Showing posts with label Chicago Cubs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago Cubs. Show all posts

Sunday, December 21, 2014

MLB Network ratings spike during busy Winter Meetings

MEDIA

This post first appeared on SABRmedia.org.

How often are you glued to a television watching men chat in a hotel?

If you’re like me, that’s what you did during the 2014 MLB Winter Meetings, held Dec. 7-11 at the Hilton San Diego Bayfront Hotel. But don’t feel too bad for spending hours of tube time on what many baseball outsiders may see as the TV equivalent of watching paint dry. 

Since launching into our living rooms in 2008, the MLB Network has been a game changer in terms of how we get our baseball fix. It’s baseball 24 hours a day, seven days a week, a concept I couldn’t imagine while growing up in the 80s and reading box scores and game recaps in the morning newspaper.

The network offers its viewers a plethora of options from games and highlights to loads of chatter from a talented, knowledgeable and entertaining – I could listen to Billy Ripken talk all day about baseball – group of studio hosts and reporters.

MLB Network has developed a successful formula for attracting viewers and giving them a reason to put down the remote. Its live coverage of the Winter Meetings serves as a prime example.

According to Forbes’ Maury Brown, MLB Network’s primetime coverage set a new ratings high for the network by attracting 179,000 viewers, an increase of 48 percent over the previous record.

“The record speaks much to how deals that go down during the meetings, when there is so much interest, and yet often times, when the meetings yield little in terms of such critical contracts that create a domino effect, can affect television ratings,” wrote Brown on Forbes.com.

Much of the interests, as Brown notes, was the Jon Lester watch. For which team would the lefty sign and when. Would it be the Cubs? Or, the World Series Champion Giants? How about a return to Boston? There was even talk the Yankees were lurking, waiting to swoop in at the right moment.

That’s a lot of drama, even for night-time TV.

I’m not a fan of any of the teams that were reported to be targeting Lester at the time, but being a baseball fan, I wanted to know the minute he committed to a team, a city. I knew MLB Network had us covered.

And sure enough, when I hoped out of bed at 4:45 a.m. Wednesday and turned on the television – the channel was still, of course, on MLB Network from my previous night’s viewing – I saw in a little red box on the bottom right of my screen that Lester had indeed agreed to be a Cubbie.

“Yes,” I said with a half-hearted fist pump. As I said, I’m not a Cubs fan, but I was excited for their fans, one of which is my 9-year old son, Ty.

But it wasn’t just Lester drawing us in. This was one of the most active Winter Meetings, in terms of players swapping teams, in recent memory. Free agent signings, trades and persistent rumors of both types of transactions left us feeling like we couldn’t turn away from MLB Network.

I couldn’t.

Being a Nationals’ fan, my ears perked up even more when there was talk of my team potentially making a trade that would “blow the roof off this place.”

According to MLB.com, 79 players – 15 of those were All-Stars – changed teams during the 2014 Winter Meetings through free agency, trades or the Rule 5 Draft.

Teams handed out more than $500 million in guaranteed contracts and signing bonuses this week in deals that either became official or were agreed upon at the Winter Meetings,” MLB.com reported after the meetings broke up.

The Winter Meetings were gold, and so was MLB Network. It provided us baseball enthusiasts with the ability sit in our living rooms and man caves and track the hot stove league in front of, to paraphrase Homer Simpson, “TV’s warm glowing warming glow.”




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Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Today in Baseball History – November 26

National League President Ford Frick, on this date in 1948, sent money to cover the funereal expenses for one of the baseball’s most under-appreciated players, Lewis Robert “Hack” Wilson.

Wilson died a day earlier, at age 48, apparently with no money despite making a good living playing professional baseball. He was paid $33,000 by the Chicago Cubs in 1931.

At one time, Wilson held a National League record of 56 homers in a season and collected 191 RBI in 1930, a record that has yet to be matched.

In addition to Frick’s monetary support – many accounts, including this New York Times article – say that patrons of a bar Wilson frequented passed around a hat to collect money for the funeral.

Below is a brief Associated Press article announcing Wilson’s funeral.

BALTIMORE – (AP) – A simple funeral service in a neighborhood undertaker’s parlor will be held today for one of baseball’s mightiest sluggers, Hack Wilson.
The funeral is being paid for by the National League. Wilson, who earned as much as $30,000 a season with the Chicago Cubs, died broke Tuesday.

For two days no one claimed the body and a pauper’s burial was awaiting Wilson when fans started pouring in offers to contribute toward a decent burial. Then Ford Frick, president of the National League, sent the money to cover expenses.

Thursday night, hack’s second wife who has been living with her parents in Martinsburg, W.Va., requested that burial be there where Wilson started his professional baseball career in the Class D Blue Ridge League.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Today's Lineup


…or nine stories from around the Majors you may have missed today.

Interested in each MLB team's TV deals? Fangraphs has it covered. Speaking of TV deals the Nationals talks with MASN is on a flight to nowhere.

River Avenue Blues examines the Yankees infield defense over the past decade.

While I'm sitting here, typing, waiting for either QPR or Sunderland to score, the Braves are waiting by the phone – so are the Phillies – for B.J. Upton to call.

Former MLB union chief Marvin Miller has died at age 95.

Coyotes are starting an early line for Cubs tickets.

The White Sox have promoted former Bristol Sox manager Bobby Thingpen – he's done a few other things, too – to be the big club's bullpen coach.

The Oakland A's are donating one full player playoff share to charity.

Jonathan Broxton and the Reds may be nearing a multi-year deal.


That QPR – Sunderland match was dreadful. Both teams desperately needed a win. The game ended 0-0. #comeonfulham

Friday, November 2, 2012

Will this Trade Ever Happen?

Associated Press
Hey, you know what's fun on this Friday night?

It's following the is-he-or-isn't-he story of whether Dan Haren is being traded from the Angels to Chicago for Cubs' closer Carlos Marmol.

I first read reports of the trade about 9 p.m. Eastern time. A little later, FoxSports.com's Ken Rosenthal tweeted a not-so-fast comment regarding the deal. Tweet after tweet after retweet followed Rosenthal's lead.

Now, at about 10:25 p.m. Eastern, reports are coming out, via Twitter of course, that, though Marmol has ok'd the trade, the deal is dead for now and the Angels are talking with other clubs about the 30-year-old Haren. Marmol, who had 20 saves in 2012, had reported told a Spanish language media outlet the deal was done and he was headed to Los Angeles.

Oh, the confusion!

So who knows what happens next? My guess is – and this is an extremely uneducated, un-sourced guess – I'll wake up Saturday morning and read that Haren is now a Cub and Marmol is now with the Angels and I will have wasted valuable time on Twitter on Friday night when I could have been watching Phineas and Ferb with my adorable kids.

UPDATE: If the Cubs really want Haren, they can have him and keep Marmol. The Angles decline the option on Haren, making the righty a free agent. Haren gets a $3.5 million buyout from the Angels.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Has A-Rod Played His Last Game in Yankees Pinstripes?


I'm listening and watching and reading… for what team will Alex Rodriguez be striking out next year?

This, for sure, seems destined at this point to be THE story of the hot stove league.

Rumors began circulating Wednesday, apparently by the always reliable Keith Olbermann, about a possible off-season trade that would send A-Rod to Miami – he lives there, ya know? – with the Yankees eating much of his $114 million remaining salary.

Are the Yankees really so sick of the guy that they'd consider sucking it up and moving on, paying him to play for another team? If you believe the reports, it sure appears that way.

And if it happens – the trade to Miami, that is, who do Yankees fans want from the Marlins roster in return? Did I really hear someone on the radio this morning mention Heather Bell? Really?

I'm still in wait and see mode, but with A-Rod getting benched for what will be three consecutive starts in ALCS Game 4 tonight – in favor of a guy who's batting oh-for-12 in the postseason – it's becoming increasing difficult to see how the Yankees and A-Rod can come back together in spring training like nothing ever happened, like right handed pitchers ceased to exist over the winter.

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By the way, Bob Nightengale has a story on usatoday.com saying A-Rod, who has a full no-trade clause, is telling friends (and cute bikini models in the stands?) he will not block a trade, but will only go to a large-market team. That seams fair. I never saw a pending reunion between A-Rod and A.J. Burnett happening in Pittsburgh.

But where will Rodriguez end up if the Yankees can and will pull the trigger on a trade? Could it be Miami? Dodgers? Angels? White Sox? Cubs? None of those seem logical, but who knows?