October is always a fun month in sports. NFL kicks into high gear and the MLB playoffs
start. It is pretty much the only month when baseball is relevant and
must-watch TV. I follow baseball and keep an eye on it all season long, but I
almost never watch an entire game or even a couple of innings straight on TV
during the regular season. I am sure I
am less engaged with MLB because the teams I care about, the Oakland A’s and the Arizona Diamondbacks, have not been great the last few years, though the DBacks did have a good
season and made the playoffs this year. But even
otherwise, I am just not sure who watches regular season MLB games on TV
religiously anymore. There are several reasons for that. The game doesn’t have
great stars since the previous generation has left the building and the next
generation stars like Mike Trout and Bryce Harper have not been in the biggest of stages
or won consistently yet. As much as I didn’t like the Yankee dynasty, the lack
of a dominant team like them also hurts the league. Love them or hate them, it turns out we
need teams like the Yankees and the Patriots and the Warriors.
Also, I feel like our entertainment choices and consumption
patterns have changed even compared to just 5 years back and I can’t imagine
people sitting on their couch and watching baseball games uninterrupted these
days. If we already had way too many TV channels 10 years back, now we have way too many entertainment platforms, each with multiple binge watching “channels” or options. The net-net of it all is, baseball as a sport is in trouble
and is becoming less and less culturally relevant. I do have to say the macro-economic
numbers from MLB tells us a different story. They are raking in more money than
ever before and the player salaries are sky rocketing as always. Last I heard, the stadium attendance might be going up too and even the TV numbers
are not alarming in anyway . Of
course, the Cubs playing an amazing 7-game World Series last year helps TV ratings,
though the league can’t count on a storyline like that every year. MLB has been lucky this year too as they got
the Yankees, Astros, Dodgers, and the Cubs in the Championship series. That’s 4
of the largest TV markets in the country.
Despite all of that high-level data, there is something off
with baseball and it just doesn’t feel like the sport of the future. It doesn’t
have the star power of the NBA or the gambling stranglehold of the NFL. With
all that said, the MLB playoffs are always watchable and fun. The drama and the level of
competition are top-notch. You can’t take your eyes off a Clayton Kershaw
versus Dallas Keuchel matchup in the playoffs when a single pitch or a hit can
decide the game. Having a likeable superstar like Jose Altuve in the World
Series is a huge plus too. Maybe he should be the next big star the game should
be pushing. I totally expect the Astros to win this World Series, though the
Dodgers are probably more talented on the pitching side. It will be a great
story for Houston after the devastating hurricane. I wouldn’t mind a long and
exciting World Series given that these really are the only MLB games I have
watched all season.
What makes this October especially special is the early
start of the NBA season. Right now, we have all three leagues in-season plus College
football and the NHL if you care. There are only a handful dates in the history
when we have had all 3 pro leagues in action. It’s usually in late October or
early November when the World Series is wrapping up and the NBA is starting
off. But now, we are having several such days thanks to the NBA schedule
change. I do wonder if the early start of the NBA is affecting the World Series
ratings. You can’t complain during a week like this one when you can go from
Monday Night football to World Series games on Tuesday and Wednesday to a NBA
double header on TNT Thursday night back to World Series on Friday and wrap the
week up with college football on Saturday and NFL on Sunday. Of course, I left
out several other NBA games one could have watched through the week, not to
mention the usually unwatchable Thursday Night football. In any case, mucho
options for us sports fans! Let’s drink it all in while it lasts.
3 comments:
What a great World Series! Game 7 was a bit anti-climactic but it was a great series overall. Happy to see Verlander win the big one (as a Tigers fan) but feel a little bad for Kershaw. Happy for the city of Houston. Minute Maid Park was rocking and the game was in LA! Weird how 'Boston Strong' (after the marathon bombing) led to the Red Sox winning the World Series in 2013 and how 'Houston Strong' led to this one. I guess having a catastrophic event to rally a team around is a recipe for MLB postseason success!
Lots of weirdness in the NBA as well but that's a topic for another day. 😃
Not a fan of Verlander due to all the playoff pain he inflicted on us A's fans a few years back. But I do respect him. One of the best big game pitchers for sure.
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