Did MLB quiet TBS?

Craig Calcaterra passes along a conspiracy theory from The Common Man:

To The Common Man, it suggests that perhaps TBS was asked not to make a big deal out of potentially missed calls. This would seem to jive with an earlier play in the San Francisco-Atlanta series, where Buster Posey was clearly out at 2B, but announcers refused to acknowledge it, in spite of the video evidence to the contrary (and Posey saying after the game “it’s a good thing we don’t have instant replay).

If this is the case, it seems likely that the commissioner’s office has made conscious decision not just to ignore the loud cries for expanded instant replay, but to tacitly suppress them by denying these voices additional evidence with which to make their case.

Calcaterra adds:

I thought the Posey thing was totally bizarre, and was made even more bizarre when Mat Winer, the studio host, said he thought Posey was safe and was basically laughed off the stage by David Wells, Cal Ripken and Dennis Eckersley.  Winer would be beholden to a TBS/MLB mandate in ways that Eck, Ripken and Boomer really wouldn’t be.

So is there a conspiracy at play here? Did Major League Baseball ask TBS announcers to downplay discussions of bad umpiring?

I’m going to go ahead and say no.

Now perhaps I’m biased, since I’m occasionally the subject of similar conspiracy theories myself. And you must allow the small possibility that, as a representative of a team-owned network, I am part of the machine and have been assigned by Bud Selig to quash these rumors before they gain too much steam.

But that’s not actually the case, and I’m guessing neither Selig nor anyone in his office told anyone at TBS anything about what to say in the broadcast. I’d go with Occam’s Razor, like Calcaterra suggests.

If anything, I’d guess their producer told them that harping too much on a few bad calls diminishes the drama inherent in the actual sport part of the sport, which the announcers have to play up — not so much to benefit the league office as to keep people watching the damn broadcast.

Plus, the game’s moving forward; TBS has to show the next pitch, the broadcasters have to focus on what’s happening in front of them and all the folks in the production truck have jobs to do that might preclude them from replaying the same bad call ad infinitum.

Also, really fleshing this conspiracy theory out, I’m not sure it even benefits Major League Baseball to protect its umpires this October. If there are really going to be discussions about how to better umpiring and incorporate instant replay this winter, why enact some nefarious scheme that only works to the advantage of the umpire’s union?

Certainly it protects the product on the field, but Major League Baseball must realize that it has a monopoly on professional baseball, and it’s going to take a hell of a lot of bad umpiring before people start tuning out.

So I’m sticking with no. But of course, they could be paying me to write that.

4 thoughts on “Did MLB quiet TBS?

  1. Nobody noticed the Posey play at the time because it only became a huge deal when he scored four batters later. The broadcast showed the replay once (that I remember), for the reason you mentioned, the game kept going. Brooks Conrad didn’t argue. Bobby Cox didn’t come out to argue. Nobody gave anybody a reason to think it was a bad call, or at least such an egregiously bad call to make a stink about it.

    And I’ll tell you what, at the time, watching it live and then the replay once, I couldn’t tell if the tag was made or there was a little bit of daylight between Posey’s jersey and the glove.

  2. I do think MLB said something to TBS. I started to have a feeling about this during game 2 of the Yankees-Twins series. Before you say or even think it, NO the Yankees don’t get every call their way, but if this was regular season and YES, SNY or whoever had the game on you know a questionable call would be replayed over and over again from every angle possible.

    MLB can’t afford what happened last year to them again with the umpires almost taking up more of the media than the games.
    I am glad some of the players are coming out and requesting there be a meeting at the end of the year about the state of umpiring.

    But if MLB was paying me I would writing the same thing!!!!

  3. Technically they can but it certainly doesn’t look good.
    Personally I think they just need to institute instant replay, but that’s me. Some people are against that, don’t know why.

Leave a reply to Billy Pilgrim Cancel reply