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MLB Leaving ESPN following 2025 season

Joe Morgan and Jon Miller calling the games together on ESPN was the last time I enjoyed watching baseball on their network outside of the postseason. Their coverage has only gone downhill since. Here comes yet another streaming package MLB will con fans into subscribing for a couple weeks of games in the Wild Card Round and Divisional Series.
 
Joe Morgan and Jon Miller calling the games together on ESPN was the last time I enjoyed watching baseball on their network outside of the postseason. Their coverage has only gone downhill since. Here comes yet another streaming package MLB will con fans into subscribing for a couple weeks of games in the Wild Card Round and Divisional Series.
It’s been years since I even watched the World Series, much less any other MLB game.

Red Sox are technically my favorite team because they were my favorite when I did watch, but I couldn’t tell you the name of a single player on the team.

Just a terribly boring sport to watch. Even when I was working in sports I always hated when I had to sometimes work a baseball game. It was never one of my primary sports I worked but sometimes I’d have to fill in. Easy sport to work (if everyone else shows up to work that is), but long ass games and boring.
 
Used to love baseball growing up. Huge Reds fan, loved watching Ricki, Jose, Mark etc with the A’s, etc. Started to lose interest during the strikes and briefly became interested again during the HR steroid period. Funny how life is. Baseball was fun to play and watch as a kid and thought Golf was boring all around. Now, I love watching and playing golf and haven’t watched baseball in years. I’ll never understand how or why they continue to pay these guys the insane salaries they do.
 
Specialty pitchers pushed games to three hours. The strike hurt but Sammy and McGwire brought baseball back. I don't think steroids hurt the game as much as some think.

I tend to believe that the glut of games available on TV totally fatigued the fan. I remember Saturday afternoon Game of the Week and how special it was to watch it. Must see. Attending a game was a fans dream. But that dream became an expensive one.

Big TV contracts severely crimped the budget of a family outing, sending a game into the $400 to $500 price range for many. Four decent seats, 4 soft drinks, 4 hot dogs at least, souvenirs, parking, gas to the game. The game was no longer budget friendly for families. Still it has survived but it will never be the same.
 
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MLB is slowly trying to ensure that no one can watch its product on television.


Good news in Cincinnati all you need to do is pay $19.99 per month on top of an Amazon Prime subscription, or download the Fan Duel app and pay the fee if you’d like to casually tune in to see why they’re firing off the fireworks in the stadium you can hear from your house.

It’s impossible to be casually interested just because you live in the city. Need to be intentional about it, which is not going to help grow the fan base.
 
Baseball is pretty much a regional sport, I follow the Reds closely, but would almost never watch a Sunday night game between two random teams (one of which is almost guaranteed to be the Yankees or the Dodgers). But tbh, I only watched one NFL game all season so I am not much of a TV watcher anyway.
 
It’s been years since I even watched the World Series, much less any other MLB game.

Red Sox are technically my favorite team because they were my favorite when I did watch, but I couldn’t tell you the name of a single player on the team.

Just a terribly boring sport to watch. Even when I was working in sports I always hated when I had to sometimes work a baseball game. It was never one of my primary sports I worked but sometimes I’d have to fill in. Easy sport to work (if everyone else shows up to work that is), but long ass games and boring.
I'm with you partly. A Red Sox and Brewers fan since I was young in the early 80's (actually liked the Dodgers in late 70's and 80's too), and would still consider myself a fan of the Red Sox and Brewers. Never seen either team play in person, even though I have been to games in Atlanta, Texas, Cincinnati, Philadelphia.
But I too would have trouble naming players on either team. For the Sox, there's Devers, and I read they signed Bregman, and ...I'm not sure after that. For the Brewers I could name a couple as well; and then for both teams if you gave me a multiple choice list I might get a few more right. I may look once a month at the standings, or the stats for those 2 teams, and if I see either playing I might watch an inning occasionally.

I love baseball, don't think it is boring at all. But the older you get while still working, the less time you have for watching sports. And to see an entire season of baseball for your favorite team takes much more total time than other sports:
MLB: 400-450 hours
NHL: 160-220 hours
NBA: 160-220 hours
college basketball: 60-85 hours
NFL: 50-65 hours
college football: 40-55 hours

But also the less you watch of any sport, the less you know the players, the less you become interested/invested in it. The exception is if you either bet games or play fantasy sports.

Lastly, I think MLB has become less enjoyable, with all of the frequent pitching changes, and so few good hitters now, where teams are batting like in the .240's and making the playoffs. Years ago the worst offense in the league would be hitting at least .250's. But now it's all about the HR, which means more K's too. There's so much more to hitting than hitting a HR.
 
I'm with you partly. A Red Sox and Brewers fan since I was young in the early 80's (actually liked the Dodgers in late 70's and 80's too), and would still consider myself a fan of the Red Sox and Brewers. Never seen either team play in person, even though I have been to games in Atlanta, Texas, Cincinnati, Philadelphia.
But I too would have trouble naming players on either team. For the Sox, there's Devers, and I read they signed Bregman, and ...I'm not sure after that. For the Brewers I could name a couple as well; and then for both teams if you gave me a multiple choice list I might get a few more right. I may look once a month at the standings, or the stats for those 2 teams, and if I see either playing I might watch an inning occasionally.

I love baseball, don't think it is boring at all. But the older you get while still working, the less time you have for watching sports. And to see an entire season of baseball for your favorite team takes much more total time than other sports:
MLB: 400-450 hours
NHL: 160-220 hours
NBA: 160-220 hours
college basketball: 60-85 hours
NFL: 50-65 hours
college football: 40-55 hours

But also the less you watch of any sport, the less you know the players, the less you become interested/invested in it. The exception is if you either bet games or play fantasy sports.

Lastly, I think MLB has become less enjoyable, with all of the frequent pitching changes, and so few good hitters now, where teams are batting like in the .240's and making the playoffs. Years ago the worst offense in the league would be hitting at least .250's. But now it's all about the HR, which means more K's too. There's so much more to hitting than hitting a HR.
My problem with baseball is numerous things.

Once i got to college I discovered sports, notably lacrosse, that didn’t exist in the high school ranks around here that are way more entertaining to watch and play than baseball, so that made baseball become more boring.

And long story short, I used to work in sports and some stuff happened that made me resent the sport of baseball. Then I got burnt out on working in sports, and that bled over into my personal relationship with sports and I’ve never liked sports anywhere close to as much as I did pre-burnout.

And it’s certainly not due to lack of time, it’s all because of burnout. I’m single, so no romantic partner to take up my time. Thankfully I have no kids, so no parental duties to take up my time. Despite working full time now, I work around 60% as many hours now than when I worked in sports, so considerably less working hours taking up my time every week.
 
I think it says something about the sport when a baseball organization announces that moderate facial hair is now acceptable and that's somehow news in 2025.

Baseball - where it's always 1927. Come enjoy a game and maybe afterward we'll all go see a Buster Keaton picture.
 
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