Monday Night Baseball
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''Monday Night Baseball'' is an American live game telecast of
Major League Baseball Major League Baseball (MLB) is a professional baseball league composed of 30 teams, divided equally between the National League (baseball), National League (NL) and the American League (AL), with 29 in the United States and 1 in Canada. MLB i ...
(MLB) that aired on Monday nights during the regular season. Earlier incarnations of ''Monday Night Baseball'' aired on NBC and then ABC in the 1970s and 1980s. These games formerly aired weekly on
ESPN ESPN (an initialism of their original name, which was the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network) is an American international basic cable sports channel owned by the Walt Disney Company (80% and operational control) and Hearst Commu ...
. The game started at 7 p.m. ET, following '' SportsCenter'', and usually lasted around three hours leading up to an hour-long '' Baseball Tonight''. The program sometimes aired on
ESPN2 ESPN2 is an American multinational pay television network owned by ESPN Inc., a joint venture between the Walt Disney Company (which owns a controlling 80% stake) and Hearst Communications (which owns the remaining 20%). ESPN2 was initially ...
rather than ESPN, often due to NBA playoff coverage in April and May, and preseason '' Monday Night Football'' coverage in August. Beginning with the 2022 Major League Baseball season, ESPN significantly reduced their MLB schedule, which included cutting their ''Monday Night Baseball'' games. Monday night games now occasionally air on Fox Sports 1 as part of their irregularly scheduled weeknight games, and on MLB Network as part of their '' MLB Network Showcase'' package.


History


The NBC years (1966–1975)

''Monday Night Baseball'' was born on October 19, 1966, when NBC signed a three-year contract to televise the game. Under the deal, NBC paid roughly $6 million per year for the 25 ''Games of the Week'', $6.1 million for the 1967 World Series and 1967 All-Star Game, and $6.5 million for the 1968 World Series and 1968 All-Star Game. This brought the total value of the contract (which included three Monday night telecasts each season) up to $30.6 million. From
1972 Within the context of Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) it was the longest year ever, as two leap seconds were added during this 366-day year, an event which has not since been repeated. (If its start and end are defined using Solar time, ...
1975 It was also declared the ''International Women's Year'' by the United Nations and the European Architectural Heritage Year by the Council of Europe. Events January * January 1 – Watergate scandal (United States): John N. Mitchell, H. R. ...
NBC televised Monday games under a contract worth $72 million. In
1973 Events January * January 1 – The United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and Denmark 1973 enlargement of the European Communities, enter the European Economic Community, which later becomes the European Union. * January 14 - The 16-0 19 ...
, NBC extended the Monday night telecasts to 15 straight (with a local blackout). September 1, 1975 saw NBC's last ''Monday Night Baseball'' game, in which the
Montreal Expos The Montreal Expos () were a Canadian professional baseball team based in Montreal. The Expos were the first Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise located outside the United States. They played in the National League (baseball), National League ...
beat the Philadelphia Phillies 6–5. Curt Gowdy called the Monday night games with
Tony Kubek Anthony Christopher Kubek (born October 12, 1935) is an American former professional baseball player and television sportscaster, broadcaster. During his nine-year playing career with the New York Yankees, Kubek played in six World Series in the ...
from 1972 to 1974, the pair being joined in 1973 and 1974 by various guest commentators from both in and out of the baseball world. Jim Simpson and Maury Wills called the secondary backup games. Joe Garagiola hosted NBC's pregame show, ''The Baseball World of Joe Garagiola'', and teamed with Gowdy to call the games in 1975.


The ABC years (1976–1988)

ABC would pick up the television rights for ''Monday Night Baseball'' games in the following year. Just like with '' Monday Night Football'', ABC brought in the concept of the three-man-booth (originally composed of Bob Prince, Bob Uecker, and Warner Wolf as the primary crew) to their baseball telecasts. Ratings were typically poor for ABC's Monday night games, and by , ABC only televised 13 ''Monday Night Baseball'' games. This was a fairly sharp contrast to the 18 games to that were scheduled in . '' The Sporting News'' suggested that ABC paid Major League Baseball to not make them televise the regular season, opining that the network only wanted the sport for October anyway. For most of its time on ABC, the Monday night games were held on "dead travel days" when few games were scheduled. The team owners liked that arrangement, as the ABC games didn't compete against their stadium box offices and local telecasts. The network, on the other hand, found the arrangement far more complicated; ABC often had only one or two games to pick from for each telecast from a schedule designed by Major League Baseball. While trying to give all of the teams national exposure, ABC ended up with a surplus of games involving games between either small-market teams and/or teams with losing records. In , the final year of ABC's contract with Major League Baseball, ABC moved the baseball telecasts to Thursday nights in hopes of getting a leg up against NBC's '' The Cosby Show''. The network also aired some late-season games on Sunday afternoons.


ESPN (2006–2021)

ESPN occasionally carried Monday night games after signing television rights deals with MLB in 1990, though the main regular broadcasts were '' Sunday Night Baseball'' and the '' Wednesday Night Baseball'' doubleheader. The network began carrying Monday night games regularly as part of the eight-year television contract that ESPN signed in 2005, replacing the second Wednesday night game. Unlike ''Sunday Night Baseball'', the game was non-exclusive, meaning it would also be carried by the teams' local broadcasters, and telecasts were typically blacked out in the participating teams' markets. Because ESPN broadcasts '' Monday Night Football'' beginning with pre-season games in mid-August, late season ''Monday Night Baseball'' games would either move to ESPN2 or ESPN would broadcast a doubleheader as part of ''Wednesday Night Baseball''. On some occasions, ESPN scheduled two games to air simultaneously, with one game airing on ESPN and the second on ESPN2. Both telecasts are branded with the ''Wednesday Night Baseball'' name, but one featured the Monday night announce team. In 2021, ESPN agreed to a new contract with Major League Baseball through the 2028 season. However, the deal included only around 30 exclusive broadcasts, 25 of which would take place on ''Sunday Night Baseball'', thus ending regular Monday Night Baseball broadcasts.


References


Sports Business Daily


External links

* * ttps://web.archive.org/web/20070323105816/http://sports.espn.go.com/espntv/espnTopics?topic=Baseball Baseball on ESPN.tv
MLB on ESPN.com

Searchable Network TV Broadcasts
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