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FanHouse ExtraInnings

Latest ExtraInnings Stories

Rockies and Padres Get Ridiculous, Play 22 Inning Marathon



Extra inning games are weird. When they first get going, you want to see some sort of resolution so you can go to sleep. But as a game goes to 15, 16, 17 innings and so forth, the masochist in me always comes out and hopes that the game hits that magic threshold of 20 innings ... even though I have to get up early the next morning to go to work.

The Rockies and Padres have hit that magic threshold for me ... and then some. The teams played a 22 -inning extravaganza which finally ended after Troy Tulowitzki drove home Willy Taveras with an RBI double off of Glendon Rusch on an 0-2 count. Taveras had reached with two outs and nobody on when Khalil Greene's throw from short pulled Tony Clark off the bag. Taveras then went to third on a stolen base and an error in front of Tulo's double. Of course it would have to be an unearned run that would win the game ... which finally ended at 4:21 AM ET after six hours and 16 minutes when Kip Wells struck out opposing pitcher Rusch looking.

Amazingly, both catchers, Josh Bard and Yorvit Torrealba, caught the entire game. And both teams now have to travel for Friday night games ... the Rockies go to Houston, and the Padres go to Arizona. Hopefully, Rockies announcer George Frazier will make it to the next game with his sanity, as he spent his time between innings on pizza runs, scrounging for food in adjacent luxury boxes, and contemplated sending their on-field reporter out for food in the 21st inning.

Major League Baseball Needs To Fix Its Blackout Problem

And I'm not the first one to say it. Jeff Passan at Yahoo! Sports (making fun of that exclamation point will seriously never get old) tackled the issue yesterday, and he agrees.

This has long been a problem for Major League Baseball's fans, especially for slightly out of market fans whose games come through regional television sometimes, but not always. This can be incredibly frustrating for oh, Cubs fans in Indiana, or Braves fans in Louisiana. You get the point.

The good news? Passan reports that the MLB is starting to take a hard look at blackouts and the problems they cause:
MLB president Bob DuPuy [pictured right] plans to officially address the blackout troubles in front of the sport's powerful executive council two weeks from today at the quarterly owners meetings in New York. How seriously the eight-man council treats the concerns will go a long way toward proving whether baseball is serious about rewriting its archaic rules or simply raising the issue to muzzle all of the fans who are not allowed to buy the product baseball is selling.

... Well, in theory at least. The reality is much different. Some areas are blacked out from 40 percent of the games on a full schedule. No one in Iowa can watch the Brewers, Cardinals, Cubs, Royals, Twins and White Sox. Las Vegas has its own hexagon of darkness with the A's, Angels, Diamondbacks, Dodgers, Giants and Padres.

Think about that. Baseball, which has made billions of dollars through MLB.com and its national television packages by knocking down the barriers that prevented mass consumption, is more than happy to ignore its own Great Wall.

Unfortunately, those rules don't make sense anymore, as Passan says. It's time for the MLB to move out of the Dark Ages like the rest of us, and open up the game to fans who seem to be desperately craving it.

Baseball Thinks About Getting into Reality TV

Flavor FlavApparently Major League Baseball's staring match with the cable companies paid off. As part of the agreement that saved MLB Extra Innings from being exclusive to DirecTV, MLB's baseball channel will be distributed to over 40 million U.S. households once it begins broadcasting in 2009. To put that in context, USA Today reports that the NFL Network managed just 12 million households in its first year in 2003 and took three years to reach 41 million households last year.

So, what will a channel dedicated to all things baseball 24/7 show? MLB vice president Tim Brosnan suggested it might show Japanese games or minor league games, which would be an attractive option for those fans eager to catch "the next big thing" before he arrives to the majors. But unlike the NFL Network, the network won't rely on broadcasting very many current games to draw in viewers.
Fox and TBS have postseason TV rights locked up for seven years. [MLB vice president Tim] Brosnan says there's "still north of about 100" of MLB's 2,430 annually scheduled games that are still available to be broadcast nationally. "But there's an awful lot of game programming already on somewhere. We believe this channel won't live or die on games but on our creativity." ...

And given that the idea is to "take fans inside the sport without becoming the insider's network," he says, there could be entertainment: "I'm a big admirer of Bravo Channel's reality shows. We could have heroes and villains."
Because, really, what's more creative than reality television? Actually, at least one Major League team has already dabbled in reality TV. Fans in New York are probably familiar with the YES Ultimate Road Trip, where fans get the chance to attend every single one of the team's 162 games. It's an interesting idea, even if Yankees fans are among the most insufferable in all of sports.

Democracy Wins! Cable Granted Access to 'Extra Innings'

Bud Selig and Bob DuPuyBaseball will remain on cable after all! Major League Baseball and iN Demand, the group of cable companies consisting of Comcast, Cox and Time Warner, announced last night that they've come to a seven-year agreement to keep Extra Innings, MLB's out-of-market baseball package, on cable.

But wait, what if you don't have Comcast, Cox or Time Warner? Well, iN Demand will make their own agreements with other cable carriers to give them access, while MLB will continue to negotiate with DISH Network. And as for all of you who signed up for MLB.tv (and couldn't even get it to work right), you can hurry up and cancel your subscription before the five-day free trial runs out.

What I'm curious about, though, is how Bud Selig is taking the news. In March he justified the would-be exclusive deal with DirecTV like so:
"I've heard for years we have too much product out there," Selig said. "Everywhere I've gone ... there's no market that has less than 350 to 400 [televised] games, and some have quite a bit more than that. We have an enormous amount of product out there"
But in last night's press release Bob DuPuy said this:
"Our chief goal throughout the process was to ensure that fans would have access to as many baseball games and as much baseball coverage as possible," said MLB President and Chief Operating Officer Bob DuPuy.
No wonder it took so long to hammer out a deal, what with all the confusing reigning in the commissioner's office.

Previously on FanHouse:
MLB Lifts Deadline for 'Extra Innings' Discussions
Last-Minute 'Extra Innings' Negotiations Continue
Congress' DirecTV Plea Falls on Deaf Ears
Cable Companies' Offer for 'Extra Innings' Falls Short
Cox Offers Free MLB.tv to Past 'Extra Innings' Subscribers
MLB's 'Extra Innings' Deal Isn't Exclusive to DirecTV ... Yet

MLB Lifts Deadline for 'Extra Inning' Discussions

Bud SeligRemember those last-minute negotiations between the cable companies and Major League Baseball we talked about yesterday? Turns out they're not so "last minute" at all -- MLB has done away with the deadline they set, which, if you read between the lines, suggests progress is being made toward preventing 'Extra Innings' from being exclusive to DirecTV. From The Biz of Baseball:
MLB President & COO Bob DuPuy said late yesterday, "We will continue discussions until we reach a deal or it becomes apparent we cannot."
I'm happy with the development, but Sen. John Kerry is getting impatient. In an official statement released yesterday, Kerry said:
"It is opening day. The baseball season has begun and we're still waiting for the business guys to get the show on the road and meet their obligation to the fans. Many fans are now denied access to their favorite team because executives haven't resolved relatively minor business differences. That is wrong. I want to see an agreement that is good for fans and consumers. The parties must push ahead with discussions and must not abandon baseball's greatest fans, who have been thrown a curveball."
A "curveball?" If he's going to grandstand, I wish he'd at least spare us the metaphors.

Previously on FanHouse:
Last-Minute 'Extra Innings' Negotiations Continue
Congress' DirecTV Plea Falls on Deaf Ears
Cable Companies' Offer for 'Extra Innings' Falls Short
Cox Offers Free MLB.tv to Past 'Extra Innings' Subscribers
MLB's 'Extra Innings' Deal Isn't Exclusive to DirecTV ... Yet

Last-Minute 'Extra Innings' Negotiations Continue

Bud SeligWell, the season has officially started and we've yet to get any official resolution on the whole Extra Innings fiasco. The Biz of Baseball, which has been at the forefront of reporting on this situation from the very start, reports that MLB has extended their self-imposed deadline to negotiate with the cable companies and DISH Networks from March 31 through today.

This can't drag on forever, though, so if these last-ditch efforts fall through, it may be time to seriously consider buying an MLB.tv subscription, or worse yet, take up another hobby. (I hear gardening can be relaxing). No matter what happens, though, if you have cable or a competing satellite service to DirecTV, you certainly won't be getting any out-of-market games (aside from those on ESPN, of course) on your television set today.

If you have DirecTV, though, sit back and enjoy as there's 13 games -- including five broadcast in HD! -- for your pleasure. Not to rub salt into the wounds of jilted cable subscribers, but the DirecTV channel lineup is after the jump.

Politicians, CEOs Discuss MLB's 'Extra Innings' Deal

John KerryOfficials from Major League Baseball, iN Demand, DirectTV, EchoStar and various other heads of companies met with senators in Congress today in a hearing moderated by concerned baseball fan John Kerry. Why? To discuss MLB's pending deal with DirectTV which will give the satellite service exclusive access to Extra Innings.

I'm as upset as the next guy about not being able to order Extra Innings on cable ... but isn't there something better these lawmakers should be doing? And where was the uproar when the NFL left cable in the cold?

In any event, The Biz of Baseball has been dutifully reporting on the hearing all day long, posting opening statements by the likes of presidents and CEOs of various companies, a law professor from Penn State, officials from MLB, and, of course, very concerned politicians. If delving into this mess is your thing, you'll love the video archive of today's hearing. Me? The very idea makes me want to slam my fingers in a car door, buy hey, whatever floats your boat.

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