered years, NBC had the rights to the All-Star Game and both League Championship Series while ABC had the World Series[283] and newly created Division Series.[284] In odd-numbered years, both League Championship Series and All-Star Game[285] television rights were supposed to alternate. As such, ABC would ultimately broadcast[286] the 1995 All-Star Game[287] from The Ballpark in Arlington in Arlington, Texas. It was ABC's first broadcast of the All-Star Game since the 1988 contest in Cincinnati. On Sunday, July 2, ABC aired a one-hour special[288] hosted by Al Michaels that announced the names of the players who were selected to play in the 1995 All-Star Game.

ABC won the rights to the first dibs at the World Series in August 1993 after ABC Sports president Dennis Swanson won a coin toss[289] by calling "heads." Ken Schanzer, who was the CEO of The Baseball Network, handled the coin toss. Schanzer agreed to the coin toss by ABC and NBC at the outset as the means of determining the order in which they'd divvy up the playoffs.

While ABC and NBC would provide some production personnel and their own announcers[290][291] for the games,[292][293] all of would be coordinated from the office of Ken Schanzer,[294][295][296] the chief executive officer of The Baseball Network and former executive vice president for NBC Sports. The graphics, camera placements, and audio quality were intended on looking and sounding about the same on both networks.

Hi everyone, and welcome to Baseball Night in America, I'm Al Michaels. And those of us at ABC are delighted to be back in the business of broadcasting baseball for the first time since the 1989 World Series. And it's a brand new concept, we'll have six[297] regular season games on ABC, including tonight and again on Monday night. Then, we'll bring you the Division playoffs in October, part of baseball's new expanded playoff format, and the World Series in late October. Baseball Night in America, a regionalized[298] concept, you'll see a game in your region that's important to those of you in those particular areas. It also gives us the capability of updating games as never before. So sit back, relax and enjoy the premiere of Baseball Night in America as we take you out to the ballgames.

— Al Michaels on site at Seattle's Kingdome on the premiere broadcast of Baseball Night in America on July 16, 1994.

The long-term plans for The Baseball Network crumbled when the players went on strike on August 12, 1994 (thus forcing the cancellation of the World Series[299]). In July 1995, ABC and NBC, who wound up having to share the duties of televising the 1995 World Series[300] as a way to recoup (with ABC broadcasting Games 1,[301] 4, and 5 and NBC broadcasting Games 2, 3, and 6), announced[302] that they were opting[303][304] out of their agreement[305] with Major League Baseball. Both networks figured that as the delayed 1995 baseball season opened without a labor agreement, there was no guarantee against another strike. Both networks soon publicly vowed to cut all ties with Major League Baseball for the rest of the 20th century.[306][307]

Al Michaels would later write in his 2014 autobiography You Can't Make This Up: Miracles, Memories, and the Perfect Marriage of Sports and Television that the competition between the two networks could be so juvenile that neither ABC nor NBC wanted to promote each other's telecasts during the 1995 World Series.[308] In the middle of Game 1, Michaels was handed a promo that read "Join us here on ABC for Game 4 in Cleveland on Wednesday night and for Game 5 if necessary, Thursday." Michaels however would soon add "By the way, if you're wondering about Games 2 and 3, I can't tell you exactly where you can see them, but here's a hint: Last night, Bob Costas, Joe Morgan, and Bob Uecker ([NBC's broadcast crew] were spotted in Underground Atlanta." Naturally, Bob Costas soon made a similar reference to ABC's crew (Michaels, Jim Palmer, and Tim McCarver) on NBC.

ABC Sports president Dennis Swanson, in announcing the dissolution of The Baseball Network, said:[309]

The fact of the matter is, Major League Baseball seems incapable at this point in time, of living with any longterm relationships, whether it's with fans, with players, with the political community in Washington, with the advertising community here in Manhattan, or with its TV partners.

Calling the final out of Game 5 of the 1995 World Series, Al Michaels yelled, "Back to Georgia!" as the Cleveland Indians took it; NBC carried the series-clinching sixth game two days later. As previously mentioned, had that particular World Series gone to a seventh game,[310] then it would've been broadcast by ABC.

Okay Lesley! So the sixth game on NBC on Saturday. We would have a seventh game here on ABC if it goes to seven in Atlanta. To the strains of "Glory Days"...Springsteen's "Glory Days", it's a glory night in Cleveland. Their Indians win it by a score of 5 to 4. Braves lead the series 3 games to 2. Tonight's game brought to you by Lexus Luxury Automobiles, the result of a relentless pursuit of perfection, Texaco CleanSystem 3 Gasolines, and Budweiser, the gold medal winning American premium lager of the 1995 Great American Beer Festival, this Bud's for you. Al Michaels, Jim Palmer, Tim McCarver, Lesley Visser, John Saunders...saying goodnight...from Jacobs Field...in Cleveland!

— Al Michaels at the end of ABC's coverage of Game 5 of the 1995 World Series, the final Major League Baseball game that would be broadcast on the network for 25 years.

It was rumored that ABC would only offer Major League Baseball about $10 to $15 million less per year than what CBS[311] was reportedly willing to offer for the 1996 season. At the time, it was reported that Major League Baseball was expecting a combined total of over $900 million in rights fees from two networks.

Ultimately, despite of the failure of The Baseball Network,[312] NBC decided to retain its relationship with Major League Baseball, but on a far more restricted basis. Under the five-year deal signed on November 7, 1995[313][314] (running from the 1996 to 2000 seasons) for a total of approximately $400 million, NBC did not televise any regular season games. Instead, NBC only handled the All-Star Game,[315][316] three Division Series[317] games[318] (on Tuesday,[319] Friday, and Saturday nights), and the American League Championship Series[320] in even-numbered years and the World Series,[321] three Division Series games (also on Tuesday, Friday, and Saturday nights) and the National League Championship Series[322] in odd-numbered years. Fox,[323][219] which assumed ABC's portion of the league broadcast television rights, gained the rights to the Saturday Game of the Week during the regular season, in addition to alternating rights to the All-Star Game, League Championship Series (the ALCS in odd-numbered years and the NLCS in even-numbered years), Division Series, and the World Series.[324][325][326]

Aftermath edit

After losing its Major League Baseball broadcast rights again, this time to Fox, ABC counterprogrammed against Fox's postseason coverage by airing a mix of miniseries and TV-movies aimed at female viewers. One of the movies aired on ABC, Unforgiven, aired opposite Andy Pettitte's shutout in Game 5 of the 1996 World Series (Fox's first World Series, and the final game in Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium history).

With ABC being sold to The Walt Disney Company in 1996,[327] ESPN picked up daytime and late-evening Division Series games with a provision similar to its National Football League games, in which the games would only air on network affiliates in the local markets of the two participating teams. ESPN's Major League Baseball contract was not affected then, but would take a hit in 1998 with the new National Football League contract.

In September 2000, a baseball official, speaking on the condition he not be identified, confirmed ESPN passed on keeping its playoffs rights (thus, giving Fox Sports exclusivity), saying the decision was partly based on price and partly because ABC wasn't interested in the network package.[328]

ABC Family's (now Freeform) coverage of the 2002 Division Series was produced by ESPN. The reason that games were on ABC Family instead of ESPN was because The Walt Disney Company bought Fox Family from News Corporation. The ABC Family/ESPN inherited Division Series package was included in Fox's then exclusive television contract with Major League Baseball (initiated in 2001). ABC Family had no other choice but to fulfill the contract handed to them. The only usage of the ABC Family "bug" was for a ten-second period when returning from a commercial break (in the lower right corner of the screen).

2020s edit

ABC would return to airing postseason baseball in 2020. They were scheduled to air at least four of the 24 possible daytime games in the season's first ever expanded eight-series wild card round, that the networks of ESPN will air. Not only did this mean that ABC aired Major League Baseball games of any kind since Game 5 of the 1995 World Series,[329] but it also marked the first time since NBC's final game in 2000, that a Major League Baseball game had aired on any broadcast network other than Fox. It had also been at least 9,105 days since ABC last broadcast a Major League Baseball game.

On May 13, 2021, Major League Baseball and The Walt Disney Company announced an extension to ESPN's contract, which included exclusive rights to the Wild Card series, if the league were to expand it. This includes games being broadcast on ABC under a similar structure to the 2020 Wild Card series.[330][331]

On July 7, 2021, ESPN announced that a Sunday Night Baseball game between the Chicago Cubs and Chicago White Sox, scheduled for August 8 from Wrigley Field would air exclusively on ABC. This was the first regular season Major League Baseball game to be aired on ABC since August 19, 1995,[332] when ABC was part of the short-lived Baseball Network and also the first[333] ESPN-produced regular season telecast that ABC would air.[334]

On Saturday, September 24, 2022, and again on Saturday, October 1, 2022, during regularly scheduled college football telecasts, ABC aired live look-ins of the YES Network's telecast of the New York Yankees. This was due to Aaron Judge potentially hitting his 61st and 62nd home run of the season.[335] This was a controversial move, many fans complained about the interruptions. Aaron Judge did not hit his record setting home run during the look-ins.

In October 2022, ABC was scheduled to air at least one game from the 2022 Wild Card Series.[336] ABC was also in-line to broadcast a potential third game of the American League Wild Card Series between the Seattle Mariners and Toronto Blue Jays.[337] Ultimately however, Seattle wound up winning the series in two games, thus it wasn't necessary.

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Works cited edit

External links edit

  • History of Major League Baseball on ABC at IMDb
  • Official website

history, major, league, baseball, this, article, long, read, navigate, comfortably, please, consider, splitting, content, into, articles, condensing, adding, subheadings, please, discuss, this, issue, article, talk, page, january, 2023, following, article, det. This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page January 2023 The following article details the history of Major League Baseball on ABC the broadcast of Major League Baseball games on the ABC television network Contents 1 1950s 2 1960s 2 1 1960 1961 2 2 1965 3 1970s 3 1 1976 1977 3 1 1 The Bronx is Burning 3 2 1978 1979 4 1980s 4 1 1980 1982 4 2 1983 1989 television package 4 2 1 1986 1988 4 2 2 1989 4 2 2 1 Loma Prieta earthquake 5 1990s 5 1 Aftermath 6 2020s 7 References 7 1 Works cited 8 External links1950s editIn 1953 1 ABC TV executive Edgar J Scherick who later created Wide World of Sports broached a Saturday Game of the Week 2 TV sport s first network series At the time ABC was labeled a nothing network that had fewer outlets than CBS or NBC ABC also needed paid programming or anything for bills as Scherick put it At first ABC hesitated at the idea of a nationally televised regular season baseball program ABC wondered how exactly the Game of the Week would reach television in the first place and who would notice if it did Also Major League Baseball barred the Game of the Week from airing within 50 miles of any ballpark 3 Major League Baseball according to Scherick insisted on protecting local coverage and didn t care about national appeal ABC though did care about the national appeal and claimed that most of America was still up for grabs In April 1953 Edgar Scherick set out to acquire teams rights but instead only got the Philadelphia Athletics Cleveland Indians 4 and Chicago White Sox 5 6 to sign on 7 These were not national broadcast contracts since they were assembled through negotiations with individual teams to telecast games from their home parks It was until the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961 that antitrust laws barred pooled rights TV contracts negotiated with a central league broadcasting authority In 1953 ABC earned an 11 4 rating for its Game of the Week telecasts Blacked out cities had 32 of households In the rest of the United States 3 in 4 TV sets in use watched Dizzy Dean 8 and Buddy Blattner 9 or backup announcers Bill McColgan and Bob Finnegan call the games for ABC CBS took over the Saturday Game in 1955 the rights were actually set up through the Falstaff Brewing Corporation 10 retaining Dean Blattner and McColgan Finnegan as the announcing crews as well as Gene Kirby who produced the Dean Blattner games and alternated with them on play by play and adding Sunday coverage in 1957 As Edgar Scherick said In 53 no one wanted us Now teams begged for Game s cash In 1959 ABC broadcast the best of three playoff series 11 12 13 to decide the National League pennant between the Milwaukee Braves and Los Angeles Dodgers The cigarette company L amp M sponsored the telecasts George Kell 14 and Bob DeLaney were the announcers ABC Radio also broadcast the playoff series with Bob Finnegan and Tony Flynn announcing 1960s edit1960 1961 edit In 1960 ABC returned to baseball broadcasting with a series of late afternoon Saturday games Jack Buck 15 and Carl Erskine 16 17 were the lead announcing crew for this series which lasted one season 18 ABC typically did three games a week Two of the games were always from the Eastern or Central Time Zone The late games no doubleheaders were usually San Francisco Giants 19 or Los Angeles Dodgers home games However the Milwaukee Braves 20 used to start many of their Saturday home games late in the afternoon So if the Giants and Dodgers were both on the road at the same time ABC still would be able to show a late game One other note about ABC baseball coverage during this period Despite temporarily losing the Game of the Week package in 1961 ABC still televised several games in prime time with Jack Buck returning to call the action This occurred as Roger Maris 21 22 was poised to tie and subsequently break Babe Ruth s regular season home run record of 60 As with all Major League Baseball games in those days the action was totally blacked out 23 of major league markets As a matter of fact as documented in the HBO film 61 the Maris family was welcomed into ABC s Kansas City Missouri affiliate KMBC TV so they could watch the in house feed of the game which was blacked out of Kansas City On September 20 1961 Bob Neal and Hank Greenberg called a baseball game for ABC in prime time between Maris New York Yankees and the Baltimore Orioles 1965 edit In 1965 ABC provided the first ever nationwide baseball coverage with weekly Saturday broadcasts 24 on a regional basis ABC paid 5 7 million for the rights to the 28 Saturday holiday Games of the Week ABC s deal 25 26 covered all of the teams except the New York Yankees and Philadelphia Phillies 27 who had their own television deals and called for two regionalized games on Saturdays Independence Day and Labor Day 28 Each Saturday ABC broadcast two 2 p m games and one 5 p m game for the Pacific Time Zone ABC blacked out the games in the home cities of the clubs playing those games 29 Major League Baseball however had a TV deal with NBC for the All Star Game and World Series At the end of the season ABC declined to exercise its 6 5 million option for 1966 citing poor ratings 30 31 especially in New York According to ABC announcer Merle Harmon s profile in Curt Smith s book Voices of Summer in 1965 CBS Yankee Game of the Week beat ABC in the ratings in at least Dallas and Des Moines To make matters worse local television split the big city audience Therefore ABC could show the Cubs vs the Cardinals in the New York market yet the Mets would still kill them in terms of viewership Harmon Chris Schenkel Keith Jackson 32 and on occasion Ken Coleman 33 served as ABC s principal play by play voices for this series Also on the network s announcing team were pregame host Howard Cosell and color commentators Leo Durocher Tommy Henrich 34 Warren Spahn who worked with Chris Schenkel on a July 17 Baltimore Detroit contest and Hall of Fame Brooklyn Dodger great Jackie Robinson who on April 17 1965 became the first black network broadcaster for Major League Baseball 35 According to ABC Sports producer Chuck Howard Robinson had a high stabbing voice great presence and sharp mind All he lacked was time The announcing duos were generally Chris Schenkel Leo Durocher and Merle Harmon Jackie Robinson For instance the team of Schenkel and Durocher called the San Francisco New York Mets contest on April 17 Milwaukee Pittsburgh contest on August 21 and the San Francisco Los Angeles alongside Jackie Robinson on September 6 The San Francisco Los Angeles game on Labor Day was the first meeting between those two clubs since a melee from about two weeks prior involving Giants pitcher Juan Marichal cracking Dodgers catcher John Roseboro on the head during a brawl Jackie Robinson worked with Merle Harmon on at least the St Louis Cincinnati contest on April 24 It was around this time that ABC suggested that Major League Baseball reduce their regular season schedule to just 60 games 36 ABC wanted the games to only be played on weekends They also wanted to promote baseball in the same manner as football as a major television event 1970s editSee also Major League Baseball on NBC Alternating coverage with ABC 1976 79 In March 1975 Commissioner Bowie Kuhn announced that ABC would join NBC in a new deal with Major League Baseball The rights fees paid by the two networks were 29 3 higher than what MLB got in the 1971 deal but adjusted for inflation the money in the new deal was about the same as in the old one 37 38 Under the initial agreement 1976 1979 both networks paid 92 8 million ABC paid 12 5 million per year to show 16 Monday night games in 1976 18 in the next three years plus 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 NBC paid 10 7 million per year to show 25 Saturday Games of the Week and the other half of the postseason both League Championship Series in odd numbered years and World Series in even numbered years and the All Star Game in odd numbered years 1976 1977 edit ABC also picked up the television rights for Monday Night Baseball 39 beginning in 1976 For most of its time on ABC the Monday night games were held on dead travel days when few games were scheduled The team owners liked that arrangement as the national telecasts didn t compete against their stadium box offices ABC on the other hand found the arrangement far more complicated ABC often had only one or two games to pick from for each telecast from a schedule designed by Major League Baseball While trying to give all of the teams national exposure ABC ended up with far too many games between sub 500 clubs from small markets Reviewing the network s first two weeks of coverage for Sports Illustrated William Leggett opined It may be unfair to say that Monday Night Baseball as it has been presented by ABC so far this season is the worst television treatment ever given a major sport because by all odds somebody at sometime must have done something worse But it is difficult to remember when or where that might have happened 40 On the flip side however ABC Sports head Roone Arledge brought in then innovative concept of a center field camera 41 This camera is behind the pitcher that looks at the batter s face ABC Sports had to gain special permission from both Major League Baseball and the home team to put the camera in center field Just like with Monday Night Football ABC brought in the concept of the three man booth originally with Bob Prince Bob Uecker and Warner Wolf 42 as the primary crew to their baseball telecasts Al Michaels then the radio announcer for the San Francisco Giants was brought in by ABC as the back up announcer for Monday Night Baseball That year Michaels called two no hitters by the Pirates John Candelaria vs Los Angeles on August 9 for ABC and the Giants John Montefusco at Atlanta on September 29 1976 for Giants radio Michaels initially worked in the booth alongside Bob Gibson and Norm Cash The following year Cash would be replaced by Bill White who himself would remain with ABC through the 1979 season 43 All in all the back up telecasts were made available to an estimated 15 of the United States 44 Roone Arledge stated that It ll take something different for it to work i e curb viewership yawns and lulls with Uecker as the real difference so Arledge reportedly hoped Prince disclosed to his broadcasting partner Jim Woods about his early worries about calling a network series for the first time Prince for one didn t have as much creative control over the broadcasts on ABC as he did calling Pittsburgh Pirates games on KDKA radio On the June 7 1976 edition of Monday Night Baseball Prince returned to Three Rivers Stadium from which he had been exiled for over a year Although Prince received a warm reception he was confused when the next day the Pittsburgh Post Gazette read Ratings are low negative reviews rampant 45 Critics ripped 46 ABC s coverage 47 for such things as its camera work 48 49 they often followed fly balls like they did golf shots keeping the focus on the ball and its choice of announcers Bob Prince was accused of a National League bias 50 while Bob Uecker was considered to be just a Don Meredith 51 52 53 clone On June 28 1976 the Detroit Tigers faced the New York Yankees on Monday Night Baseball with 47 855 attending at Tiger Stadium and a national television audience Tigers pitcher Mark The Bird Fidrych 54 talked to the ball and groomed the mound as the Tigers won 5 1 in a game that lasted only 1 hour and 51 minutes After the game the crowd would not leave the park until Fidrych came out of the dugout to tip his cap 55 For ABC s coverage of the 1976 All Star Game from Philadelphia the team of Bob Prince Bob Uecker and Warner Wolf alternated roles for the broadcast For the first three innings Prince did play by play with Wolf on color commentary and Uecker doing field interviews For the middle innings Uecker worked play by play with Prince on color and Wolf doing the interviews For the rest of the game Wolf worked play by play with Uecker on color and Prince doing interviews Bob Prince was gone by the fall of 1976 with Keith Jackson Howard Cosell 56 57 58 and guest analyst Reggie Jackson calling that year s American League Championship Series Warner Wolf Al Michaels and guest analyst Tom Seaver worked the NLCS On the subject of his dismissal from ABC Bob Prince said I hated Houston and ABC never let me be Bob Prince 59 60 MLB commissioner Bowie Kuhn strongly objected to ABC s recruitment of Howard Cosell 61 62 because of comments by Cosell in recent years about how dull baseball had become But Roone Arledge 63 held the trump card as the contract he had signed with Major League Baseball gave ABC the final say over announcers So Cosell worked the 1976 ALCS and became a regular member of Monday Night Baseball the next season Keith Jackson 64 was unavailable to call Game 1 of the 1976 ALCS because he had just gotten finished calling an Oklahoma Texas college football game for ABC Thus Bob Uecker filled in 65 for Jackson for Game 1 Uecker also took part in the postgame interviews for Game 5 of the 1976 ALCS while Warner Wolf did an interview of George Brett in the Kansas City locker room Still on the disabled list toward the end of the 1977 season Mark Fidrych worked as a guest color analyst on a Monday Night Baseball telecast for ABC he was subsequently criticized for his lack of preparation as when play by play partner Al Michaels tried talking with him about Philadelphia Phillies player Richie Hebner and Fidrych responded Who s Richie Hebner 66 As an American League player Fidrych had never had to face Hebner who played in the National League The 1977 World Series 67 marked the first time that the participating teams local announcers were not used as the booth announcers on the network telecast of a World Series 68 69 1977 was also the first year in which one announcer in this case ABC s Keith Jackson provided all of the play by play for a World Series telecast In previous years the play by play announcers and color commentators had alternated roles during each game Meanwhile New York Yankees announcer Bill White and Los Angeles Dodgers announcer Ross Porter alternated between pregame postgame duties on ABC and calling the games for CBS Radio White worked the ABC telecasts for the games in New York including the clubhouse trophy presentation ceremony after Game 6 while Porter did likewise for the games in Los Angeles The Bronx is Burning edit Howard Cosell was widely attributed with saying the famous phrase The Bronx is burning Cosell is credited with saying the quote during Game 2 of the 1977 World Series which took place in Yankee Stadium on October 12 1977 For a couple of years fires had routinely erupted in the South Bronx mostly due to low value property owners setting their own properties ablaze for insurance money During the bottom of the first inning an ABC aerial camera panned a few blocks from Yankee Stadium to a building on fire giving the world a real life view of the infamous Bronx fires The scene became a defining image of New York City in the 1970s Cosell supposedly stated There it is ladies and gentlemen The Bronx is burning 70 This was later picked up by candidate Ronald Reagan who then made a special trip to the Bronx to illustrate the failures of then contemporary politicians to address the issues in that part of New York City In 2005 author Jonathan Mahler published Ladies and Gentlemen The Bronx is Burning a book on New York in 1977 and credited Cosell with saying the title quote during the aerial coverage of the fire ESPN produced a 2007 mini series based on the book called The Bronx is Burning Cosell s comment seemed to have captured the widespread view held at the time that New York City was on the skids and in a state of decline The truth was discovered after Major League Baseball published a complete DVD set of all of the games of the 1977 World Series Coverage of the fire begins with Keith Jackson commenting on the enormity of the blaze while Cosell added that President Carter had visited that area just days before As the top of the second inning began the fire was once again shown from a helicopter mounted camera and Cosell commented that the New York Fire Department had a hard job to do in the Bronx as there were always numerous fires In the bottom of the second Cosell informed the audience that it was an abandoned building that was burning and no lives were in danger There was no further comment on the fire and Cosell appears to have never said The Bronx is Burning at least not on camera during Game 2 70 1978 1979 edit In 1978 71 Baseball Hall of Famer Don Drysdale joined ABC Sports with assignments such as Monday Night Baseball Superstars and Wide World of Sports In 1979 72 Drysdale covered the World Series Trophy presentation According to Drysdale My thing is to talk about inside things Keith Jackson does play by play Howard s Cosell role is anything since anything can happen in broadcasting When ABC released and then rehired him in 1981 Drysdale explained it by saying If there is nothing to say be quiet Ultimately Drysdale seemed to be slowly phased out of the ABC picture as fellow pitcher Jim Palmer was considered ABC s new poster child of superior looks and popularity from underwear commercials By 1989 Palmer would earn 350 000 from ABC for appearing on around ten regular season broadcasts and making a few postseason appearances 73 For a national television audience the 1978 American League East tie breaker game New York Yankees Boston Red Sox aired on ABC with Keith Jackson and Don Drysdale on the call Meanwhile the game aired locally in New York City on WPIX and WSBK TV in Boston with local announcers Also in 1978 Keith Jackson called an Oklahoma Texas college football game for ABC and then flew to New York arriving just in time to call Game 4 of the ALCS that same night October 7 In 1979 the start of ABC s Monday Night Baseball coverage was moved back to June due to poor ratings during the May sweeps period In place of April and May prime time games ABC began airing Sunday Afternoon Baseball games in September 74 The network also aired one Friday night game the Yankees at the Angels on July 13 of that year On August 6 1979 the entire Yankee team attended team captain catcher Thurman Munson s funeral in Canton Ohio Teammates Lou Piniella and Bobby Murcer who were Munson s best friends gave eulogies That night before a national viewing audience on ABC s Monday Night Baseball the Yankees beat the Baltimore Orioles 5 4 in New York with Murcer driving in all five runs with a three run home run in the seventh inning and a two run single in the bottom of the ninth 75 For the 1979 World Series ABC used play by play announcers Keith Jackson in Baltimore and Al Michaels in Pittsburgh and color commentators Howard Cosell and Don Drysdale ABC s broadcast was also simulcast over the Orioles and Pirates respective local television outlets CBS affiliates WMAR TV in Baltimore and KDKA TV in Pittsburgh in addition to ABC s own affiliates WJZ TV and WTAE TV After the sixth game Howard Cosell in his limo was surrounded and attacked by angry Oriole fans with shaving cream which prompted Baltimore police to complement his private security for Game 7 76 1980s editABC hardly showed many baseball games during the regular season in the 1980s And when they did it was only on either Monday or Thursday nights from the end of Sweeps Week in late May until when the NFL Preseason started in the first week of August After that they typically would not broadcast baseball again until the playoffs ABC also had a clause where they could air a game the last day of the regular season if it had playoff implications such as in 1987 in regards to the Detroit Tigers American League East pennant chase against the Toronto Blue Jays The team of Al Michaels Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver called that game nationally 77 However in 1986 ABC did do a number of early season Sunday afternoon games before they went into Monday Night Baseball 1980 1982 edit ABC s contract was further modified prior to the 1980 season with the network airing just five Monday Night Baseball telecasts in June of that year followed by Sunday Afternoon Baseball in August and September ABC did Sunday afternoon games late in the season to fulfill the number of games in the contract and to not interfere with Monday Night Football Also in 1980 ABC with Al Michaels and Bob Uecker on the call broadcast the National League West tie breaker game between the Houston Astros and Los Angeles Dodgers 78 On October 11 1980 Keith Jackson called an Oklahoma Texas college football game for ABC in the afternoon then flew to Houston to call Game 4 of the NLCS In the meantime Don Drysdale did the play by play for the early innings up until the middle of the fourth inning Meanwhile ABC used Steve Zabriskie 79 as a field reporter during the 1980 NLCS In 1981 ABC planned to increase coverage to 10 Monday night games and eight Sunday afternoon 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 games but the players strike that year ended up reducing the network s schedule to three Monday night and seven Sunday afternoon telecasts Also in 1981 as means to recoup revenue lost during a players strike Major League Baseball set up a special additional playoff round as a prelude to the League Championship Series ABC televised the American League Division Series while NBC televised the National League Division Series The Division Series round wasn t officially instituted until 14 years later Games 3 of the Brewers Yankees series and Royals Athletics series were aired regionally On October 10 Keith Jackson called an Oklahoma Texas college football game for ABC and missed Game 4 of the Milwaukee New York series In Jackson s absence Don Drysdale filled in for him on play by play alongside Howard Cosell On a trivial note the ABC s affiliates WTEN in Albany New York and its satellite WCDC TV in Adams Massachusetts as well as WIXT now WSYR TV in Syracuse New York did not carry any of ABC s games at that time because of the New York Yankees games that were simulcast from New York City s WPIX movies and syndicated series and specials among others to provide advertising for those extra money In 1982 ABC aired 11 Monday night games and one Sunday afternoon game Following his retirement Steve Stone was hired by ABC 92 to serve as a color commentator 93 for their Monday Night Baseball 94 telecasts Stone was normally paired with Al Michaels 95 and Bob Uecker 96 in the booth Also in 1982 Baltimore Orioles manager Earl Weaver announced he would retire at the end of the season one which saw the Orioles wallow at the back of the pack for the first half of the year before climbing in the standings to just three games behind going into a season ending four game series against the division leading Milwaukee Brewers at Baltimore s Memorial Stadium The Orioles beat them handily in the first three games to pull into a first place tie The final game of the series and the season on October 3 would decide the AL East title Televised nationally on a Sunday afternoon on ABC 97 with Keith Jackson and Howard Cosell on the call the Orioles suffered a crushing 10 2 loss After the game the crowd called for Weaver to come out This tribute to the retiring Weaver provided intense emotion against the backdrop of the season ending defeat as Weaver in tears stood on the field and applauded back to the fans and shared words and an embrace with Brewers manager Harvey Kuenn Game 1 of the 1982 NLCS had to be played twice In the first attempt on October 6 the Atlanta Braves led against the St Louis Cardinals 1 0 behind Phil Niekro The game was three outs away becoming official when the umpire stopped it When the rain did not subside the game was canceled 98 Game 1 began from the start the following night in a pitching match up of Pascual Perez for the Braves and longtime Cardinal starter Bob Forsch Howard Cosell did not broadcast Game 2 of the 1982 NLCS alongside Al Michaels and Tommy Lasorda 99 because of his commitment of hosting the Pittsburgh Steelers 50th Anniversary dinner in Pittsburgh on October 9 1982 which was broadcast live on Pittsburgh s ABC affiliate WTAE TV and Pittsburgh s NBC affiliate WPXI TV ABC s Jim Lampley 100 interviewed the winners in the Cardinals clubhouse after clinching the National League pennant in Game 3 The ABC s coverage of 1982 American League Championship Series between the Milwaukee Brewers and California Angels featured the broadcast team of Keith Jackson 101 Jim Palmer and Earl Weaver In his final assignment as a member of ABC s baseball broadcasting team Bob Uecker interviewed the victorious members of the Brewers from their clubhouse following Game 5 Meanwhile Ted Dawson 102 103 104 interviewed 1982 ALCS Most Valuable Player Fred Lynn the first player from the losing side to be awarded the MVP Award for a League Championship Series Bobby Grich and manager Gene Mauch from the Angels clubhouse after Game 5 Following the 1982 ALCS Keith Jackson wouldn t be assigned to broadcast further Major League Baseball games for ABC until the 1986 season 1983 1989 television package edit On April 7 1983 Major League Baseball ABC and NBC agreed to terms of a six year television package 105 worth 1 2 billion The two networks continued to alternate coverage of the playoffs ABC in even numbered years and NBC in odd numbered years World Series ABC televised the World Series in odd numbered years and NBC in even numbered years and All Star Game ABC televised the All Star Game 106 in even numbered years 107 and NBC in odd numbered years through the 1989 108 season with each of the 26 clubs receiving 7 million per year in return The last package gave each club 1 9 million per year ABC contributed 575 million for regular season prime time and Sunday afternoons and NBC paid 550 million for thirty Saturday afternoon games ABC was contracted to televise 20 prime time regular season games a year in addition to other games the aforementioned Sunday afternoon games But ABC didn t come close to using that many which meant they actually paid for games they weren t showing To give you some perspective ABC televised six prime time games in 1984 and eight 1985 They planned to again televise eight prime time games in 1986 USA Network s coverage became a casualty of the new 1 2 billion TV contract between Major League Baseball ABC and NBC One of the provisions to the new deal was that local telecasts opposite network games had to be eliminated 109 1983 marked the last time that local telecasts of League Championship Series games were allowed In 1982 Major League Baseball recognized a problem with this due to the emergence of cable superstations such as WTBS in Atlanta and WGN TV in Chicago When TBS tried to petition for the right to do a local Braves broadcast of the 1982 NLCS 110 Major League Baseball got a Philadelphia federal court 111 112 to ban 113 them on the grounds that as a cable superstation TBS couldn t have a nationwide telecast competing with ABC s On June 6 1983 Al Michaels officially succeeded Keith Jackson as the lead play by play announcer for Monday Night Baseball Michaels who spent seven seasons working backup games was apparently very miffed 114 over ABC Sports delay in announcing him as their top baseball announcer Unlike Jackson whose forte was college football Michaels had gigs with the Cincinnati Reds and San Francisco Giants before joining ABC in 1976 TV Guide huffed about Jackson by saying A football guy on baseball Jackson was unavailable for several World Series games in 1979 and 1981 because of conflicts with his otherwise normal college football broadcasting schedule Thus Michaels did play by play for games on weekends Earl Weaver was the lead ABC color commentator in 1983 but was also employed by the Baltimore Orioles as a consultant At the time ABC had a policy preventing an announcer who was employed by a team from working games involving that team So whenever the Orioles were on the primary ABC game Weaver worked the backup game This policy forced Weaver to resign from the Orioles consulting position in October so that he could work the World Series 115 116 for ABC The 1984 NLCS 117 schedule which had an off day after Game 3 rather than Game 2 allowed ABC to have a prime time game each weeknight even though Chicago s Wrigley Field 118 119 120 121 122 did not have lights at the time which remained the case until four years later ABC used Tim McCarver as a field reporter during the 1984 NLCS During the regular season McCarver teamed with Don Drysdale who teamed with Earl Weaver and Reggie Jackson for the 1984 NLCS on backup games 123 while Al Michaels Jim Palmer and Earl Weaver Howard Cosell formed ABC s lead broadcast team For ABC s coverage of the 1984 All Star Game Jim Palmer only served as a between innings analyst Had the 1984 ALCS between the Detroit Tigers and Kansas City Royals gone the full five games the last year that the League Championship Series was a best of five series Game 5 on Sunday October 7 would have been a 1 p m ET time start instead of being in prime time This would have happened because one of the presidential debates 124 between Ronald Reagan and Walter Mondale was scheduled for that night In return ABC was going to broadcast the debates instead of a baseball game in prime time Al Trautwig 125 interviewed the Detroit Tigers from their clubhouse following their pennant clinching victory in Game 3 Between his stints with the California Angels and Oakland Athletics in 1985 Tommy John 126 served as color commentator alongside Tim McCarver for a game between the Chicago White Sox and the Athletics in Oakland on Monday Night Baseball on June 24 127 McCarver s normal broadcast partner in 1985 128 Don Drysdale couldn t partake in the June 24 broadcast out of fear of it appearing as a conflict of interest Drysdale in addition to his ABC duties was an announcer for the White Sox at the time This situation was similar to the one with Earl Weaver being prohibited from taking part in ABC s broadcasts of Baltimore Orioles games in 1983 In 1985 ABC announced that every game of the World Series 129 would be played under the lights for the biggest baseball audience possible Just prior to the start of the 1985 World Series 130 131 ABC removed Howard Cosell from scheduled announcing duties 132 as punishment for his controversial book I Never Played the Game In Cosell s place came Tim McCarver 133 joining play by play man Michaels and fellow color commentator Jim Palmer who was beginning his trek of being a part of numerous World Series telecasts Reportedly by 1985 Cosell was considered to be difficult to work with on baseball telecasts Apparently Cosell and Michaels got into a fairly heated argument following the conclusion of their coverage of the 1984 American League Championship Series due to Cosell s supposed drunkenness among other problems 134 135 136 Rumor has it that Michaels went as far as to urged ABC executives to remove Cosell from the booth Ultimately Michaels went public with his problems with Cosell 137 Michaels claimed that Howard had become a cruel evil vicious person In the end the very last baseball game that Howard Cosell would help broadcast for ABC and his very last assignment for ABC Sports in general was a game between the between the Kansas City Royals and Minnesota Twins 138 in Minneapolis on Sunday September 29 1985 Perhaps Al Michaels s first historic call with ABC Sports while covering Major League Baseball occurred in what is now known by many as the Don Denkinger game on October 26 1985 The Kansas City Royals trailed the St Louis Cardinals 3 1 in a World Series that was panned for being low scoring and dull After a Royals win in St Louis forced the action back to Kansas City the sixth game was also low scoring However this contest grew into a tense pitcher s duel In the bottom of the 9th pinch hitter Jorge Orta led off for the Royals against Cardinals pitcher Todd Worrell with Kansas City trailing 1 0 and hit a ground ball to first baseman Jack Clark Clark threw over to pitcher Worrell who was running over to cover first base in time to beat the speedy Orta and did Yet first base umpire Don Denkinger still called Orta safe at first Steve Balboni then hit a pop up to first which Jack Clark missed for an error keeping Balboni s at bat alive and he promptly singled to put men on first and second The infamous and controversial leadoff single by Orta and the Jack Clark error eventually led to the Royals loading the bases and putting the tying run on third base and the winning run on second with one out for Dane Iorg Iorg hit a 2 run single and the Royals came back to win 2 1 The Royals went on to win Game 7 11 0 and complete the comeback after being down 3 games to 1 However it was Denkinger s dubious safe call and not Iorg s hit Clark s error Jim Sundberg s heroics for his difficult slide past catcher Darrell Porter for the winning run or the Game 7 blowout that were most remembered in years to come Little squibber to the right side Worrell racing to cover and the throw doesn t get him Al Michaels 139 describing Don Denkinger s infamous call in Game 6 of the 1985 World Series 1986 1988 edit By 1986 ABC only televised 13 Monday Night Baseball games 140 This was a fairly sharp contrast to the 18 games to that were scheduled in 1978 The Sporting News believed that ABC paid Major League Baseball to not make them televise the regular season No late season games in September 141 were scheduled in 1986 TSN added that the network only wanted the sport for October anyway Going into 1987 ABC had reportedly purchased 20 Monday night games but only used eight of those slots 142 More to the point CBS Sports president Neal Pilson said Three years ago we believed ABC s package was overpriced 143 by 175 million We still believe it s overpriced by 175 million 144 During the 1986 season Don Drysdale did play by play ABC s Sunday afternoon games 145 which aired until July when Monday Night Baseball began ABC s Monday night schedule in 1986 then started on July 7 and ran through August 25 Al Michaels did the main Sunday game usually with Jim Palmer while Drysdale and Johnny Bench did the backup contests 146 Keith Jackson 147 working with Tim McCarver did the secondary Monday night games Bench took a week off in June with Steve Busby filling in and also worked one game with Michaels as the networks switched the announcer pairings While Drysdale worked the All Star Game in Houston as an interviewer he did not resurface until the playoffs Bench simply disappeared ultimately going to CBS Radio On October 12 1986 at Anaheim Stadium Al Michaels 148 along with Jim Palmer called Game 5 of the American League Championship Series 149 150 The California Angels 151 held a 3 games to 1 lead of a best of seven against the Boston Red Sox In the game the Angels held a 5 2 lead going into the ninth inning Boston scored two runs on a home run by Don Baylor closing the gap to 5 4 When Donnie Moore came in to shut down the rally there were two outs and a runner on first base Rich Gedman who had been hit by a pitch The Angels were one out 152 from their first ever trip to the World Series But Dave Henderson 153 154 hit a 2 2 pitch off Moore for a home run giving the Red Sox a 6 5 lead The Angels were able to score a run in the bottom of the ninth pushing the game into extra innings Moore continued to pitch for the Angels He was able to stifle a 10th inning Red Sox rally by getting Jim Rice to ground into a double play Nevertheless the Red Sox were able to score off Moore in the 11th inning via a sacrifice fly by Henderson The Angels could not score in the bottom of the 11th and lost the game 7 6 The defeat still left the Angels in a 3 games to 2 advantage with two more games to play at Fenway Park The Angels were not able to recover losing both games by wide margins 10 4 and 8 1 Game 7 of the 1986 ALCS ended with Calvin Schiraldi striking out Jerry Narron The Red Sox can go from last rites to the World Series and they do Al Michaels call of Calvin Schiraldi s final strikeout in Game 7 of the 1986 ALCS On October 15 1986 Game 6 of the NLCS ran so long lasting for 16 innings 5 hours and 29 minutes it bumped up against the start time of Game 7 of the ALCS also on ABC That same game color commentator Tim McCarver left the booth during the bottom of the 16th to cover the expected celebration in the New York Mets clubhouse As a result play by play man Keith Jackson was on the air alone for a short time Eventually McCarver rejoined the broadcast just before the end of the game watching the action on a monitor in the Mets clubhouse then doing the postgame interviews with the Mets Meanwhile Corey McPherrin a sports anchor with WABC ABC s flagship station out of New York City interviewed Mike Scott when he was presented with the 1986 NLCS MVP award after Game 6 During the late 1980s McPherrin delivered in game updates during ABC s Monday Night Baseball 155 156 and Thursday Night Baseball broadcasts Game 6 of the 1986 NLCS turned out to be the final Major League Baseball game that Keith Jackson would broadcast 157 Meanwhile in his last ever ABC assignment Don Drysdale 158 interviewed the winners in the Boston clubhouse following Game 7 of the 1986 ALCS For the 1987 World Series between the Minnesota Twins and St Louis Cardinals ABC used 12 cameras and nine tape machines This includes cameras positioned down the left field line on the roof of the Metrodome and high above third base There have been a few occasions when two Monday Night Football games were played simultaneously In 1987 a scheduling conflict arose when Major League Baseball s Minnesota Twins went to Game 7 of the World Series 159 making the Hubert H Humphrey Metrodome unavailable for the Minnesota Vikings scheduled game against the Denver Broncos that Sunday Game 6 of the 1987 World Series played on Saturday October 24 was the last World Series game to not be played in prime time The game started at 4 p m Eastern Time Another weekend afternoon sixth game was planned for 1988 however since the World Series ended in five games it was unnecessary The 1987 World Series was the final one that ABC aired that went the full seven games The next time that ABC broadcast a World Series in 1989 the Oakland Athletics swept the San Francisco Giants in four games For the final World Series that ABC broadcast to date 1995 they split the coverage with NBC ABC only covered Games 1 4 5 and a seventh game had it been necessary ABC overall drew a 24 0 rating 160 for their coverage of the 1987 World Series In a February 2015 interview Al Michaels alleged the Twins pumped artificial crowd noise into the Metrodome during the 1987 World Series Responding to Michaels theory Twins President Dave St Peter said that he did not think the Twins needed conspiracy theories in order to win the World Series Instead he argued that appreciation and respect should be paid to players like Frank Viola Gary Gaetti Kent Hrbek and Kirby Puckett who he said came out of nowhere to win a championship 161 To Gaetti for the first time ever the Minnesota Twins are the World Champions Al Michaels calling the final out of Game 7 of the 1987 World Series 162 on ABC During the 1988 Writers Guild of America strike networks benefited from sports programming including NBC which relied on the Summer Olympics in September and the World Series in October and ABC which in addition to its postseason baseball coverage 163 164 moved up the start time for the early weeks of Monday Night Football when Al Michaels was unavailable to do play by play on Monday Night Football which he had done for ABC beginning in 1986 due to his postseason baseball duties Frank Gifford covered for him from 9 p m ET to 8 pm ET MacGyver which normally aired at 8 pm was not yet ready with new episodes Come the 1988 League Championship Series 165 166 167 168 169 170 ABC under the guidance of new executive producer Geoffrey Mason 171 debuted fatter and wider graphics 172 that gave off a cleaner sharper look complete with a black border ABC also debuted a new energetic symphonic pop styled musical theme 173 174 composed by Kurt Bestor 175 which would become an all compassing theme of sorts for ABC Sports during this time period ABC also begun employing the services of Pinnacle Productions Inc 176 a video production company based out of Spokane Washington 177 to create the opening title sequences for their sports telecasts ABC s coverage of Game 2 178 of the 1988 NLCS 168 didn t start until 10 pm ET due to a presidential debate This is the latest ever scheduled start for an LCS game Gary Bender did play by play for the 1988 American League Championship Series 179 180 between the Oakland Athletics and Boston Red Sox Bender spent two years 1987 1988 as the No 2 baseball play by play man for ABC behind Al Michaels Bender worked the backup Monday Night Baseball broadcasts with Tim McCarver in 1987 and Joe Morgan 181 in 1988 as well as serving as a field reporter for ABC s 1987 World Series coverage After Bender spent an entire summer developing a team with Joe Morgan ABC brought in Reggie Jackson 182 to work with the duo for the 1988 ALCS According to Bender s autobiography Call of the Game pages 118 120 183 ABC s decision to bring in Jackson to work with Bender and Morgan caused problems Reggie is one of the strongest personalities I ve ever met He epitomizes the big name athlete who has become a great player in part because of his ego but who does not have the sensitivity to let go of that ego when working with others Consequently Reggie demanded things he hadn t earned the right to demand He wanted more attention He insisted we adjust our way of doing things for him During the spare time of his active career Reggie Jackson worked as a field reporter and color commentator for ABC Sports During the 1980s 1983 1985 and 1987 respectively Jackson was given the task of presiding over the World Series Trophy presentations After wrapping up his play by play duties for ABC s coverage of the 1988 ALCS in which Oakland swept Boston in four games Gary Bender 184 185 covered the postgame interviews in the victorious Los Angeles Dodgers clubhouse following Game 7 of the 1988 NLCS against the New York Mets Three days earlier Mike Barry 186 interviewed Boston manager Joe Morgan following their defeat to Oakland in Game 4 of the ALCS 1989 edit On December 14 1988 CBS 187 under the guidance of Commissioner Peter Ueberroth 188 189 190 Major League Baseball s broadcast director Bryan Burns 191 192 193 CBS Inc CEO Laurence Tisch 194 195 196 197 as well as CBS Sports executives Neal Pilson 198 and Eddie Einhorn paid approximately US 1 8 billion equivalent to 2 46 billion in 2022 191 199 for exclusive over the air television rights for over four years beginning in 1990 CBS paid about 265 million each year 200 for the World Series League Championship Series All Star Game and the Saturday Game of the Week It was one of the largest agreements 201 to date between the sport of baseball and the business of broadcasting The cost of the deal between CBS and Major League Baseball was about 25 more 202 than in the previous television contract with ABC and NBC 203 According to industry insiders neither NBC nor ABC wanted the entire baseball package that is regular season games both League Championship Series and the World Series because such a commitment would have required them to preempt too many highly rated prime time shows Thus ABC and NBC bid thinking that two of the networks might share postseason play again or that one of the championship series might wind up on cable Peter Ueberroth had encouraged the cable idea but after the bids were opened NBC and ABC found to their chagrin that he preferred network exposure for all postseason games Only CBS with its weak prime time programming dared go for that In 1989 the final year of ABC s contract with Major League Baseball ABC moved the baseball telecasts to Thursday nights 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 in hopes of getting leg up against NBC s Cosby Show Scott Muni a disc jockey who worked at the heyday of the AM Top 40 format and then was a pioneer of FM progressive rock radio voiced promos for ABC s Thursday Night Baseball broadcasts ABC was also still in line to air a special Sunday afternoon telecast 213 on October 1 in the event that the American League East race between the Toronto Blue Jays and Baltimore Orioles still hadn t been decided But since the Blue Jays managed to clinch the divisional title the day prior it wasn t necessary After braving the traumatic Loma Prieta earthquake 214 and an all time low 16 4 rating 215 for the 1989 World Series 216 Al Michaels took ABC s loss of baseball to CBS 217 218 219 as tough to accept Michaels added that baseball was such an early stepchild at ABC and had come such a long way 220 Gary Thorne 221 who served as ABC s backup play by play announcer 222 in 1989 and was an on field reporter for the World Series 223 that year and covered the trophy presentation in the process simply laughed while saying Great reviews just as ABC baseball ends 224 Meanwhile Dennis Swanson president of ABC Sports noted in a statement that baseball had been a blue chip franchise since 1976 for the network which was disappointed to lose it 140 After ABC lost the Major League Baseball package to CBS they aggressively counterprogrammed CBS postseason baseball coverage like NBC with made for TV movies and miniseries geared towards female viewers 225 I ll miss it I ve been involved with this ABC package since Day One in 1976 Especially now because beginning with our postseason coverage in 1985 That s when analysts Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver permanently joined ABC s baseball crew teaming with producer Curt Gowdy Jr 226 and director Craig Janoff I really felt we d put it together the way I d always dreamed about it In the early years we attempted to cover it in a different fashion ABC had been gigantically successful with Wide World of Sports and with covering the Olympic Games A number of people in our company wanted to cover baseball like gymnastics and swimming and other Wide World events Attempting to do that was basically in the early years an abysmal failure Baseball needs to be looked at in a certain manner You need people in it who understand the game and truly love the game It took us a while to get the right people and the right group together I know some of the NBC people recently have talked about their cameramen their audio men the guys involved with their telecasts are baseball fans They love baseball It took us a while to get up to speed in that area But once we did we began to cover it as well as it s been covered I m tremendously proud of what we have done especially from the 1985 postseason coverage on We got to a point especially in the last couple of years where nothing can stop us now And the only thing that stopped us was the fact we lost the rights Al Michaels to the Chicago Tribune on October 17 1989 According to ABC broadcast engineer Dan Rapak in the book Brought to You by ABC s coverage of the 1989 World Series was about to become a case study in financial stupidity By this point in time ABC Sports was well into cost cutting mode 227 and trying to avoid unnecessarily expenditure ABC decided that to save money there would be no satellite uplink trunk present at San Francisco s Candlestick Park Instead the feed from San Francisco back to ABC s headquarters in New York City would take a complex circuitous route For starters the signal would go from the truck to a telephone company room dubbed a clamper room at the third level of the stadium From there the signal would be transmitted over a fiber optic cable onto the local phone company switching office From there the signal would be sent to KGO ABC s owned and operated station in the San Francisco Bay Area The signal would then pass through KGO s Master Control Room and soon uplinked to a satellite which relayed the signal to a downlink in Connecticut Finally the signal would be sent to the ABC Television Complex in New York Rapak added that to save further costs ABC decided that an on site telephone company technician wasn t really necessary As such ABC wouldn t pay to have him on site just in case any problems might have arise with the phone company s equipment Not only that but ABC merely rented a small standby generator to protect them in the event of a power failure ABC s management decided that it would be too costly to have a large transfer switch shipped in from ABC Sports field shop in Lodi New Jersey This particular switch would be able to shift the entire load of all the mobile units from local utility power to the generator with a single pull of a large lever But since ABC s engineers who were working at Candlestick Park during the 1989 World Series had no means of quickly putting the generator into service should the need arise they would have to instead kill the utility power sources for safety They would then have to disconnect more than a dozen huge power cables from the power boxes inside of the stadium Next they would have to physically drag the power cables outside of the stadium and reconnect all of them to turn the generator on This in effect meant that the changeover would ve taken approximately 10 minutes when it could ve simply taken less than a minute If you ll indulge us just another moment this is the end of our association with baseball I think as many of you may know the primary package goes to CBS And to our friends at what s known in the industry as Black Rock good luck in 1990 and beyond To those of you at NBC for 41 years you made this an art form And to people especially like Curt Gowdy Sr the fabulous announcer to the Hall of Fame director Harry Coyle and down through the years to Tony Kubek and the people of the present like Bob Costas and all the men and women at NBC at the peacock take a bow you were terrific 228 And we re done for a while anyway after 14 years at ABC We want to thank you for watching and we want to thank all the people that have come together to work on our telecasts We have our own Curt Gowdy Curt Gowdy Jr who has been our terrific producer And Craig Janoff and to the incomparable Steve Hirdt it s been a great ride for 14 years We re going to show you all the names right now gentlemen roll the credits as we say goodnight from San Francisco 229 Al Michaels at the end of ABC s coverage of the 1989 World Series Prior to the start of the 1990 season speculation arose that Al Michaels would move over to CBS in the event that he won an arbitration case against ABC Tim McCarver 230 231 232 had already been hired by CBS to serve as their lead color commentator and they were in need of a play by play man 233 234 235 236 237 following the abrupt dismissal of 238 239 Brent Musburger 222 240 241 on April Fools Day 1990 Michaels had been feuding 242 with the network over an alleged violation of company policy Michaels contract with ABC was originally set to expire in late 1992 Ultimately however ABC announced a contract extension that sources said would keep Michaels at ABC through at least the end of 1995 and would pay him at least 2 2 million annually with the potential to earn more That would make Michaels the highest paid sports announcer in television Meanwhile CBS eventually settled on using the services of Jack Buck 243 244 245 246 for their top play by play man Loma Prieta earthquake edit See also Bay Bridge Series and 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake 1989 World Series and television coverage of earthquake Game 3 of the 1989 World Series 247 248 249 initially scheduled for October 17 174 was delayed by ten days due to the Loma Prieta earthquake 250 The earthquake struck at approximately 5 04 p m Pacific Time At the moment the quake struck ABC s color commentator Tim McCarver 251 was narrating taped highlights of the previous Series game Viewers saw the video signal begin to break up heard McCarver repeat a sentence as the shaking distracted him and heard McCarver s colleague Al Michaels 252 exclaim I ll tell you what we re having an earth 253 At that moment the feed from Candlestick Park was lost 254 The network put up a green ABC Sports telop graphic as the audio was switched to a telephone link Michaels had to pick up a POTS phone in the press booth phones work off a separate power supply and call ABC headquarters in New York at which point they put him back on the air Michaels cracked Well folks that s the greatest open in the history of television bar none accompanied by the excited screams of fans who had no idea of the devastation elsewhere 255 After about a 15 minute delay ABC aired a rerun of Roseanne 256 257 and subsequently The Wonder Years 258 in the meantime ABC was able to regain power via a backup generator 259 ABC s play by play man Al Michaels who was familiar 247 with the San Francisco Bay Area 260 dating back to his days working for the San Francisco Giants from 1974 1976 then proceeded to relay reports to Ted Koppel 261 262 263 264 265 at ABC News headquarters in Washington D C Al Michaels was ultimately nominated for an Emmy for his on site reporting at the World Series The Goodyear Blimp was aloft above the ballpark to provide aerial coverage of the World Series Blimp pilot John Crayton reported that he felt four bumps during the quake 266 ABC was able to use the blimp to capture some of the first images of the damage to the Bay Bridge 267 At this very moment ten days ago we began our telecast with an aerial view of San Francisco always a spectacular sight and particularly so on that day because the cloudless sky of October 17 was ice blue and the late day sun sparkled like a thousand jewels That picture was very much a mirror of the feel and the mood that had enveloped the Bay Area and most of Northern California Their baseball teams the Giants and A s had won pennants and the people of this region were still basking in the afterglow of each team s success And this great American sporting classic the World Series was for the time being exclusively theirs Then of course the feeling of pure radiance was transformed into horror and grief and despair in just fifteen seconds 268 And now on October 27 like a fighter who s taken a vicious blow to the stomach and has groggily arisen this region moves on and moves ahead And one part of that scenario is the resumption of the World Series No one in this ballpark tonight no player no vendor no fan no writer no announcer in fact no one in this area period can forget the images The column of smoke in the Marina The severed bridge The grotesque tangle of concrete in Oakland The pictures are embedded in our minds And while the mourning and the suffering and the aftereffects will continue in about thirty minutes the plate umpire Vic Voltaggio will say Play Ball and the players will play the vendors will sell the announcers will announce the crowd will exhort And for many of the six million people in this region it will be like revisiting Fantasyland But Fantasyland is where baseball comes from anyway and maybe right about now that s the perfect place for a three hour rest 269 Al Michaels at the beginning of ABC s telecast of the resumption of Game 3 of the 1989 World Series 1990s editMain articles The Baseball Network and The Baseball Network announcers After a four year long hiatus when CBS exclusively carried the over the air Major League Baseball television rights as previously mentioned ABC returned to baseball 270 in again alongside NBC 271 1994 Under a six year plan 272 Major League Baseball was intended to receive 85 of the first 140 million 219 in advertising in advertising revenue or 87 5 273 of advertising revenues and corporate sponsorship 274 from the games until sales top a specified level 50 of the next 30 million and 80 of any additional money Prior to this Major League Baseball was projected to take a projected 55 cut in rights fees and receive a typical rights fee from the networks After NBC s coverage of 1994 All Star Game was completed ABC would air 275 regular season games on Saturdays 276 or Mondays 277 for the next six weeks Joining the lead broadcast team of Al Michaels Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver was Lesley Visser who served as the lead field reporter for the CBS baseball coverage from 1990 to 1993 Visser was reuniting with McCarver for whom she had worked with on CBS The regular season games fell under the Baseball Night in America umbrella which premiered on July 16 1994 On the subject of play by play man Al Michaels returning to baseball for the first time since the 1989 World Series Jim Palmer said Here Al is having done five games since 1989 and steps right in It s hard to comprehend how one guy could so amaze Meanwhile Brent Musburger 278 279 280 281 CBS alumnus Jim Kaat and reporter Jack Arute became the secondary team for ABC Musburger 282 and Kaat called the rest of the 1995 American League Division Series between the Seattle Mariners and New York Yankees and the first two games of that year s American League Championship Series between Seattle and the Cleveland Indians No balls and a strike to Martinez Line drive we are tied Griffey is coming around In the corner is Bernie He s going to try to score Here s the division championship Mariners win it Mariners win it Brent Musburger calling 279 Edgar Martinez s game winning double in Game 5 of the 1995 ALDS between the Seattle Mariners and the New York Yankees In even numbered years NBC had the rights to the All Star Game and both League Championship Series while ABC had the World Series 283 and newly created Division Series 284 In odd numbered years both League Championship Series and All Star Game 285 television rights were supposed to alternate As such ABC would ultimately broadcast 286 the 1995 All Star Game 287 from The Ballpark in Arlington in Arlington Texas It was ABC s first broadcast of the All Star Game since the 1988 contest in Cincinnati On Sunday July 2 ABC aired a one hour special 288 hosted by Al Michaels that announced the names of the players who were selected to play in the 1995 All Star Game ABC won the rights to the first dibs at the World Series in August 1993 after ABC Sports president Dennis Swanson won a coin toss 289 by calling heads Ken Schanzer who was the CEO of The Baseball Network handled the coin toss Schanzer agreed to the coin toss by ABC and NBC at the outset as the means of determining the order in which they d divvy up the playoffs While ABC and NBC would provide some production personnel and their own announcers 290 291 for the games 292 293 all of would be coordinated from the office of Ken Schanzer 294 295 296 the chief executive officer of The Baseball Network and former executive vice president for NBC Sports The graphics camera placements and audio quality were intended on looking and sounding about the same on both networks Hi everyone and welcome to Baseball Night in America I m Al Michaels And those of us at ABC are delighted to be back in the business of broadcasting baseball for the first time since the 1989 World Series And it s a brand new concept we ll have six 297 regular season games on ABC including tonight and again on Monday night Then we ll bring you the Division playoffs in October part of baseball s new expanded playoff format and the World Series in late October Baseball Night in America a regionalized 298 concept you ll see a game in your region that s important to those of you in those particular areas It also gives us the capability of updating games as never before So sit back relax and enjoy the premiere of Baseball Night in America as we take you out to the ballgames Al Michaels on site at Seattle s Kingdome on the premiere broadcast of Baseball Night in America on July 16 1994 The long term plans for The Baseball Network crumbled when the players went on strike on August 12 1994 thus forcing the cancellation of the World Series 299 In July 1995 ABC and NBC who wound up having to share the duties of televising the 1995 World Series 300 as a way to recoup with ABC broadcasting Games 1 301 4 and 5 and NBC broadcasting Games 2 3 and 6 announced 302 that they were opting 303 304 out of their agreement 305 with Major League Baseball Both networks figured that as the delayed 1995 baseball season opened without a labor agreement there was no guarantee against another strike Both networks soon publicly vowed to cut all ties with Major League Baseball for the rest of the 20th century 306 307 Al Michaels would later write in his 2014 autobiography You Can t Make This Up Miracles Memories and the Perfect Marriage of Sports and Television that the competition between the two networks could be so juvenile that neither ABC nor NBC wanted to promote each other s telecasts during the 1995 World Series 308 In the middle of Game 1 Michaels was handed a promo that read Join us here on ABC for Game 4 in Cleveland on Wednesday night and for Game 5 if necessary Thursday Michaels however would soon add By the way if you re wondering about Games 2 and 3 I can t tell you exactly where you can see them but here s a hint Last night Bob Costas Joe Morgan and Bob Uecker NBC s broadcast crew were spotted in Underground Atlanta Naturally Bob Costas soon made a similar reference to ABC s crew Michaels Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver on NBC ABC Sports president Dennis Swanson in announcing the dissolution of The Baseball Network said 309 The fact of the matter is Major League Baseball seems incapable at this point in time of living with any longterm relationships whether it s with fans with players with the political community in Washington with the advertising community here in Manhattan or with its TV partners Calling the final out of Game 5 of the 1995 World Series Al Michaels yelled Back to Georgia as the Cleveland Indians took it NBC carried the series clinching sixth game two days later As previously mentioned had that particular World Series gone to a seventh game 310 then it would ve been broadcast by ABC Okay Lesley So the sixth game on NBC on Saturday We would have a seventh game here on ABC if it goes to seven in Atlanta To the strains of Glory Days Springsteen s Glory Days it s a glory night in Cleveland Their Indians win it by a score of 5 to 4 Braves lead the series 3 games to 2 Tonight s game brought to you by Lexus Luxury Automobiles the result of a relentless pursuit of perfection Texaco CleanSystem 3 Gasolines and Budweiser the gold medal winning American premium lager of the 1995 Great American Beer Festival this Bud s for you Al Michaels Jim Palmer Tim McCarver Lesley Visser John Saunders saying goodnight from Jacobs Field in Cleveland Al Michaels at the end of ABC s coverage of Game 5 of the 1995 World Series the final Major League Baseball game that would be broadcast on the network for 25 years It was rumored that ABC would only offer Major League Baseball about 10 to 15 million less per year than what CBS 311 was reportedly willing to offer for the 1996 season At the time it was reported that Major League Baseball was expecting a combined total of over 900 million in rights fees from two networks Ultimately despite of the failure of The Baseball Network 312 NBC decided to retain its relationship with Major League Baseball but on a far more restricted basis Under the five year deal signed on November 7 1995 313 314 running from the 1996 to 2000 seasons for a total of approximately 400 million NBC did not televise any regular season games Instead NBC only handled the All Star Game 315 316 three Division Series 317 games 318 on Tuesday 319 Friday and Saturday nights and the American League Championship Series 320 in even numbered years and the World Series 321 three Division Series games also on Tuesday Friday and Saturday nights and the National League Championship Series 322 in odd numbered years Fox 323 219 which assumed ABC s portion of the league broadcast television rights gained the rights to the Saturday Game of the Week during the regular season in addition to alternating rights to the All Star Game League Championship Series the ALCS in odd numbered years and the NLCS in even numbered years Division Series and the World Series 324 325 326 Aftermath edit After losing its Major League Baseball broadcast rights again this time to Fox ABC counterprogrammed against Fox s postseason coverage by airing a mix of miniseries and TV movies aimed at female viewers One of the movies aired on ABC Unforgiven aired opposite Andy Pettitte s shutout in Game 5 of the 1996 World Series Fox s first World Series and the final game in Atlanta Fulton County Stadium history With ABC being sold to The Walt Disney Company in 1996 327 ESPN picked up daytime and late evening Division Series games with a provision similar to its National Football League games in which the games would only air on network affiliates in the local markets of the two participating teams ESPN s Major League Baseball contract was not affected then but would take a hit in 1998 with the new National Football League contract In September 2000 a baseball official speaking on the condition he not be identified confirmed ESPN passed on keeping its playoffs rights thus giving Fox Sports exclusivity saying the decision was partly based on price and partly because ABC wasn t interested in the network package 328 ABC Family s now Freeform coverage of the 2002 Division Series was produced by ESPN The reason that games were on ABC Family instead of ESPN was because The Walt Disney Company bought Fox Family from News Corporation The ABC Family ESPN inherited Division Series package was included in Fox s then exclusive television contract with Major League Baseball initiated in 2001 ABC Family had no other choice but to fulfill the contract handed to them The only usage of the ABC Family bug was for a ten second period when returning from a commercial break in the lower right corner of the screen 2020s editFurther information Major League Baseball on ABC List of games since 1995 ABC would return to airing postseason baseball in 2020 They were scheduled to air at least four of the 24 possible daytime games in the season s first ever expanded eight series wild card round that the networks of ESPN will air Not only did this mean that ABC aired Major League Baseball games of any kind since Game 5 of the 1995 World Series 329 but it also marked the first time since NBC s final game in 2000 that a Major League Baseball game had aired on any broadcast network other than Fox It had also been at least 9 105 days since ABC last broadcast a Major League Baseball game On May 13 2021 Major League Baseball and The Walt Disney Company announced an extension to ESPN s contract which included exclusive rights to the Wild Card series if the league were to expand it This includes games being broadcast on ABC under a similar structure to the 2020 Wild Card series 330 331 On July 7 2021 ESPN announced that a Sunday Night Baseball game between the Chicago Cubs and Chicago White Sox scheduled for August 8 from Wrigley Field would air exclusively on ABC This was the first regular season Major League Baseball game to be aired on ABC since August 19 1995 332 when ABC was part of the short lived Baseball Network and also the first 333 ESPN produced regular season telecast that ABC would air 334 On Saturday September 24 2022 and again on Saturday October 1 2022 during regularly scheduled college football telecasts ABC aired live look ins of the YES Network s telecast of the New York Yankees This was due to Aaron Judge potentially hitting his 61st and 62nd home run of the season 335 This was a controversial move many fans complained about the interruptions Aaron Judge did not hit his record setting home run during the look ins In October 2022 ABC was scheduled to air at least one game from the 2022 Wild Card Series 336 ABC was also in line to broadcast a potential third game of the American League Wild Card Series between the Seattle Mariners and Toronto Blue Jays 337 Ultimately however Seattle wound up winning the series in two games thus it wasn t necessary References edit Searchable Network TV Broadcasts ABC Sports rec sport baseball Walker amp Bellamy 2008 p 103 Club Owners Veto Television of Spring Games The Spokane Review Associated Press March 14 1954 p 1 Ames Walter June 13 1953 Major League Ball Game on KECA TV Topper Series Set as Irma Replacement Los Angeles Times p A5 Albany Club Owner Asks for Video Of Major League Games in His Area Hartford Courant Associated Press June 6 1953 Ames Walter May 8 1954 L A Las Vegas Relay Ready by Fall Lamenting Berle Seeks New Home Los Angeles Times p A5 TV Baseball Ban Denied By Official The Daily Reporter Associated Press March 11 1954 p 1 George Dave April 25 2008 San Francisco Palm Beach Post Was in Slump All His Career Beaver Valley Times May 15 1954 Sports Briefs Los Angeles Times March 6 1954 p B3 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 Television Notebook Baseball Scores A Hit Among Week s Shows New York Times October 4 1959 p X17 Buck Jack May 6 2014 Jack Buck OThat s a Winner o Sports Publishing ISBN 9781613216798 ABC Signs Erskine as TV Color Man Los Angeles Times Associated Press April 12 1960 p C7 Can t Hide No Hitter From Fans Erskine The Miami News Associated Press June 5 1960 p 2C No Major Changes Loom in TV Sports During 1961 Hartford Courant Associated Press January 1 1961 ABC Adds Saturday Fights Fifth Game Prescott Evening Courier Associated Press March 17 1960 p 13 TV Scout Preview St Petersburg Times April 16 1960 p 10B Adams Val September 19 1961 Networks Plan Wide U N Report New York Times p 71 ABC TV to Film Tilt 154 Daytona Beach Morning Journal Associated Press September 19 1961 ABC Lands a 3 Sport TV Contract The Milwaukee Sentinel March 27 1960 p 2T Jay Robert June 5 2015 A Year in TV Guide June 5th 1965 Television Obscurities Television Package is Baseball s Aim The Tuscaloosa News Associated Press December 11 1964 p 7 ABC Signs 12 2 Million Baseball Pact Reading Eagle Associated Press December 15 1964 p 14 New York Times April 8 1965 ABC Plans on Instant Replays The Miami News p 6B Tele Log Deseret News April 14 1965 p 2B Dubrow Rick April 16 1965 Baseball in New Venture Beaver County Times United Press International p 7 Adams Val August 19 1965 ABC Doubtful About Televising Baseball in 66 New York Times p 61 Reichler Joe August 22 1965 TV Baseball Has Problems The Herald Tribune Associated Press p 4D Page Don April 17 1965 SportsLook Up to Our Chins in NBA Dribbles Los Angeles Times p B2 Cady Steve February 24 1965 CBS Rivals Back Sale of Yankees New York Times p 46 Simon Mark July 2 2003 MLB Living Legends Keith Jackson ESPN com Adams Val March 18 1965 Jackie Robinson Is Back in Baseball As a Commentator New York Times p 67 Hilderbrandt Chuck May 27 2015 ABC TV Once Suggested That Major League Baseball Reduce Their Regular Season Schedule to 60 Games SABR Baseball and the Media Research Committee NBC splits MLB Rights NBC Sports History Page Verducci Tom October 21 2015 Game Changer How Carlton Fisk s home run altered baseball and TV Sports Illustrated Lucas Ed May 19 2016 Lucas ABC s Monday Night Baseball was ahead of its time The Jersey Journal Leggett William May 10 1976 ABC has the Monday blahs Sports Illustrated Retrieved October 20 2018 Rapak Dan July 12 2020 Brought to You By AuthorHouse p 130 ISBN 9781477290507 Shea Stuart May 7 2015 Calling the Game Baseball Broadcasting from 1920 to the Present SABR Inc p 372 ISBN 9781933599410 Brooks Marsh Tim Earle F June 24 2009 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946 Present p 105 ISBN 9780307483201 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Horn Barry November 17 2017 SNF voice Al Michaels on top notch lyricist Tony Romo s abilities as an analyst The Dallas Morning News Fink David June 8 1976 Tearful Prince In King s Return Pittsburgh Post Gazette p 16 Shea Stuart May 7 2015 Calling the Game Baseball Broadcasting from 1920 to the Present SABR Inc p 397 ISBN 9781933599410 Lovett Daniel J April 17 2014 Anybody Seen Dan Lovett Memoirs of a Media Nomad Balboa Press p 185 ISBN 9781452594200 Leggett William December 20 1976 The Winter Games Win a Medal Sports Illustrated Legget William May 10 1976 ABC Has the Monday Blahs Sports Illustrated Forr James Bob Prince SABR Lucas Ed May 19 2016 Lucas ABC s Monday Night Baseball was ahead of its time The Jersey Journal Leonard John May 30 1976 TV View The New York Times Pergament Alan October 27 1995 NBC S Morgan Emerges As Series Star in Booth The Buffalo News Blast off Schmidt launches Phillies to title Geocities Archived from the original on October 21 2009 Fidrych 1977 p 149 Vogan Travis November 6 2018 ABC Sports The Rise and Fall of Network Sports Television Univ of California Press ISBN 9780520966260 Walker and Hughes James R and Pat May 1 2015 Crack of the Bat A History of Baseball on the Radio U of Nebraska Press p 214 Crack of the Bat A History of Baseball on the Radio Glasspiegel Ryan April 30 2015 Howard Cosell Was Quite Incorrect About the Future Fortunes of ESPN and John Madden The Big Lead Cushing Rick March 2010 1960 Pittsburgh Pirates Day by Day A Special Season an Extraordinary Dorrance Publishing p 387 ISBN 9781434904980 Smith Curt 2005 Voices of Summer Ranking Baseball s 101 All Time Best Announcers Carroll amp Graf Publishers p 175 ISBN 0 7867 1446 8 Haggar Jeff February 18 2018 Howard Cosell Black Hat in the Booth Classic TV Sports Walker Hughes James R Pat 2015 Crack of the Bat A History of Baseball on the Radio U of Nebraska Press p 214 abc monday night baseball 1976 critics a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Brady Dave March 23 1977 Arledge Lets Kuhn Know Who s Boss The Washington Post Hagger Jeff October 10 2012 Keith Jackson and ABC conflicts with college FB and MLB playoffs 1976 1986 Classic TV Sports Hanover Evening Sun Newspaper Archives NewspaperARCHIVE com October 7 1976 The Bird doesn t rule the roost in the television announcer s booth The Miami News Associated Press September 6 1977 1977 World Series Los Angeles Dodgers vs New York Yankees GAME 6 TV The Paley Center for Media Shales Tom October 13 1977 Howard Cosell The Washington Post Maril David October 31 2009 Opinion World Series misses home team announcers on national broadcasts Enterprise News a b Flood Joe May 16 2010 Why the Bronx burned New York Post Smith Howard April 13 1978 ABC Is Tops In Baseball Gettysburg Times Saunders Keith February 25 2019 In praise of the 1979 World Series The World According to Keitho Hyman Mark February 12 1990 Jim Palmer more than ever an ex ballplayer Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 8 2014 Walker amp Bellamy 2008 p 143 New York Yankees 5 Baltimore Orioles 5 Baseball reference com August 6 1979 The Prescott Courier Google News Archive Search 1987 10 04 ABC Blue Jays at Tigers on YouTube Dodgers vs Astros 1980 on YouTube 1980 NLCS Game 4 mrodsports on YouTube Saturday 12 noon ABC Weekend Special CBS The New UPI October 3 1980 Major league baseball will once again be televised by UPI March 4 1981 The National Pastime Summer 2015 Issue North Side South Side All Around SABR Inc ISBN 9781933599861 Katz Jeff Split Season 1981 Chicago Style SABR Stewart Larry May 29 1987 Not Much Fanfare as CBS Brookshier Go Separate Ways Los Angeles Times Walker Bellamy James R Robert V June 2008 Center Field Shot A History of Baseball on Television U of Nebraska Press p 143 ISBN 978 0803248250 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wenner Lawrence A August 1989 Media Sports and Society SAGE p 111 ISBN 9780803932449 Chad Norman April 14 1985 NBC s Adjustments Improve Baseball Coverage Washington Post ABC Sports and Major League Baseball have reached agreement on UPI April 7 1983 Sandomir Richard April 24 1995 SPORTS JOURNALISM He Made People Listen Made People Think The New York Times Silverman Matthew May 2016 One Year Dynasty Inside the Rise and Fall of the 1986 Mets Baseball s Rowman amp Littlefield p 292 ISBN 9781493024209 Berkow Ira February 2 1986 Sports of the Times the Turnstiles Still Rattle The New York Times Interview Steve Stone The Heckler September 6 2004 Paintadosi Roger August 13 1982 There s No Play by Play Like Home Washington Post Retrieved February 9 2016 Steve Stone Thinking Out of the Stretch Arizona Jewish Life April 1 2013 Hirdt Steve July 23 2021 Yes Al We Do Believe In Miracles The Analyst Stone Steve January 2001 Where s Harry Steve Stone Remembers 25 Years with Harry Caray p 8 ISBN 9781461732471 1982 10 03 ABC Brewers at Orioles on YouTube D Agostino Dennis October 7 1982 ABC s Playoff Coverage Not Flashy but Solid Beaver County Pa Times Associated Press p B3 NBC Nobody Does It Better Sports Illustrated October 25 1982 Retrieved February 9 2016 St Louis Cardinals 1982 NL Champions 2 2 on YouTube Bush Frederick C October 10 1982 Milwaukee Brewers rally in Game Five to reach World Series Sabr org Retrieved October 9 2022 Stewart Larry July 24 1987 Dawson Leaving Channel 7 Sports Channel 2 Eyeing Lampley Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 9 2022 Ted Patient Story St Luke s Sports Medicine St Luke s Sports Medicine Retrieved October 9 2022 Bark Ed October 17 2014 Updating former KDFW TV sports anchor Ted Dawson who s still in there pitching Uncle Barky s Bytes Retrieved October 9 2022 Copyright Royalty Fees for Cable Systems Hearings Before the Subcommittee October 19 1983 p 703 The Ballparks Candlestick Park This Great Game 1988 MLB All Star Game Complete on YouTube Goodwin Michael February 18 1986 TV Sports Swanson New ABC Chief Proves Deft New York Times Leifer Eric M June 2009 Making the Majors The Transformation of Team Sports in America p 1964 ISBN 9780674040069 Kuhn Out to Stop Braves Broadcasts Tuscaloosa News Associated Press October 1 1982 p 14 United Press International October 5 1982 Judge Bars WTBS From Braves Games Sarasota Herald Tribune p 10B Turner Is Denied Review of Order New York Times Associated Press October 6 1982 United Press International October 5 1982 Turner Telecasts Enjoined by Court New York Times Lidz Frank February 15 1988 This Mouth Talks Back Sports Illustrated Amdur Neil October 11 1983 TV Sports the Delicate Art of Play By Play The New York Times Remnick David October 14 1983 This Dignity Is Deadly The Washington Post Soul crushing flashback Cubs Padres Game 5 1984 Desipio February 11 2013 Boswell Thomas August 31 1984 Kuhn Rules No Lights For Wrigley The Washington Post Shipp E R August 29 1984 Cubs Fans Think Game s Better With No Lights The New York Times Wrigley Lights Chronology Chicago Tribune August 8 1988 Greenfield Jimmy 2012 100 Things Cubs Fans Should Know amp Do Before They Die Triumph Books p 194 ISBN 9781600786624 wrigley field 1984 world series lights Krantz Les November 2013 Wrigley Field The Centennial 100 Years at the Friendly Confines Triumph Books p 118 ISBN 9781623686697 Rogers Thomas Johnson Roy S June 8 1985 SCOUTING In the Booth New York Times Boswell Thomas October 5 1984 Baseball s Disaster Plan Wait Until Dark Washington Post 1984 ALCS game 3 Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers PART 2 on YouTube Henninger Paul June 22 1985 VIEWING SPORTS TOMMY JOHN GOES TO BAT AS ABC SPORTSCASTER Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 8 2023 McCarver Tim Host June 24 1985 Monday Night Baseball Television production United States ABC Chad Norman April 14 1985 NBC s Adjustments Improve Baseball Coverage The Washington Post Retrieved January 8 2023 1985 World Series St Louis Cardinals vs Kansas City Royals game 6 TV The Paley Center for Media Mitchell Fred October 10 1985 Cosell Is Out of Series Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 9 2016 Palmer Maimon Jim Alan June 2016 Jim Palmer Nine Innings to Success A Hall of Famer s Approach to Achieving Triumph Books ISBN 9781633194625 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Daley Steve October 13 1985 Joy in Mudville Cosell Has Struck Out Chicago Tribune Pergament Alan October 23 1988 It s a Pleasure Catching Up On Baseball With McCarver The Buffalo News Ribowsky Mark November 12 2011 Howard Cosell s Boozy Baseball Broadcasts Drunken Fights With Al Michaels And The Rise Of Tim McCarver Deadspin Retrieved April 19 2013 Getle Larry November 16 2014 Al Michaels on Cosell s drinking and OJ s guilt New York Post Kindred Dave March 10 2006 Sound and Fury Two Powerful Lives One Fateful Friendship Simon amp Schuster New York p 261 ISBN 9780743289238 Myslenski Skip September 15 1985 MICHAELS GLAD COSELL IS GONE Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 9 2016 Rosenberg Howard October 4 1985 DR JEKYLL AND MR COSELL Los Angeles Times Miller Doug October 20 2014 Denkinger cool with reminders of mistaken call in 85 Series MLB com a b Durso Joseph December 15 1988 A Billion Dollar Bid By CBS Wins Rights To Baseball Games New York Times Sarni Jim October 4 1986 ABC Channels Efforts Into Playoffs South Florida Sun Sentinel Shea Stuart May 7 2015 Calling the Game Baseball Broadcasting from 1920 to the Present p 374 ISBN 9781933599410 TV TO SPORTS THE BUCKS STOP HERE Sports Illustrated February 24 1986 Goodwin Michael February 10 1987 TV Sports Quiet Talks for Baseball New York Times Berkow Ira February 2 1986 SPORTS OF THE TIMES THE TURNSTILES STILL RATTLE The New York Times Sarni Jim April 12 1986 ABC ADDED BASEBALL COVERAGE Sun Sentinel Archived from the original on June 29 2021 Lewis Jon Keith Jackson 1928 2018 Sports Media Watch Hirst Steve July 23 2021 Yes Al We Do Believe In Miracles The Analyst MEMORIES YOU RE TALKIN ABOUT MEMORIES THE FINAL OUTS OF THE 1986 ALCS Surviving Grady January 23 2008 Screen Grabs from MLB Classics on YouTube 1986 ALCS Game 5 Boston at California Fenway Pastoral August 12 2013 DiGiovanna Mike October 12 2021 The most gut wrenching game in Angels history 35 years later it still haunts them Yahoo Von Doviak Scott September 18 2018 Charlesgate Confidential ISBN 9781785657184 Finn Chad December 9 2020 Al Michaels wins 2021 Ford Frick Award from Baseball Hall of Fame Boston Crehan Herb January 1 2016 Remembering Dave Hendu Henderson Boston Baseball History Strong James February 26 1988 1990 All Stars to Play Under Wrigley Lights Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 9 2016 Night Game Televised Only on WGN Los Angeles Times August 7 1988 Retrieved February 9 2016 ABC S Keith Jackson A Hoss of a Broadcaster Sports Illustrated February 9 1987 Retrieved February 9 2016 Sarni Jim October 4 1986 ABC Channels Efforts Into Playoffs Sun Sentinel Retrieved February 9 2016 William Taaffe November 2 1987 Baseball Clinic From ABC Sports Illustrated Retrieved February 9 2016 Silverstein Jack M June 11 2021 The 1991 NBA Finals Were David Stern s Godsend A Shot On Ehlo Al Michaels says Twins pumped fake noise into 1987 World Series MSN Archived from the original on September 25 2015 Retrieved February 7 2015 Halsted Al May 2016 100 Things Twins Fans Should Know amp Do Before They Die ISBN 9781633194809 National League Championship Series amp ABC News 1988 Promo on YouTube September 29 1988 commercials on YouTube Stewart Larry October 24 1988 Dodgers 88 A Season to Remember For NBC Its Series Role May Have Been Most Significant Ever Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 9 2016 Callan Matthew October 11 2013 Let s Go to the Videotape Jay Howell Gets Bounced 1988 Sun Sentinel Andreu Robbie October 9 1988 Howell Confesses But Only to a Misdemeanor Sun Sentinel Retrieved February 9 2016 a b Nidetz Steve October 11 1988 ABC Deserves Kudos for NL Show But Barbs for AL Coverage Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 9 2016 Fimrite Ron October 17 1988 Kiss That Baby Goodby Sports Illustrated Retrieved February 9 2016 Hoffarth Tom October 4 2013 25 years later The Dodgers 1988 playoff run NLCS Game 1 Los Angeles Daily News Retrieved February 9 2016 Nidetz Steve September 23 1988 ABC Sports Honcho is in Pursuit of Graphic Changes Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 9 2016 Minami Craig October 9 2013 1988 Dodgers NLCS Game 4 The Mike Scioscia home run True Blue LA Retrieved February 9 2016 The ABC baseball theme 1988 89 on YouTube a b Foster Jason September 19 2015 The 9 best network baseball theme songs of all time ranked Sporting News Robinson Doug October 28 2002 Kurt Bestor Private discord public acclaim Deseret News Buck Richard June 10 1991 Pinnacle Productions Seattle Move Helps Video Producer Reach New Heights The Seattle Times Agra Tech s Videos Commercial Greenhouse Manufacturer Agra Tech Inc 1988 10 05 1988 NLCS Game 2 New York Mets at Los Angeles Dodgers on YouTube Sarni Jim October 7 1988 ABC Is Good Or Bad Depending On Series Sun Sentinel Retrieved February 9 2016 Taaffe William October 17 1988 Mixed Message Sports Illustrated New York Yankees at Oakland Athletics 1988 05 30 ABC Monday Night Baseball on YouTube 1988 ALCS game 1 Oakland Athletics at Boston Red Sox on YouTube Bender Johnson Gary Michael L 1994 Call of the Game What Really Goes on in the Broadcast Booth Language Arts amp Disciplines p 118 ISBN 9781566250139 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 1988 Dodgers Mets compilation of newsclips and scoring play on YouTube National Baseball Company Sports Illustrated October 31 1988 Retrieved February 9 2016 R amp R Ratings Report 1984 April OCR Page 0008 pdf PDF Marcus Steve December 15 1988 CBS Homer Will Send Scully Etc to Showers Deseret News Phil Mushnick January 29 2007 Look But Don t Blink New York Post Mushnick Phil January 1 2000 Crime of the Century How Peter Ueberroth and Baseball s Money Hungry Owners Robbed Our Children of the National Pastime New York Post Boswell Thomas January 3 1989 Commentary Peter s Principle Money Talks The Washington Post a b A Billion Dollar Bid By CBS Wins Rights To Baseball Games The New York Times December 15 1988 Helyar John July 27 2011 The Lords of the Realm Random House Publishing ISBN 9780307801425 Smith Curt February 21 2011 The Cambridge Companion to Baseball Cambridge University Press p 234 ISBN 9781139826204 Williams Scott March 8 1991 Tisch Takes Blame for CBS Baseball Contract Losses The Associated Press Diamond Edwin April 2 1990 Gamesman Is CBS s Larry Tisch a smart sports guy New York Magazine Serwer Andrew E September 6 1993 CBS To Beat the Odds Stay the Course Fortune Walker Bellamy James R Robert V June 2008 Center Field Shot A History of Baseball on Television U of Nebraska Press p 154 ISBN 978 0803248250 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Johnson William Oscar June 25 1990 The Cleanup Hitters Sports Illustrated Vault Baseball to CBS NBC Strikes Out ABC Also Falls Short as 4 Year Package Goes for 1 Billion The Los Angeles Times December 15 1988 Downey Kevin April 18 2002 Waning days of big TV sports Media Life Archived from the original on February 25 2015 Shames Laurence July 23 1989 CBS Has Won the World Series now It Could Lose Its Shirt The New York Times Erardi Luckhaupt John Joel September 29 2010 The Wire to Wire Reds Sweet Lou Nasty Boys and the Wild Run to a World p 40 ISBN 9781578604661 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ernest Cashmore 1994 And There Was Television p 146 ISBN 9780415091305 ABC Baseball Open on YouTube Vance Reid October 25 2016 The Cubs and I Medium Archived from the original on April 5 2022 Gary Thorne ESPN Press Room Archived from the original on August 26 2019 Retrieved August 26 2019 Nidetz Steve June 9 1989 For ABC Wrigley s a New Ballgame Chicago Tribune NBC ABC In Lame Duck Year for Coverage of Majors The Buffalo News April 1 1989 June 26 1989 Promo for Thursday Night Baseball amp Monday Night Movie Bumper on YouTube Brooks Marsh Tim Earle F June 24 2009 The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946 Present Random House Publishing Group p 105 ISBN 9780307483201 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Warner Rick November 12 1988 It s Let s Make a Deal time for networks cable Gadsden Times Associated Press p B5 Craig Jack June 26 1989 Sports Programming and Cable Television Hearing Before the Volume 4 Stewart Larry September 29 1989 Finale for Scully May Not Be One Los Angeles Times Smith Shelley October 30 1989 we re Having An Sports Illustrated Chad Norman October 20 1989 ABC Lets Vincent Do What s Best for Bay Area The Washington Post 1989 World Series Game 1 Giants A s pregame on YouTube Stewart Larry December 15 1988 Baseball to CBS NBC Strikes Out ABC Also Falls Short as 4 Year Package Goes for 1 Billion The Los Angeles Times A WHOLE NEW GAME Two megabuck TV deals may change the face of baseball for good or not so good Sports Illustrated December 26 1988 a b c Edwards Craig February 26 2020 MLB s Winning and Losing Efforts to Conquer TV Part I The Strike Fan Graphs Nidetz Steve October 17 1989 Forever Away Is Here For Michaels Chicago Tribune Stewart Larry February 24 1989 Hernandez s Dream Job Gone but Now There s a Fantasy Los Angeles Times p 3 a b NBC ABC In Lame Duck Year for Coverage of Majors The Buffalo News April 2 1989 Encina Eduardo A October 24 2014 Orioles broadcaster Gary Thorne says memories of 1989 World Series earthquake still vivid The Baltimore Sun Smith Curt 2005 Voices of Summer Ranking Baseball s 101 All Time Best Announcers Carroll amp Graf Publishers p 381 ISBN 0 7867 1446 8 Herbert Steven October 30 1991 World Series A CBS Grand Slam Los Angeles Times Taaffe William November 2 1987 Baseball Clinic from ABC Sports Illustrated Chad Reid Norman Tony March 7 1989 With Its Era of Dominance Past ABC Now Looks to Regroup Washington Post Retrieved February 9 2016 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Rosenberg Howard October 30 1989 The Ballgame s Over for Great Team at ABC Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 9 2016 1989 World Series Game 4 10 28 1989 Stereo on YouTube Meyers Kate September 28 1990 CBS successful baseball coverage Entertainment Weekly Steve Nidetz June 13 1989 CBS catches a rising star in breezy McCarver Chicago Tribune p 5 Jack Craig June 6 1989 CBS Ready for Final Fling Boston Globe Fang Ken April 10 2020 Which moments in sports broadcasting history do we wish we could have covered live Awful Announcing Musburger gone rec sport baseball April 2 1990 Du Brow Rick NBC s Team Player Has His Eye on the Ball Sportscasting With CBS surprise sacking of Brent Musburger Bob Costas would seem the obvious replacement but he s sticking with his baseball less network Los Angeles Times Asher Mark April 2 1990 CBS Sports Drops Musburger Washington Post Spanberg Erik March 30 2015 At Final Four 25 years ago Musburger provided drama SportsBusiness Journal Stephenson Creg April 1 2015 Today in sports CBS fires Brent Musburger on eve of NCAA Tournament title game 25 years ago AL com Terry Armour April 6 1990 Fans Should Rejoice With The Firing Of Over exposed Musburger Daily Press Rudy Martzke January 16 1990 It s official Musburger is back in baseball game USA Today Trecker Jerry October 23 1992 Cbs Forges Its Own Era Of Deadball Hartford Courant Nidetz Steve May 3 1990 ABC Sports Tunes in to Musburger Chicago Tribune Barnes Mike April 5 1990 CBS names Jack Buck to replace Musburger UPI Rusnak Jeff April 6 1990 Buck In Brent At Cbs Sun Sentinel This Date in History April 5 The Eagle April 4 2020 Jack Craig November 7 1989 Will Buck Stop at CBS Boston Globe p 70 a b Smith Shelley October 30 1989 We re Having an Sports Illustrated Journalism and Popular Culture SAGE January 16 1992 p 199 ISBN 9781446230640 Rapak Dan December 11 2012 Brought to You By AuthorHouse p 355 ISBN 9781477290507 Curtis Bryan Lee Patricia October 30 2013 Rocked An oral history of the 1989 World Series which was dominated by the Oakland A s and devastated by the Loma Prieta earthquake Grantland Palmer Maimon Jim Alan June 2016 Jim Palmer Nine Innings to Success A Hall of Famer s Approach to Achieving Triumph Books LLC ISBN 9781633194625 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Al Michaels joins Damon Ratto and Kolsky 957thegame radio com October 17 2019 Earthquake Time Monday October 30 1989 Ed Magnuson p 2 Retrieved September 5 2009 News report on MLB COM 1 50 minutes in Retrieved August 29 2009 Earthquake Time Monday October 30 1989 Ed Magnuson p 3 Retrieved September 5 2009 Journalism and Popular Culture SAGE January 16 1992 p 197 ISBN 9781446230640 Goodman Walter October 19 1989 Review Television How the Networks Coped With Scant Information New York Times Bell Ficociello Robert C Robert M October 19 2017 America s Disaster Culture The Production of Natural Disasters in Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 9781628924619 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Carman John October 14 1999 Local News Met Quake s Challenge SF Gate Kroichick Ron October 12 2019 Al Michaels brought Bay Area background to 1989 earthquake coverage San Francisco Chronicle Hall Jane October 19 1989 Networks Turned to Affiliates After Quake Los Angeles Times Margulies and Goldman Lee and John October 18 1989 Bay Area Quake Coverage Television Networks Scrambled to Report Disaster Los Angeles Times Shales Tom October 19 1989 After the Quake Images Frozen in Time The Washington Post Dawson Greg October 19 1989 Quake Coverage Had Many Shaky Moments Orlando Sentinel ABC News Special Report 1989 San Francisco Earthquake Coverage Interrupts 1989 World Series TV The Paley Center for Media Holler Scott Vicki Sheff Lorenzo Benet Doris Bacon Tom Cunneff Michael Alexander Kristina Johnson Robin Micheli Linda Witt October 30 1989 A City Trembled Its People Held People 32 18 Retrieved August 29 2009 High above the ballpark John Crayton was piloting a Goodyear blimp for ABC We were just ready to go on the air when the network feed went blank The last thing I heard was the director swearing Then I started noticing transformers blowing up and dust and smoke in the air I felt and I know this sounds strange but I felt four bumps in the blimp a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Rapaport Richard J 1998 The Media Radio Television and Newspapers The Loma Prieta California Earthquake of October 17 1989 Lifelines Performance of the Built Environment U S Geological Survey Professional Paper Issue 1552 p A43 A46 ISBN 9780607915518 Retrieved February 28 2013 Marquez Donald October 17 2009 Series Interrupted SBNation com Marquez Donald November 9 2009 Scrapbook Memories 1989 World Series Game 3 Part 2 SBNation com Name chosen for baseball s joint TV venture Houston Chronicle August 25 1993 Retrieved July 2 2012 NBC enters joint venture with ABC and MLB to form The Baseball Network NBC Sports History Page Wise Meyer Aaron N Bruce S May 23 1997 International Sports Law and Business Volume 3 Kluwer Law International p 1701 ISBN 9789041106025 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bartkowiak Kiuchi Mathew J Yuya January 10 2014 Packaging Baseball How Marketing Embellishes the Cultural Experience p 82 ISBN 9780786492510 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Shelley Donald Coolidge March 7 1995 Firms May Take a Walk on Baseball Promotions The Christian Science Monitor Fang Ken October 25 2016 Does the MLB on TBS package really benefit fans and viewers Awful Announcing ABC Baseball Night takes ratings beating USA Today July 19 1995 Retrieved May 31 2011 Larry Stewart July 21 1995 ABC Getting a Major Chance With British Open Coverage Los Angeles Times Foster Jason January 25 2017 Remember when Brent Musburger called baseball games Sporting News a b Townsend Mark January 25 2017 Brent Musburger s greatest baseball call was one for the ages Big League Stew Sandomir Richard October 10 1995 PLAYOFFS 95 TV SPORTS The Wrong Man in the Baseball Booth The New York Times Rabinowitz Gershon October 7 2015 Revisiting the 1995 Division Series Baseball Essential Foster Jason January 25 2017 Remember when Brent Musburger called baseball games Sporting News More tales of The Baseball Network SIU Daily Egyptian July 26 1995 Archived from the original on December 5 2014 Retrieved February 12 2015 ABC lost the 1994 World Series this was supposed to be NBC s year Instead they split the spoils Who got the better of the deal Let s see The networks each get 6 percent of the advertising revenues baseball gets 88 percent Call it a draw Baseball players unlikely to endorse new playoffs The Daily Reporter August 24 1993 Sixty Sixth Annual All Star Game The 66th Annual All Star Game 1995 TV The Paley Center for Media 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 July 11 1995 Gowdy Jr behind scenes provides All Star touch The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Retrieved February 9 2016 All Star Selection Special Baseball the 1995 TV The Paley Center for Media ABC Wins Coin Toss for Game 7 Orlando Sentinel September 13 1995 Retrieved May 31 2011 Stewart Larry August 26 1994 NBC and Costas Will Make Their Return to Baseball Later Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 9 2016 Frager Ray July 8 1994 Costas hoping Baseball Night keeps grip The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Retrieved February 9 2016 Horn Barry July 7 1994 What happened to national telecasts The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Retrieved February 9 2016 Nidetz Steve July 11 1994 With Baseball Back NBC Pulls Out Its Own All Star Lineup Chicago Tribune Chicago Retrieved February 9 2016 Shapiro Leonard September 17 1993 Untangling Baseball Network s Intricacies Washington Post Washington D C Retrieved February 9 2016 Koehler Robert July 10 1994 Networking the Ballparks ABC and NBC Take Separate Turns at Bat to Drive Home Regular and Post Season Play Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Retrieved February 9 2016 Sandomir Richard April 4 1994 Baseball TV Sports Network Baseball s Unopening Day The New York Times Mifflin Lawrie June 20 1995 Safe at Home Chicago Tribune Retrieved February 9 2016 Baseball Anheuser Busch Backs Network The New York Times March 31 1994 Halberstam David J October 21 2019 The cancelled 94 World Series Network voices remember a baseball low point 25 years ago Meachem Matt October 16 1995 Series Evokes Fond Memories for Uecker Too Chicago Tribune World Series 1995 Game 1 Atlanta Braves vs Cleveland Indians TV The Paley Center for Media Jack Craig August 20 1995 Fans not wild about baseball The Boston Globe Retrieved May 31 2011 ABC and NBC Quit Baseball Network The Philadelphia Inquirer June 23 1995 Retrieved July 2 2012 Jack McCallum Christian Stone July 3 1995 Scorecard Sports Illustrated Richard Sandomir June 27 1995 TV Sports All Are to Blame for Baseball Network s Demise The New York Times Leonard Shapiro June 24 1995 ABC NBC Pull Plug On Baseball Washington Post Retrieved July 2 2012 Baseball Broadcasting Faces Uncertain Future The Moscow Times June 28 1995 Michaels Wertheim Al L Jon November 18 2014 You Can t Make This Up Miracles Memories and the Perfect Marriage of Harper Collins p 202 ISBN 9780062314987 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Broken Promises Cited In Breakup Decision By ABC and NBC Dissolves The Baseball Network The Spokesman Review June 24 1995 Retrieved February 9 2016 Milton Kent September 15 1995 ABC flips for Game 7 of Series The Baltimore Sun Retrieved July 2 2012 Shapario Leonard October 18 1995 CBS DENIES REPORT OF BROADCAST DEAL The Washington Post Trecker Jerry October 26 1995 THE BASEBALL NETWORK ADDS UP TO BAD RECEPTION The Hartford Courant Nidetz Steve November 7 1995 BASEBALL S NEW TV PACKAGE INCLUDES OLD FAVORITES Chicago Tribune Stewart Larry November 6 1995 Fox Gets Baseball NBC Is Part of Deal Los Angeles Times Haisten Bill July 5 1996 Relative to 93 Baseball Still Slumping Tulsa World July 2000 Promo for the 2000 Baseball All Star Game on YouTube Sports Graphics Packages Historically MLB on NBC 1996 SportsLogos net November 10 2013 Nelson John October 10 1996 Costas and Team Getting Into Rhythm of the Playoffs Associated Press NBC 1999 MLB Postseason Promo on YouTube Kent Milton October 14 1996 Costas Morgan Uecker talent combo that works The Baltimore Sun Sports Graphics Packages Historically MLB on NBC 1999 to 2000 SportsLogos net June 10 2013 Callan Matthew November 10 2009 Tag Archives 1999 nlcs Scratchbomb Prisbell Eric October 12 2020 Fox and MLB Quarter century of culture change Sports Business Daily Jim McConville November 6 1995 MLB sews up deal with Fox NBC Major League Baseball National Broadcasting Co Fox Broadcasting Co Broadcasting amp Cable HighBeam Research Archived from the original on March 29 2015 Retrieved January 25 2015 James McConville November 13 1995 Baseball s new TV rights contract Major League Baseball contract Brief Article Broadcasting amp Cable HighBeam Research Archived from the original on March 29 2015 Retrieved January 25 2015 Stewart Larry October 4 1996 Without Scully Playoff Coverage Suffers Los Angeles Times Baseball ABC Auditing Baseball Venture The New York Times December 22 1995 Retrieved July 2 2012 Baseball Notes Washington Post September 27 2000 Fisher Eric September 28 2020 MLB to be seen on ABC for first time since 1995 SportsBusiness ESPN extends deal to air MLB games through 28 ESPN com May 13 2021 Retrieved May 18 2021 MLB ESPN extend deal through 2028 MLB com Retrieved May 18 2021 Searchable Network TV Broadcasts SABR Baseball and the Media Research Committee Pederson Erik July 7 2021 ABC To Air ESPN s Sunday Night Baseball For First Time Deadline ABC to Exclusively Televise ESPN s Sunday Night Baseball for First Time on August 8 ESPN Press Room U S July 7 2021 Retrieved July 7 2021 ESPN kept interrupting college football with Aaron Judge at bats and fans were furious September 24 2022 Hipes Patrick October 5 2022 Baseball Sets TV Schedule For First Ever Wild Card Round Deadline Retrieved October 5 2022 Lucia Joe October 6 2022 Your 2022 MLB Wild Card Weekend announcing schedule Awful Announcing October 9 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint location link Works cited edit 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 editHistory of Major League Baseball on ABC at IMDb Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Major League Baseball on ABC amp oldid 1166349508, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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