ESPN has show the Dodgers at Cardnials both Monday and Wednesday which is surprising as ESPN usually airs a different match up not the same teams on both game nights.
bpatrick said:With the Braves running away with the NL East and a sure lock for
postseason, I can understand why a network would show them. But
ESPN, being in Bristol, CT, seems to think that the baseball world revolves
around the Yankees, Mets, and Red Sox. What's more, all the national
baseball outlets seem to think it's the '40s, when interest was focused
primarily on the Yankees, (New York) Giants, and (Brooklyn) Dodgers.
For all that, I think that even today, given the history and mystique of
the two teams, the Yankees and the Dodgers would be the best bet for
a high-rated World Series.
Still (and forgive me if you live in New York or Boston but I do live in
Braves country), I get tired of the Yankees and Red Sox virtually every
week on ESPN. I wouldn't want the Braves all the time either, however.
Aren't there other teams that have fans in other parts of the country...
for example, St. Louis?
ansky212 said:On a national stage they are going to target the biggest teams in the biggest markets. I don't know why people find it so hard to understand why the Yankees/Mets/and Red Sox get so much coverage. It's all about reaching the greatest number of potential viewers - ratings that translate to revenue. There are so many baseball teams that can't even find viewers in their home market, so why would ESPN want them?
bpatrick said:Aren't there other teams that have fans in other parts of the country...
for example, St. Louis?
KeithE4 said:ansky212 said:On a national stage they are going to target the biggest teams in the biggest markets. I don't know why people find it so hard to understand why the Yankees/Mets/and Red Sox get so much coverage. It's all about reaching the greatest number of potential viewers - ratings that translate to revenue. There are so many baseball teams that can't even find viewers in their home market, so why would ESPN want them?
I think it's more because the national ad agencies are located in NYC, plus the physical location of ESPN and its employees. I can almost guarantee that the Cubs, Dodgers, Cardinals, & Giants have bigger followings nationally than the Mets (The Yankees are a national draw because they're like the Dallas Cowboys - you love 'em or you love to hate 'em). But those teams are not located in Noo Yawk, and most ad folks don't follow anyone but the Yankees and Mets, likely in that order. NBC is also guilty of Noo Yawk-centricity, if not more-so.
The Red Sox get coverage only because of (1) the rivalry with the Yankees, and (2) Bristol CT has fans of both teams. Note that Fox doesn't have the Red Sox love that the Eastern Seaboard Partisans Network has.