Weekend wrap: Charting career of Keith Olbermann; Will he do week of SportsCenter?

Spanning the globe to bring you the constant variety of sports media:

Tracking Keith Olbermann: Fang’s Bites posts a timeline of Keith Olbermann’s career, beginning in 1980. It’s been quite an interesting run.

First producer: Norby Williamson, OIbermann’s first producer for SportsCenter, reflects on his return to ESPN at Front Row.

Return of Big Show: Prior to the debut of his new show, Jason McIntyre of Big Lead says Olbermann will host a week of SportsCenter. It will coincide with the launch of the new Fox Sports 1.

Most viewed: Sports Media Watch has the top 50 most viewed sports telecasts of the year thus far. Surprise, surprise, the top 10 are all NFL.

Star power: Richard Deitsch of SI.com says ESPN’s College GameDay hopes to have President Obama and Tiger Woods among its guest forecasters this year.

Selena: John Koblin of Deadspin catches up with Selena Roberts. He writes about Roberts’ new website and her unexpected seven-figure windfall from her late mother.

Missed opportunity: Bob Pool in the Los Angeles Times has the incredible story of the man who collects autographed covers of Sports Illustrated, and the one he didn’t get.

British history: Classic Sports TV and Media has a comprehensive history of TV coverage of the British Open. It started in 1962 with taped coverage on ABC’s Wide World of Sports.

Strategy: Michael Bradley at the National Sports Journalism Center discusses a plan for the new Fox Sport 1 to differentiate itself from ESPN.

Reflections: Jennifer Overman posts comments from attendees of the recent Association for Women in Sports Media convention.

Ohio State connection: Kyle Rowland of Eleven Warriors writes how Ohio State has produced numerous former athletes turned TV analysts: Kirk Herbstreit, Clark Kellogg, Chris Spielman, Eddie George, Jim Jackson and more.

The Swirsk: An interview with Chicago Bulls radio announcer Chuck Swirsky, conducted by Paul Banks of Chicago Sports Media Watch.

LaTroy: Jeff Pearlman writes the backstory about his interview with the Mets’ LaTroy Hawkins for the Wall Street Journal.

New addition: JimRomenesko.com has details of Ben Cohen being named a full-time sports reporter for the Wall Street Journal.

*****

Podcasts:

Jason McIntyre Show: Interviews Peter King about his new football site at Sports Illustrated. Note: I will have a Q/A with King on Monday.

Sports Media Weekly: Steve Lepore of SB Nation examines Olbermann and more with Keith and Ken.

 

 

 

 

NY Times: Nate Silver to join ESPN; will be regular contributor to Olbermann show

Well, this is significant.

From the New York Times:

Nate Silver, the statistician who attained national fame for his accurate projections about the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections, is parting ways with The New York Times and moving his FiveThirtyEight franchise to ESPN, the sports empire controlled by the Walt Disney Company, according to ESPN employees with direct knowledge of his plans.

At ESPN, Mr. Silver is expected to have a wide-ranging portfolio. Along with his writing and number-crunching, he will most likely be a regular contributor to “Olbermann,” the late-night ESPN2 talk show hosted by Keith Olbermann that will have its debut at the end of August. In political years, he will also have a role at ABC News, which is owned by Disney.

An ESPN spokeswoman declined to comment on Friday night. Mr. Silver declined to comment. The employees, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that Mr. Silver’s deal could be announced as soon as Monday.

Before creating statistical models for elections, Mr. Silver was a baseball sabermetrician who built a highly effective system for projecting how players would perform in the future. For a time he was a managing partner of Baseball Prospectus. At public events recently, he has expressed interest in covering sports more frequently, so the ESPN deal is a logical next step.

 

 

Hockey time: Chicago-Washington kick off new season on NBC Sports Network

It’s 97 degrees in the worst weather town in the world (Chicago). So definitely need some thoughts of hockey to cool off.

The NHL announced the schedule for the 2013-14 season, and NBC and NBC Sports Network followed with their TV menu.

The season kicks off in Chicago on Oct. 1, where the Blackhawks will hoist the Stanley Cup banner prior to game against Washington on NBC Sports Network.

The biggest change will be the NHL rolling the dice on the outdoor games, with five of them this year. Will more take away from the novelty of those games? Big question for another day.

For now, if you’re hot like I am, a good day to think about some ice.

Here’s the rundown from NBC:

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NBC Sports Group will deliver coverage of 103 NHL regular-season games during the 2013-14 season, featuring 13 games on NBC and 90 games on NBC Sports Network. All games will be streamed live via NBC Sports Live Extra. Schedule highlights include:

  • The season begins with NHL Face-Off, the League’s North American launch event. Prior to NBC Sports Network’s first game of the season, in which the Washington Capitals visit the 2013 Stanley Cup Champion Chicago Blackhawks, NBC Sports Network will provide coverage of the Blackhawks 2013 Stanley Cup championship banner raising ceremony at the United Center in Chicago, Ill.
  • The 2014 NHL Winter Classic at Michigan Stadium between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Detroit Red Wings on January 1 at 1 p.m. ET on NBC.
  • The inaugural NHL Stadium Series, featuring four games played in iconic outdoor venues between January 25 and March 1, including: Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles,  Calif., Yankee Stadium in New York, N.Y., and Soldier Field in Chicago, Ill. Plus the NHL Heritage Classic at BC Place in Vancouver, B.C. on March 2.
  • The return of Wednesday Night Rivalry on NBC Sports Network. The 2013-14 NHL season on NBCSN will feature 24 Wednesday Night Rivalry telecasts — up from 15 last year.
  • A Stanley Cup Final rematch between the Chicago Blackhawks and Boston Bruins on Sunday, January 19 on NBC.
  • Eastern Conference Final rematch between the Boston Bruins and Pittsburgh Penguins on Wednesday, October 30 on NBCSN.
  • Western Conference Final rematch between the Los Angeles Kings and the Chicago Blackhawks on Monday, December 30 on NBCSN.
  • The Chicago Blackhawks and Detroit Red Wings, who went to seven games in the 2013 Western Conference Semifinals, will face off twice on NBC Sports Network. The Red Wings host the Blackhawks on Wednesday Night Rivalry, January 22. On Sunday, March 16, the Red Wings travel to Chicago to take on the Blackhawks.
  • In a renewal of their fierce intra-state rivalry, the Philadelphia Flyers and Pittsburgh Penguins meet three times on NBC and NBC Sports Network this season. The Penguins host the Flyers on Wednesday Night Rivalry, November 13 on NBC Sports Network. On Sunday, March 16 the Flyers return to Pittsburgh to take on the Penguins on NBC. The two teams meet again on Saturday, April 12 on NBC.

NBC Sports Network will offer games on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights throughout the season. Beginning in January, a Sunday game will be added most weeks. NBCSN drops the puck on its coverage on Tuesday, October 1 at 7 p.m. ET with NHL Live, NBC Sports Network’s live pre- and post-game show.

NHL Live will feature the banner raising ceremony for the 2013 Stanley Cup champion Chicago Blackhawks, live from the United Center in Chicago, Ill. At 8 p.m. ET, NBCSN will present exclusive coverage of the Blackhawks hosting the Washington Capitals. Emmy Award-winning play-by-play commentator Mike ‘Doc’ Emrick, analyst Eddie Olczyk and Emmy Award-winning ‘Inside-the-Glass’ analyst Pierre McGuire will call the game.

NHL on NBC coverage begins on Friday, November 29 at 1 p.m. ET, with the NHL Thanksgiving Showdown featuring the New York Rangers at Boston Bruins. Beginning on January 19, and continuing through the end of the regular season, NBC will air a national “Game of the Week” on most Sundays.

The Boston Bruins have the most games across NBC and NBC Sports Network this season, with 13. Boston is followed closely by the Chicago Blackhawks, Minnesota Wild, New York Rangers, Pittsburgh Penguins, and St. Louis Blues, who all make 12 appearances.  Four additional teams have 11 games on NBC and NBC Sports Network — Buffalo Sabres, Detroit Red Wings, Philadelphia Flyers, and Washington Capitals.

NHL WINTER CLASSIC

The annual NHL Winter Classic will take place on January 1, 2014 at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Mich. — The Big House — and will feature the Toronto Maple Leafs vs. the Detroit Red Wings. The 2014 NHL Winter Classic will be broadcast on NBC at 1 p.m. ET. Emrick, Olczyk and McGuire will call the game.

The five previous NHL Winter Classics have produced five of the six most-watched NHL regular-season games in the past 38 years (average viewers).

MOST-WATCHED NHL REGULAR-SEASON GAMES SINCE 1975

4.5 million Jan. 1, 2011 NBC Capitals-Penguins
4.4 million Jan. 1, 2009 NBC Red Wings-Blackhawks
3.8 million Jan. 27, 1996 FOX Six-game regional coverage
3.8 million Jan. 1, 2008 NBC Penguins-Sabres
3.74 million Jan. 2, 2012 NBC Rangers-Flyers
3.68 million Jan. 1, 2010 NBC Flyers-Bruins

NHL STADIUM SERIES and NHL HERITAGE CLASSIC

NBC and NBC Sports Network will combine to present the 2014 NHL Stadium Series, which consists of a new set of four outdoor games. The NHL Stadium Series will feature the Anaheim Ducks-Los Angeles Kings, New Jersey Devils-New York Rangers, New York Islanders-New York Rangers, and Pittsburgh Penguins-Chicago Blackhawks. All games will be held at iconic outdoor stadiums in Los Angeles, New York and Chicago. In addition, NBCSN will also present coverage of the NHL Heritage Classic featuring the Ottawa Senators-Vancouver Canucks.

Coverage begins on Saturday, January 25 at 10 p.m. ET on NBC Sports Network, when the 2012 Stanley Cup champion Los Angeles Kings face off against the Anaheim Ducks at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, Calif. It will be the first outdoor NHL game ever played in Los Angeles, and the second outdoor hockey game for the Kings franchise. In 1991, the Kings participated in an outdoor exhibition match with the New York Rangers in the parking lot at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nev.

The following day, Sunday, January 26 at 1 p.m. ET on NBC, the New York Rangers will take the ice against the New Jersey Devils at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx. The contest will be the second outdoor hockey game for the Rangers in three years, as the team participated in the 2012 NHL Winter Classic against the Philadelphia Flyers at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, Pa.

Later that week, on Wednesday, January 29 at 7 p.m. ET on NBC Sports Network, the New York Islanders will host the Rangers for a second outdoor game at Yankee Stadium. The game will be the first outdoor NHL game for the Islanders and the third for the Rangers since 2012.  (2012 NHL Winter Classic and 2014 NHL Stadium Series Game 3)

On Saturday, March 1 at 8 p.m. ET, NBC Sports Network will telecast the fourth game of the series featuring the Pittsburgh Penguins-Chicago Blackhawks at Soldier Field in Chicago, Ill. The Penguins-Blackhawks matchup will be the second time Chicago has hosted a regular-season outdoor NHL game (2009 NHL Winter Classic at Wrigley Field). The Penguins will be participating in their third regular-season outdoor NHL game since 2008. (2008 NHL Winter Classic and 2011 NHL Winter Classic).

The NHL Heritage Classic will take place on Sunday, March 2 at 7:30 p.m. ET on NBC Sports Network. The Vancouver Canucks will play the Ottawa Senators at BC Place in Vancouver, British Columbia.

DATE TEAMS STADIUM NETWORK TIME
January 25, 2014 Ducks-Kings Dodger Stadium NBCSN 10 p.m.
January 26, 2014 Rangers-Devils Yankee Stadium NBC 1 p.m.
January 29, 2014 Rangers-Islanders Yankee Stadium NBCSN 7 p.m.
March 1, 2014 Blackhawks-Penguins Soldier Field NBCSN 8 p.m.
March 2, 2014 Senators-Canucks# BC Place NBCSN 7:30 p.m.

*All times listed are ET.

#NHL Heritage Classic

WEDNESDAY NIGHT RIVALRY

NBC Sports Network’s exclusive Wednesday Night Rivalry coverage will return for a second season and feature some of the biggest rivalries in the NHL, including Boston-Montreal, Philadelphia-Pittsburgh and Chicago-Detroit. The network will air exclusive coverage on Wednesday nights for 24 weeks, with games starting at 8 p.m. ET. WNR begins Wednesday, October 2 with the Buffalo Sabres facing off against the Detroit Red Wings.

During its inaugural season, Wednesday Night Rivalry was called “the hottest new brand in sports” by Forbes. It claimed six of the top eight most-watched NHL regular-season telecasts ever on NBC Sports Network and averaged 646,000 viewers. With the success of Wednesday Night Rivalry, the 2013 season was the most-watched NHL regular season on cable in 19 years.

NBC Sports Network 2013-14 NHL Wednesday Night Rivalry schedule (subject to change):

Date Away Home
October 2 Buffalo Detroit
October 9 Chicago St. Louis
October 16 New York Rangers Washington
October 23 Boston Buffalo
October 30 Boston Pittsburgh .
November 6 Pittsburgh New York Rangers
November 13 Philadelphia Pittsburgh
November 20 Pittsburgh Washington
November 27 Boston Detroit
December 4 Philadelphia Detroit
December 11 Philadelphia Chicago
December 18 Pittsburgh New York Rangers
January 8 New York Rangers Chicago
January 15 Washington Pittsburgh
January 22 Chicago Detroit
January 29 New York Rangers New York Islanders
February 5 Pittsburgh Buffalo
February 26 Boston Buffalo
March 5 Washington Philadelphia
March 12 Boston Montreal
March 19 St. Louis Chicago
March 26 Philadelphia New York Rangers
April 2 Boston Detroit
April 9 Detroit Pittsburgh

NBC SPORTS GROUP’S STATE-OF-THE ART STUDIOS

NHL studio programming throughout much of the 2013-14 season will originate from NBC Sports Group’s state-of-the-art International Broadcast Center, located in Stamford, Conn.

NHL Live, NBC Sports Network’s live pre- and post-game show with highlights and analysis of NHL matchups, will air before and after most games. This year, the program will expand to one hour prior to live-event coverage — an increase from last year’s half-hour show. The 30-minute post-game show will air immediately following the game.

On most days, the NHL Live team will consist of Liam McHugh (host), Mike Milbury (analyst), and Keith Jones (analyst).

2014 WINTER OLYMPICS

The NHL will pause from Feb. 9-25, 2014, while NHL players comprise the majority of the rosters of the national teams competing in Sochi, Russia, for Olympic gold. The NHL season resumes Wednesday, February 26.

NBC Sports Group 2013-14 NHL regular-season schedule (subject to change):

Date Away Home Network
Tues., Oct. 1 Washington Chicago NBCSN
Wed., Oct. 2 Buffalo Detroit NBCSN
Thurs., Oct. 3 Los Angeles Minnesota NBCSN
Tues., Oct. 8 Tampa Bay Buffalo NBCSN
Wed., Oct. 9 Chicago St. Louis NBCSN
Mon., Oct. 14 Minnesota Buffalo NBCSN
Tues., Oct. 15 San Jose St. Louis NBCSN
Wed., Oct. 16 NY Rangers Washington NBCSN
Mon., Oct. 21 Colorado Pittsburgh NBCSN
Tues., Oct. 22 Nashville Minnesota NBCSN
Wed., Oct. 23 Boston Buffalo NBCSN
Mon., Oct. 28 Montreal NY Rangers NBCSN
Tues., Oct. 29 Tampa Bay New Jersey NBCSN
Wed., Oct. 30 Boston Pittsburgh NBCSN
Mon., Nov. 4 Anaheim NY Rangers NBCSN
Tues., Nov. 5 Philadelphia Carolina NBCSN
Wed., Nov. 6 Pittsburgh NY Rangers NBCSN
Tues., Nov. 12 Phoenix St. Louis NBCSN
Wed., Nov. 13 Philadelphia Pittsburgh NBCSN
Mon., Nov. 18 Anaheim Pittsburgh NBCSN
Tues., Nov. 19 Boston NY Rangers NBCSN
Wed., Nov. 20 Pittsburgh Washington NBCSN
Mon., Nov. 25 Minnesota St. Louis NBCSN
Tues., Nov. 26 Anaheim Dallas NBCSN
Wed., Nov. 27 Boston Detroit NBCSN
Fri., Nov. 29 NY Rangers Boston NBC
Mon., Dec. 2 Philadelphia Minnesota NBCSN
Tues., Dec. 3 Dallas Chicago NBCSN
Wed., Dec. 4 Philadelphia Detroit NBCSN
Mon., Dec. 9 Columbus Pittsburgh NBCSN
Tues., Dec. 10 Nashville NY Rangers NBCSN
Wed., Dec. 11 Philadelphia Chicago NBCSN
Tues., Dec. 17 Washington Philadelphia NBCSN
Wed., Dec. 18 Pittsburgh NY Rangers NBCSN
Mon., Dec. 23 Minnesota Philadelphia NBCSN
Mon., Dec. 30 Los Angeles Chicago NBCSN
Wed., Jan. 1 Toronto Detroit NBC
Sun., Jan. 5 San Jose Chicago NBCSN
Tues., Jan. 7  Philadelphia New Jersey NBCSN
Wed., Jan. 8 NY Rangers Chicago NBCSN
Sun., Jan. 12 Philadelphia NY Rangers NBCSN
Tues., Jan. 14 Philadelphia Buffalo NBCSN
Wed., Jan. 15 Washington Pittsburgh NBCSN
Thurs., Jan. 16 Los Angeles St. Louis NBCSN
Sun., Jan. 19 Boston Chicago NBC
Sun., Jan. 19 Washington NY Rangers NBCSN
Tues., Jan. 21 Minnesota Dallas NBCSN
Wed., Jan. 22 Chicago Detroit NBCSN
Thurs., Jan. 23 Pittsburgh NY Islanders NBCSN
Sat., Jan. 25 Anaheim Los Angeles NBCSN
Sun., Jan. 26 NY Rangers New Jersey NBC
Mon., Jan. 27 Buffalo Pittsburgh NBCSN
Mon., Jan. 27 Los Angeles San Jose NBCSN
Tues., Jan. 28 Washington Buffalo NBCSN
Wed., Jan. 29 NY Rangers NY Islanders NBCSN
Sun., Feb. 2 Detroit Washington NBC
Mon., Feb. 3 Colorado New Jersey NBCSN
Tues., Feb. 4 NY Islanders Washington NBCSN
Wed., Feb. 5 Pittsburgh Buffalo NBCSN
Thurs., Feb. 6 Boston St. Louis NBCSN
Wed., Feb. 26 Boston Buffalo NBCSN
Wed., Feb. 26 Los Angeles Colorado NBCSN
Sat., March 1 Pittsburgh Chicago NBC
Sun., March 2*** Philadelphia Washington NBC
Sun., March 2*** Ottawa Vancouver NBCSN
Sun., March 2*** Boston NY Rangers NBCSN
Mon., March 3 Buffalo Dallas NBCSN
Tues., March 4 Tampa Bay St. Louis NBCSN
Wed., March 5 Washington Philadelphia NBCSN
Sun., March 9 Detroit NY Rangers NBC
Sun., March 9 Chicago Buffalo NBCSN
Tues., March 11 Washington Pittsburgh NBCSN
Wed., March 12 Boston Montreal NBCSN
Sun., March 16 Philadelphia Pittsburgh NBC
Sun., March 16 Detroit Chicago NBCSN
Mon., March 17 Minnesota Boston NBCSN
Tues., March 18 Chicago Philadelphia NBCSN
Wed., March 19 St. Louis Chicago NBCSN
Sun., March 23 Minnesota Detroit NBCSN
Mon., March 24 Montreal Boston NBCSN
Tues., March 25 Detroit Columbus NBCSN
Wed., March 26 Philadelphia NY Rangers NBCSN
Sun., March 30 Boston Philadelphia NBC
Sun., March 30 Chicago Pittsburgh NBCSN
Mon., March 31 Florida New Jersey NBCSN
Mon., March 31 Minnesota Los Angeles NBCSN
Tues., April 1 Philadelphia St. Louis NBCSN
Wed., April 2 Boston Detroit NBCSN
Wed., April 2 Phoenix Los Angeles NBCSN
Thurs., April 3 Minnesota Chicago NBCSN
Thurs., April 3 Los Angeles San Jose NBCSN
Fri., April 4 Washington New Jersey NBCSN
Sun., April 6 St. Louis Chicago NBC
Sun., April 6 Buffalo Philadelphia NBCSN
Tues., April 8 Washington St. Louis NBCSN
Wed., April 9 Detroit Pittsburgh NBCSN
Wed., April 9 San Jose Anaheim NBCSN
Thurs., April 10 St. Louis Minnesota NBCSN
Fri., April 11 NY Islanders New Jersey NBCSN
Sat., April 12 Philadelphia Pittsburgh NBC
Sat., April 12 Chicago Nashville NBCSN
Sun., April 13 Detroit St. Louis NBC

 

Posted in NHL

MMQB: Peter King’s new NFL site makes it debut Monday

You will want to check this out if you are an NFL fan, or a Peter King fan for that matter. Looks very promising.

I will have a Q/A with King on Monday. Until then, here’s the release from Sports Illustrated with the details about the new site.

*******

SPORTS ILLUSTRATED today introduced “The MMQB” (TheMMQB.com), a new, digital franchise edited by award-winning SI senior writer Peter King that is devoted to NFL coverage. The franchise, an offshoot of King’s popular Monday Morning Quarterback column, will deliver insight, access and analysis from a team of reporters that will set a paradigm for future multimedia NFL coverage.

“We are aiming to be the thinking man’s website dedicated to covering the NFL in a more modern way,” said King. “We will combine the great SI storytelling style with an added emphasis on video, social media and photography.”

King, who will continue to write Monday Morning Quarterback in addition to producing other stories and videos each week, will be joined by SI newcomers Greg Bedard, Robert Klemko and Jenny Vrentas to form the nucleus of The MMQB editorial team. Bedard will focus on trends in the game and write a weekly Friday notes column. Vrentas will write feature articles and contribute regularly on the critical health, safety and legal issues confronting the NFL. Klemko will concentrate on the league’s most important news stories and go inside the lives of players off the field. “10 Things I Think I Think”, a well-known component of King’s MMQB column, will become a Monday through Friday feature, put together by various writers with many of the entries fewer than 140 characters to encourage sharing on Twitter. And for a feature called “3@3”, an NFL player, coach or executive will respond to three questions, which will be posted Monday through Friday at 3 p.m. ET.

Other regular contributors include SI media reporter Richard Deitsch, who will look at how the NFL is covered and how it interacts with fans through media; SI senior writer Don Banks will dive into the league’s hottest issues on and off the field in a column called “The Conscience”; SI senior writer Jim Trotter’s column “The Takeaway” will focus on what’s happening on the West Coast; and former Green Bay Packers executive Andrew Brandt will write a weekly column that provides insights into the business of football and the inner workings of NFL front offices. In addition, SI’s video group will fully support TheMMQB.com by producing short- and long-form original stories and companion pieces using the site’s entire editorial team.

The MMQB.com was developed by Time Inc. / SPORTS ILLUSTRATED and utilizes a responsive design that optimizes the user experience across mobile and desktop platforms with deep integration to social platforms like Facebook and Twitter. The forward-looking design allows users to easily access the “river” of content to keep up to date on the latest stories and videos as well as find and search archived content.

“We’re thrilled to launch another digital franchise under the Sports Illustrated umbrella, especially one being led by our most popular writer about the most popular sport,” said Paul Fichtenbaum, the Editor of the Time Inc. Sports Group. “In many ways this represents a natural evolution for us.”

All-Star Game ratings: Young viewers not tuning in; Rivera’s big moment prevented record low

Been a busy couple days, but I wanted to re-visit the ratings for the All-Star Game.

Technically, Fox can boast about a 1 percent increase over 2012 with 11 million viewers tuning in. The final rating was at 6.9, up from 6.8, an all-time low for the Mid-Summer Classic.

Yet that’s a disappointing number. The rating should have been higher, given that the game was in the nation’s No. 1 market (hey, there’s Seinfeld) and the Mariano Rivera factor. The New York rating was up 16 percent from last year, and the game peaked at 7.6 when Rivera came on to pitch in the eighth inning.

Take out those two elements, and this year’s edition likely is the least viewed All-Star game of all time.

Even more distressing for Fox and MLB was who didn’t watch the game: Young viewers. According to the TVSportsRatings feed on Twitter, men 50 and over accounted for 34 percent of the audience, the highest ever. In 1993, it was 24 percent.

TVSportsRatings tweets:

Between ’93 and ’13, ASG has lost 51% of its average audience and 63% of its Male 18-49 rating.

Jason McIntyre of Big Lead added more:

NBA AS on TNT had a 5.7 Men 18-49 and 6.37 M18-34. MLB had 4.5 and 3.5. NBA had 8 mil viewers. MLB 11 mil.

As I have been saying for a long time, baseball isn’t growing new fans. I have first-hand evidence in my own home with two sports-crazed teenage sons. They watch only a little baseball on TV and that’s more than their friends, who barely watch at all. It’s all about football, basketball, and even hockey for them with the Blackhawks in the Chicago market.

Clearly, baseball has issues. I will examine it more later on, but I want to leave you with this tweet from Jeff Passan of Yahoo! Sports on Neil Diamond:

Baseball wants to get a younger fan base. Naturally, it brings out a 72-year-old to sing in the middle of one of its highest-profile games.

Yes, enough with Neil Diamond at baseball games.

 

 

 

 

Coming soon: Fox Sports 1 planning documentary on Rivera; ESPN on Archie Manning

Given his recitation of the lyrics on Tuesday night, wonder if Tim McCarver will actually sing “Sandman” for Fox Sports 1’s upcoming documentary on Mariano Rivera?

Not mention here in the official release:

******

Cue the music … Metallica’s Enter Sandman.

FOX Sports’ award-winning, all-access original documentary series BEING: goes on an extraordinary journey with New York Yankees legendary closer Mariano Rivera as he marches toward Cooperstown in the final season of an epic, record-setting career.

In production since Spring Training, the unprecedented goal is for BEING: MARIANO RIVERA to premiere on FOX Sports 1 — the nation’s new sports network, launching Aug. 17 — within days of the unparalleled pitcher throwing the final trademark cutter of his monumental career.

“There is incredible opportunity here to chronicle the real human story behind the final stretch of the most dominant pitcher in modern baseball history,” said Michael Bloom, FOX Sports Senior Vice President of Original Programming. “Mariano has opened the doors completely to our cameras. We’re going to be able to see and feel, in his voice and through his eyes, what it’s like to be a legendary Yankee and wrap up a Hall-of-Fame career and take off the pinstripes for the last time. We’ll also be there as he wakes up the next morning and starts the next chapter of his life.”

One of the greatest Yankees of all-time, Rivera is an intensely private and spiritual man; his unique aura both on and off the field only enhances his mystique. BEING: MARIANO RIVERA affords viewers an intimate look into his life and takes the fan and viewer from his early childhood in Puerto Caimito, Panama to his current-day status as a living legend; all told within BEING:’S cinematic framework of Rivera’s final season. Major League Baseball Productions has had camera crews embedded behind the scenes with Rivera at multiple key points since filming began prior to Opening Day.

Universally regarded as the most dominant relief pitcher in baseball, using his signature cut fastball to score an all-time record 638 saves (and counting), five World Series rings (including the World Series MVP award in 1999) and countless single-season and career pitching marks, Rivera’s story is the stuff of legends. For more information on Rivera, please visit: http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/player/mariano-rivera/85269?q=mariano-rivera

FOX Sports Originals’ BEING: series sets the tone for FOX Sports 1 original programming with a number of other high-profile, unprecedented, all-access projects in different stages of development and production, including BEING: MIKE TYSON and BEING: THE FINEST.

“It’s important for the team at FOX Sports to connect fans and viewers with today’s heroes and show them the human side of sport,” Bloom added. “Our BEING: franchise does just that. It puts the viewer/fan in a position to walk a mile in the shoes of today’s icons and hear, see and feel what they do during the most critical times and the simplest moments.”

“Mariano Rivera’s retirement isn’t just a story for Yankee fans, or even baseball fans,” said Tom Forman, CEO of Relativity Television. “This is a story about champions, determination and going out on top. It’s about as universal as it gets.”

“Given how closely Mariano guards his privacy, we’re extremely appreciative of the access he has granted us these past few months,” said Chris Tully, Senior Vice President, Broadcasting, Major League Baseball. “This special will be a rare glimpse behind the curtain with one of the truly legendary figures in the game.”

Co-produced by Relativity Television, Relativity Sports and Major League Baseball Productions, BEING: MARIANO RIVERA is directed by Jeff Spaulding. Relativity Television’s team of Executive Producers includes Tom Forman, Happy Walters, Fernando Cuza, Matt Weaver and Brad Bishop. David Gavant serves as Vice President of Production, and David Check is Executive Producer for Major League Baseball.

********

ESPN is planning to examine the life of the original Manning, Archie. If he played for a better team and had more support, he would have joined his sons in the Hall of Fame.

From ESPN:

**************

ESPN Films’ SEC Storied series will launch its third season this fall with The Book of Manning, premiering Tuesday, Sept. 24

, at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN.  The film will explore the personal and professional life of former NFL and Ole Miss quarterback Archie Manning and how the sudden loss of his father impacted his life and the way he and his wife Olivia raised their three sons.  

About The Book of Manning:

A father-and-son story written into the pages of football folklore, it can be argued that no family has had more influence on a sport than the Mannings. Archie – the patriarch – a star quarterback at the University of Mississippi and then with the New Orleans Saints, followed by oldest son Cooper, whose football dreams were cut short by a spinal condition, then sons Peyton and Eli – both of them quarterbacks, All-SEC, number one draft picks, back-to-back Super Bowl champions and MVPs.

Narrated by actor John Goodman, The Book of Manning features revealing interviews with Archie, Olivia, Cooper, Peyton and Eli Manning along with other family members, friends, former teammates and coaches as well as never-before-seen photos and home movie footage of Archie and his sons.  Through it all, director Rory Karpf explores how a tragedy shaped the course of not only Archie’s life, but his family’s as well.

“This film offers the kind of personal and poignant look at Archie Manning and his family that hasn’t been seen before,” said ESPN Films executive producer John Dahl. “Through intimate details and insights to previously unseen material, viewers will gain a powerful understanding of how this has arguably become one of the most influential families ever in any sport.”

“I feel honored and a privileged that Archie Manning has entrusted me to tell his story,” said The Book of Manning director Rory Karpf. “We expected to make a film about football’s most famous family, but instead made a film simply about family. Making The Book of Manning has been one of the most educational and enriching experiences in my career.”

Quotes from The Book of Manning:

Robert Khayat (former Ole Miss Chancellor) on Archie as a star QB at Ole Miss:

“Archie…he put on a show. He just did. He ran everywhere, he threw everywhere. When a fella starts out to the right and gets boxed and turns back to the left and then throws it back to the right, that gets your attention.”

Archie Manning on his remarkable junior season at Ole Miss following the sudden loss of his father that August:

“You know I thought about him a lot. How much he would have enjoyed that. We had some huge wins, some exciting games, and probably the best year I ever had in football – the fall of 1969. You know I wish he could have seen that…missing my dad, that was pretty tough.”

Archie Manning on the football success of sons Peyton and Eli:

“I mean for them to be number one picks in the draft? Win Super Bowls, MVP? Yeah we pinch ourselves.  We [Olivia and Archie] just tried to raise kids. We tried to raise good kids and have a good family.  I don’t like the perception that it was a plan. You know that I was an NFL quarterback for a while and then I’ve got these boys and I’m going to mold them into being NFL quarterbacks. Not so. You might can do that and they might can be an NFL quarterback I’m not sure you’re going to have a great father-son relationship. That’s what I wanted.”

Eli Manning on growing up a Manning:

“We [Eli, Peyton and Cooper] loved sports; that’s what we loved to do. We loved being outside, we loved running around. So whatever sport was in season, I wanted to play it. All my flag football games growing up, he [Archie] always had a video camera. You know, whatever we chose, he wanted us to go all-out.”

Peyton Manning on not following his father and older brother Cooper to Ole Miss:

(If Cooper didn’t have to quit football due to a spinal condition) “I probably would have gone to Ole Miss, just to have the opportunity to play with him again, especially at my parents’ alma mater…Had my dad told me to go to Ole Miss, I would have gone to Ole Miss. I’m thankful that my dad let me make my own decision.”

Excerpts for Hawk documentary: Was asked to manage Red Sox twice; broadcasting advice from Cosell

In Hawk: The Colorful Life of Ken Harrelson (MLB Network, tonight, 7 p.m. ET), the stories and the name-dropping (Vince Lombardi, Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio, Joe Namath) come so fast that you almost expect to hear Harrelson say he was with Abner Doubleday when he started drawing diamonds on a napkin.

It really doesn’t seem possible that one person could have known so many people. But it is because we’re talking about “Hawk.”

“Do I believe everything he said?” Cornblatt said. “I have no reason not to believe him. He existed in that world in the ’60s and ’70s. It is the life he led.”

Cornblatt said countless stories never made it into the film. Considering Harrelson continues to go strong at 71, perhaps there will be a sequel.

Also, love this picture I found on Hawk playing with Cleveland. No there’s a guy with a lot of TWTW.

Here are some of the excerpts from tonight’s film:

Harrelson on being asked twice by the Red Sox to take over as manager:

While I was broadcasting their games, the Red Sox asked me to manage the team twice. The first year, it was ’77 when they fired D.J., Darrell Johnson. [Dick] O’Connell called me in Kansas City and said, “We’re going to fire D.J. Why don’t you take over the ball club?” So I said, “I don’t want to take over the ball club.” He says, “Why not?” I said “Because you don’t want my temper on that bench.” He said, “Well, who should I get?” I said, “See if you can get Yogi.” He said, “I can’t get Yogi.” I said, “Well, Popeye, get Popeye. Players love him.” Don Zimmer, third base coach. I said, “Get Popeye.” He said, “Do you think he’d take it for just the rest of the year?” I said, “Call him and ask him.” He said, “Will you call him and ask him?” I said “Sure.” So we’re at the Adam’s Mark Hotel in Kansas City and I call Popeye’s room. I said, “Look, they’re gonna fire D.J. and want to know if you’ll take over the club for just the rest of the year.” He said, this is exactly what he said, “Hawk,” he said, “I’ll take it on a day-to-day contract.” The irony, too, was that when they’re fired Zimm, they wanted me to take over the club. Finally, I determined that this is not a good deal because my wife doesn’t understand  what it would be like to be married to a high-profile manager in Boston with a bad temper.

On the broadcasting advice he received from Curt Gowdy and Howard Cosell:

It was Curt first. He called me up. … He says, “I’m coming to the ballpark today. I want to talk to you.” I said, “Ok.” So he comes in, we talk and he says, “Ok, I’ve been watching you now for a while.” He says, “You’ve got a chance to be a hell of an announcer.” He says, “I’m gonna give you the best piece of advice you’ll ever get: Don’t try to please everybody.” So a couple weeks later, Coach calls me up, [Howard] Cosell. He says, “We’re coming into Boston.” He says, “I want to talk to you.” He comes in, he says, “I’m going to give you the best piece of advice you’re ever gonna get in broadcasting. One of these days, you got a chance to be a hell of a broadcaster, but don’t try to please everybody.” It was amazing because it was in a space of like two weeks. It was, like, weird. But they were both right, both right. You cannot please everybody, especially in a two-team city. … Over the years, I’ve had a lot of critics and I’ve had a lot of love. I’ll tell you what, obviously I love the love better, but I don’t mind the critics at all.

On the differences in the personalities of Ken and “Hawk” Harrelson:

Ken Harrelson is a different guy than Hawk. Ken is a guy who is very shy, introverted and people who know me know this. Hawk, on the other side of the page, is the guy who’s protected me all my life. It was a way to handle my fear. It was a way to handle my insecurity because I was afraid. Hawk wasn’t.

Harrelson on the rivalry between Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio:

Ted Williams and I are having dinner. This is after I’m retired, I’m broadcasting now, and Ted comes down to Spring Training. We’re talking, and [of] all the 150 hours we talked on hitting, I never talked to him about DiMaggio. Finally, I said, “Tell me about DiMaggio,” because they didn’t like each other at all. I said, “Ted, tell me about that trade where DiMaggio was going to come to Fenway. You’re going to go to Yankee Stadium with that little short porch out there.” He says, “To hell with Yankee Stadium.” He said, “Put me in Detroit.” I said, “Well, how many home runs would you have averaged in Detroit?” He said, “75 a year,” and you got to believe him. I said, “Well, tell me about DiMaggio.” He goes, “He’s the best right-handed hitter I ever saw.” I had never talked with Joe about baseball. This is amazing. I said, “Joe, tell me about Ted Williams and that trade [where] you were going to go to Fenway and he was going to go to New York.” I said, “How many home runs would you have averaged in Fenway?” He said, “Probably around 70 a year,” but you got to believe him. I said, “Well, tell me about Ted.” He goes, “He’s the best left-handed hitter I ever saw.” Almost verbatim, the two of them.

Harrelson on his relationship with Mickey Mantle:

Mickey and I were tight. We played a lot of golf together. We ran together a lot. We had a lot of fun. Mickey never realized how much we loved him. I played against Mickey for six years. I played against Mickey the last game he ever played, 1968 [at] Fenway Park. [Ralph] Houk sent him up to pinch hit. We all knew it was his last game. I’m standing in right field, crying. I look over at Yaz in left field, he’s crying. I couldn’t see the infielders, but I guarantee you some of them were crying too. People never realized, or Mickey didn’t, how much we loved him.

I love that guy. He told me, “Hawk,” he says, “the worst thing I ever did in my life was name one of my kids Mickey, Jr.” He said, “But how the hell did I know I was going to grow up to be Mickey Mantle?”.

Harrelson on the biggest moment of his broadcasting career:

The biggest moment for me is [Mark] Buehrle’s perfect game. The reason is because of Mark Buehrle, the person. Mark Buehrle is my all-time favorite White Sox player. … When you get a guy like Mark Buehrle, when he pitched that perfect game, I cried.

On dining with boxer Rocky Marciano a few days before Marciano’s death in a plane crash:

We were at the Continental Hotel. I was playing with Cleveland. Tony Horton and I had gone over to have dinner and the maître d’ comes over and he says, “Mr. Harrelson?” I said, “Yes?” He says, “Mr. Marciano is upstairs. He’d like for you and your friends to come up and have some birthday cake with him.” This is only like two, three days before he crashed and got killed, he was going to Iowa for something. I had met Rocky before. He was a baseball fan, a Red Sox fan and everything. We started talking and everything, and I ask him, I said, “Rocky, what would you have done with Cassius Clay?” He said, “Hawk, he’s the fastest heavyweight that ever lived.“ He said, “And he would’ve cut me up. But in 15 rounds, I would’ve caught him and I would’ve knocked him out.” Then he said, “I heard you used to box. A friend of mine told me he saw you box once.” I said, “Yeah.” He said, “What if I could promote a fight with you and Sonny Liston?” This is 1969. I said, “Well, he’d probably knock me out.” I said, “How much money are you talking about?” He goes, “Well, how much money do you want?” I said, “I’ll do it for $100,00.” He looks like this and he goes, “At Fenway Park, we’ll sell it out with you there.” I said, “$100,000, Rocky.” He goes, “Let’s do it!”

On meeting Vince Lombardi:

I couldn’t stand Vince Lombardi, being from Kansas City. After they beat the Chiefs in the Super Bowl, he said, “Well, there are a lot of teams in the NFL that can beat the Chiefs.” Boy, when he said that, I just snapped. Hawk got pissed. So now, I’m playing with Boston, doing pretty good. We walk in to go play the Senators in Washington. I’m going to go get an ice cream cone or a popsicle, and I see these two guys down the hallway down there. I recognize Lombardi, I didn’t recognize the other guy. I’m in just my shower shoes and shorts. I look and he goes, “Hawk, can I speak to you [for] a minute?” I didn’t like this guy. I open up the freezer, take out a popsicle, take off the top, very defiantly…I saunter down there. He says, “Hawk,” he says, “I’ve followed you.” He says, “You know, you could’ve played football for me.” Here’s a guy I did not like. We talked for about ten minutes. When I walked out of that room, I would’ve gone right through that freaking wall for him. When he got sick, I flew down from Boston to see him. That’s what kind of guy Vince Lombardi was.”

On Jack Nicklaus encouraging him to qualify for the 1972 British Open:

Jack and I started talking and playing some golf together. So in ’72, we were talking and he says, “Are you going to go over and try to qualify for the Open?” I said, “No.” He said, “Hawk, you should. You’re playing too good.” So I went home that night and I thought about it. I said, “Well, if Jack Nicklaus tells me that, I got to.” So I got the forms, filled them out and went over. We qualified at Gullane, which is a sister course to Muirfield. So I’m in the tournament. The first day, I shoot 75 and I hit six three-puts. I was knocking them six, seven feet by and missing them coming back. The next day, I had five three-puts and I missed the cut by a shot. I had 11 three-puts in two days and missed the cut by a shot, so that will tell you how good I was hitting it. But I didn’t know how to play. I didn’t know how to play and everything, when I was playing good, everything was ok. But if I double-bogeyed or bogeyed a hole, then Hawk got upset and that’s when the clubs started flying.

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