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Major League Baseball on NBC

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Major League Baseball on NBC
GenreMajor League Baseball
Directed byHarry Coyle[1]
Andy Rosenberg
John Gonzalez
Doug Grabert
Bucky Gunts
Presented byMajor League Baseball on NBC broadcasters
Theme music composerRandy Edelman
Kevin Gavin[2]
Clark Gault
Steve Martin[3]
Mitch & Ira Yuspeh
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producersScotty Connal
Don Ohlmeyer
Michael Weisman
Terry O'Neill
Dick Ebersol
Tom Roy
ProducersRoy Hammerman
George Finkel
John J. Filippelli[4][5]
Kenneth Roy Edmundson
Les Dennis
Kevin Smollon (associate producer)
Jeffrey Simon (associate producer)
Ramon Plaza (associate producer)
Elliott Kalb (associate producer)
Steve Horn (associate producer)
CinematographyTom Adza
Jim Bragg
Eric A. Eisenstein
Rick Fox
Lou Gerard
Steve Gonzalez
Dave Hage
Thomas K. Hogan
Cory Leible
Vaughn Kilgore
Jim Lynch
Tim O'Neill
Albert Rice, Jr.
Luis Rojas
Nick Utley
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time180 minutes, or until conclusion
Production companyNBC Sports
Original release
NetworkNBC
Release
  • First run: July 8, 1947 (1947-07-08) – September 30, 1989 (1989-09-30)
  • Second run: July 12, 1994 (1994-07-12) – October 17, 2000 (2000-10-17)
Related
Major League Baseball on ABC
Baseball Night in America
Major League Baseball Game of the Week
Major League Baseball: An Inside Look
Monday Night Baseball

Major League Baseball on NBC is the de facto branding for weekly broadcasts of Major League Baseball (MLB) games produced by NBC Sports, and televised on the NBC television network. Major League Baseball games first aired on the network from 1947 to 1989, when CBS acquired the broadcast television rights; games returned to the network in 1994 with coverage lasting until 2000. There have been several variations[6] of the program dating back to the 1940s, including The NBC Game of the Week and Baseball Night in America.

History

From 1947 to 1956 and again in 1965, NBC only aired the All-Star Game (beginning in 1950) and World Series. From 1957 to 1989, the network aired the Saturday afternoon Game of the Week (or a variation of it prior to 1966, when NBC did not hold the exclusive over-the-air television rights). From 1994 to 1995, NBC aired games under a joint broadcasting venture with Major League Baseball and ABC called The Baseball Network. From 1996 to 2000, the network's league coverage was reduced to postseason games (three Division Series games in prime time, the American League Championship Series in even-numbered years, and the National League Championship Series and World Series in odd-numbered years), as well as the All-Star Game in even-numbered years (during years when NBC did not hold the rights to the World Series).

Early years

1930s

NBC television's relationship with Major League Baseball technically dates back to August 26, 1939.[7] It was on that particular date that on W2XBS (an experimental television station in New York City which would ultimately become NBC's flagship station, WNBC), the first-ever Major League Baseball game was televised. With Red Barber announcing, the Brooklyn Dodgers and the Cincinnati Reds[8] played a doubleheader at Ebbets Field. The Reds won the first game 5–2 while the Dodgers won the second, 6–1. Barber called the game without the benefit of a monitor and with only two cameras capturing the game. One camera was on Barber and the other was behind the plate. Barber had to guess from which light was on and where it pointed.

1940s

By 1947, television sets, most with five and seven-inch screens, were selling almost as fast as they could be produced. Because of this, Major League teams began televising games and attracted a whole new audience into ballparks in the process. People who had only casually followed baseball began going to the games in person. In 1948, Major League Baseball's total attendance reached a record high of 21 million.

1947 also saw the first televised World Series.[9] The games were broadcast in the New York City area by NBC's WNBT, CBS's WCBS-TV and DuMont's WABD and sponsored by Gillette and Ford. The 1947 World Series brought in an estimated 3.9 million viewers, becoming television's first mass audience. In addition to New York City, live coverage of the Series was also seen on WRGB in Schenectady/Albany, WPTZ in Philadelphia, WMAR-TV in Baltimore and WTTG in Washington, D.C.

In 1948 and 1949, the World Series would be carried on the aforementioned stations, as well as on WBZ-TV and WNAC-TV in Boston, WNHC-TV in New Haven and WTVR-TV in Richmond, Virginia. In 1949, the World Series was also seen live in other Northeastern and Midwestern cities (Harrisburg, Pittsburgh, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Erie, Cleveland, Detroit, Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo, Indianapolis, Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Louis) that had been hooked up to network lines over the previous year.

1950s

In 1950, the Mutual Broadcasting System acquired the television as well as radio broadcast rights to the World Series and All-Star Game for the next six years. Mutual may have been reindulging in dreams of becoming a television network or simply taking advantage of a long-standing business relationship; in either case, the broadcast rights were sold to NBC in time for the following season's games at an enormous profit.

NBC aired the second and third games of the 1951 National League tie-breaker series between the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants, necessitated by the teams' finishing the regular season in a tie for first place. The three-game pennant playoff, which featured the first baseball games televised live from coast to coast (with CBS airing the first game), culminated on October 3 when the Giants won the third and deciding game by the score of 5–4 (off Bobby Thomson's home run). Ernie Harwell called the game for Giants television flagship WPIX – the independent station's broadcast was simulcast nationally by NBC – and his description of the home run was a simple shout of "It's gone!" almost at the moment Thomson's bat struck Ralph Branca's pitch. Harwell later admitted he had probably called it "too soon", but fortunately for him, the call proved to be correct. "And then", Harwell recalled, "the pictures took over."[10]

The 1951 playoff between Brooklyn and the New York Giants and that year's World Series were the first major league baseball games telecast live from coast-to-coast; transcontinental network transmission lines had been completed and activated in September, in-time for the Japanese Peace Treaty Conference in San Francisco and the start of the 1951–52 television season.

On January 31, 1953, the New York Yankees, Cleveland Indians and Boston Red Sox joined forces against St. Louis Browns owner Bill Veeck. The respective franchises tried to force the Browns to play afternoon games in an attempt to avoid having to share television revenues. A month later, Major League Baseball owners received a warning from Senator Edwin Johnson about nationally televising their games. Johnson's theory was that nationally televising baseball games would be a threat to the survival of minor league baseball. The owners pretty much ignored Johnson since the games on NBC in particular, were gaining a large and loyal following.

Another first for NBC during this period was the first color telecast of a World Series, the 1955 matchup between the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Yankees.

Additional notes
  • By 1950, World Series games could be seen in most of the country,[11][12] but not all. 1950 also marked the first time that there was an exclusive network television broadcaster (NBC). As noted above, West Coast viewers finally saw live major league games on television during the 1951 postseason.
  • 1951, as mentioned above, marked the first time that the World Series was televised coast[13] to coast.[14][15][16]
  • The 1952 All-Star Game at Shibe Park in Philadelphia was the first nationally televised All-Star Game, but it was shortened due to rain.
  • 1955 marked the first time that the World Series was televised in color, as previously mentioned.[17][18][19]
  • Chicago White Sox announcer Bob Elson missed a chance to call the 1959 World Series – the White Sox' first since 1919, and Elson's first since 1943 – on NBC because the then head of NBC Sports, Tom Gallery (who incidentally, grew up on the same block as Elson) did not like him.[20] Elson was, however, allowed to call the Series on the White Sox' radio flagship, WCFL.

NBC begins airing the Game of the Week (1957–65)

File:62NBCbaseball.jpg
Cover of the 1962 NBC Baseball Annual.

In 1957,[21] NBC started airing weekend Game of the Week telecasts[22][23] (Sunday telecasts were added in 1959) with Lindsey Nelson and Leo Durocher calling the action. During this period, NBC (as rival CBS had the rights to broadcast at least eight teams) typically broadcast from Pittsburgh's Forbes Field, Chicago's Wrigley Field or Milwaukee's County Stadium. NBC purchased the rights to 11 Milwaukee Braves games, 11 Pittsburgh Pirates games, two Washington Senators games, and two Chicago Cubs games. Leo Durocher was succeeded as color commentator by Fred Haney in 1960, and Joe Garagiola in 1961, while Bob Wolff[24] replaced Nelson on play-by-play in 1962.

From 1958 to 1960,[25] NBC aired a special regional feed of its games in the southeast, where the network had a different sponsor (such as National Bohemian beer) than for the rest of the country. This feed featured its own announcing team, with Chuck Thompson calling the games with Bill Veeck (1958) and Al Rosen (1959–60). NBC never had a true backup game until 1966, when the network got exclusivity for the Game of the Week. In the process, NBC brought in Curt Gowdy and Pee Wee Reese for the primary game, and Jim Simpson and Tony Kubek for the alternate game (which was always shown in the markets of teams playing in the primary game).

1960–65

As previously mentioned, in 1961, NBC hired Joe Garagiola to be their Major League Baseball color commentator. The following year, Bob Wolff began working play-by-play. "You work your side of the street [interviewing players]", said Garagiola to Wolff "and I'll work mine." Wolff liked Garagiola's pizazz as he would say things like "the guy stapled him to the bag" or that a runner is "smilin' like he swallowed a banana peel." Also in 1962, NBC broadcast the National League tie-breaker series between the San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers. Bob Wolff and George Kell[26] were the announcers for the playoff series. Wolff also hosted the pre-game shows for NBC's World Series coverage from 1962 to 1965.

By 1964,[27] CBS' Dizzy Dean and Pee Wee Reese called games from Yankee Stadium, Wrigley Field, St. Louis, Philadelphia and Baltimore. New York got a US$550,000 payment of CBS' $895,000. Meanwhile, six clubs that exclusively played nationally televised games on NBC were paid $1.2 million.

Additional notes
  • 1960 – Prior to the mid-1970s, television networks and stations generally did not preserve telecasts of sporting events, choosing instead to tape over them. As a result, the broadcasts of six of the seven 1960 games are no longer known to exist. The lone exception is a black-and-white kinescope of the entire telecast of Game 7, which was discovered in a wine cellar in Bing Crosby's home in Hillsborough, California in December 2009.[28] A part-owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates, who was too superstitious to watch the Series live, Crosby listened to the decisive contest with his wife Kathryn and two friends on a shortwave radio in Paris, France. Wanting to watch the game at a later date only if the Pirates won, he arranged for a company to record it. After viewing the kinescope, he placed it in his wine cellar, where it went untouched for 49 years. It was finally found by Robert Bader, vice president of marketing and production for Bing Crosby Enterprises, while looking through videotapes of Crosby's television specials which were to be transferred to DVD. The five-reel set is the only known complete copy of the historic match, which was originally broadcast in color.[28] The NBC television announcers for the Series were Bob Prince and Mel Allen, the respective primary play-by-play voices for the Pirates and New York Yankees. Prince called the first half of Game 7, while Allen did the latter portion.[28]
  • 1961 – In contrast to preceding years, where NBC's Series telecasts featured two announcers (usually one from each participating team) who split the play-by-play duties, each working his portion of the game by himself, the network had Yankees announcer Mel Allen handle all of the play-by-play on television (with Reds announcer Waite Hoyt confined to radio) while Joe Garagiola provided color commentary. This format would eventually become the standard form of presentation on World Series telecasts.[29]
  • On July 13, 1963, NBC's coverage of the Detroit TigersChicago White Sox game from Comiskey Park in Chicago was carried by KCRA-TV in Sacramento, KCRL in Reno and KVIP-TV in Redding – however it was not televised in the San Francisco market on KRON-TV.[30] NBC's coverage of the Cleveland Indians-Tigers game at 11:30 a.m. the following day was also not broadcast by KRON.
  • During the fourth and final game of the 1963 Series, Yankees announcer Mel Allen was calling the top of the ninth inning for NBC when his voice gave out due to a bout of severe laryngitis, forcing Dodgers announcer Vin Scully (who had called the first four-and-a-half innings of the game per the network's usual setup) to resume play-by-play duties for the remainder of the game. After the Series New York Daily News sportswriter Dick Young opined that Allen, the voice of the Yankees, had been stricken by "psychosomatic laryngitis" caused by his team being swept.[31]
  • In 1964, the New York Yankees made the World Series for the 15th time in 18 years – however Mel Allen was not there. In September of that year, before the end of the season, the Yankees informed Allen that his contract with the team would not be renewed. As been frequently mentioned, in those days, the main announcers for the Series participants always called the World Series on NBC. Although Allen was therefore technically eligible to call the Series, Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick honored the Yankees' request to have Phil Rizzuto join the Series crew instead. It was the first time Allen had missed a World Series for which the Yankees were eligible since 1943, and only the second World Series (not counting those missed during World War II) that he had missed since he began calling baseball games in 1938. On December 17, after much media speculation and many letters to the Yankees from fans disgruntled at Allen's absence from the Series, the Yankees issued a terse press release announcing Allen's firing; he was replaced by Joe Garagiola. NBC and Movietone dropped him soon afterward. To this day, the Yankees have never given an explanation for Allen's sudden firing, and rumors abounded. Depending on the rumor, Allen was either homosexual, an alcoholic, a drug addict or had a nervous breakdown.[32] Allen's sexuality was sometimes a target in those more conservative days because he had not married (and never did). Years later, Allen told author Curt Smith that the Yankees had fired him under pressure from the team's longtime sponsor, Ballantine Beer. According to Allen, he was fired as a cost-cutting move by Ballantine, which had been experiencing poor sales for years[32] (it would eventually be sold in 1969). Smith, in his book Voices of Summer, also indicated that the medications Allen took in order to maintain his busy schedule may have affected his on-air performance (Stephen Borelli, another biographer, has also pointed out that Allen's heavy workload did not allow him time to take care of his health).

The Game of the Week exclusivity era (1966–89)

Until 1965[33] (when Major League Baseball made its first ever, league-wide regular-season network television deal with ABC), there was no league-wide national television package for regular season Major League Baseball games. As a result, teams, if they so desired, could sell the rights to the networks. Also prior to 1965, regular season Major League Baseball telecasts broadcast by networks had to be blacked-out in cities with league franchises. More to the point, by around the year prior, thanks to expansion (in 1960 and 1961), regular season MLB games shown on network television were blacked out in most major markets. However, the network Games of the Week, up until the late 1980s, still could not be seen in the two cities whose local teams were playing in each respective game.

From 1965 until the late 1980s, networks would cover two Saturday afternoon games each week: one that went to most of the network (a "primary game"), and the second being seen only in the home markets of the two teams playing in the network's "primary" game. Although the "primary" game would not be televised in each team's home markets, local television rights-holders in those cities were free to broadcast that game. The manner that this worked allowed, for instance, a network's two Saturday afternoon Games of the Week involving the New York Yankees at the Boston Red Sox serving as the primary game and St. Louis Cardinals at the Chicago Cubs being the secondary game. The Yankees-Red Sox game would as a result, be seen everywhere except in New York City, Boston and possibly markets adjacent to those cities. Ultimately, those markets got the Cardinals-Cubs game instead.

1960s

The New York Yankees, which, the year before, had played 21 Games of the Week for CBS, joined NBC's package in 1966. The new package under NBC called for 28 games, as compared to the 123 combined among three networks during the 1960s. On October 19, 1966, NBC signed a three-year contract with Major League Baseball. As previously mentioned, the year before, Major League Baseball sold an exclusive league-wide television package for the rights to the Saturday-Sunday Game of the Week to ABC. NBC covered only the All-Star Game and World Series in 1965. In addition, a previous deal limited CBS to covering only twelve weekends when its new subsidiary, the New York Yankees, played at home. As previously mentioned, before 1965, NBC aired a slate of Saturday afternoon games beginning in 1957.

Under the new deal, NBC paid roughly US$6 million per year for the 25 Games of the Week,[34] $6.1 million for the 1967 World Series and 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 such as a Labor Day 1966 contest between the San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers) up to $30.6 million.

On April 16, 1966, in New York City, about 50 baseball, network, and advertising officials discussed NBC's first year with the Game of the Week. New York could not get a primary match-up between the Detroit Tigers and New York Yankees with Curt Gowdy and Pee Wee Reese calling the action because of local blackout rules. Instead, that market received a backup game (or "'B' game") featuring Tony Kubek and Jim Simpson calling a game between the Cincinnati Reds and Chicago Cubs. That rule would be eliminated after the 1983 season.

In replacing CBS, NBC traded a circus for a seminar. Reese said "Curt Gowdy was its guy (1966–75), and didn't want Dizzy Dean[35] – too overpowering. Curt was nice, but worried about mistakes. Diz and I just laughed." Falstaff Brewery hyped Dean as Gowdy in return said "I said, 'I can't do "Wabash Cannonball." Our styles clash --" then came Pee Wee Reese. Gowdy added by saying about the pairing between him and Reese, "They figured he was fine with me, and they'd still have their boy." To many, baseball meant CBS's 1955–64 Game of the Week thoroughbred. A year later, NBC bought ABC's variant of a mule so to speak. "We had the Series and All-Star Game. 1966–1968's Game meant exclusivity", said NBC Sports head Carl Lindemann, who added that "[Colleague] Chet Simmons and liked him [Gowdy] with the Sox and football" also, getting two network sports for the price of one. As his analyst, Gowdy wanted his friend Ted Williams. NBC's lead sponsor, Chrysler declined the idea when Williams, a Sears spokesman, was pictured putting stuff in a Ford truck.

Before 1966, local announcers exclusively called the World Series. Typically, the Gillette Company, the Commissioner of Baseball and NBC television would choose the announcers, who would represent each of the teams that were in the World Series for the respective year. For the 1966 World Series, Curt Gowdy[36] called half of each game before ceding the microphone to Vin Scully in Los Angeles, and Chuck Thompson in Baltimore. Scully was not satisfied with the arrangement[37] as he said "What about the road? My fans won't be able to hear me." In Game 1 of the 1966 World Series, Scully called the first 4½ innings. When Gowdy inherited the announcing reins, Scully was so upset that he refused to say another word.

Tony Kubek initially had trouble adjusting to the world of broadcasting. Although he had a lot to say, he was gangling, he tended to stutter, and he talked too fast. Gowdy soon suggested to Kubek that he should work in the off-season to improve his delivery. Kubek bought a tape recorder and took to reading poetry aloud for 20 minutes a day. In 1968, Kubek wowed as a World Series field reporter. Pee Wee Reese, who was soon fired by NBC (and replaced by Kubek as the top analyst) said of Kubek "He wormed his way around, but I wasn't bitter. I just think if you don't have anything to say, you should shut your mouth."

Date Teams Play-by-play Color commentator(s)
April 15, 1967 Los Angeles at St. Louis[38]
San Francisco at Atlanta
Curt Gowdy
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
April 22, 1967 Kansas City at Baltimore
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
April 29, 1967 Detroit at Baltimore
Cleveland at Chicago White Sox
Curt Gowdy
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
May 6, 1967 San Francisco at Pittsburgh
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
May 13, 1967 Atlanta at Pittsburgh
Detroit at Boston
Curt Gowdy
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
May 20, 1967 Los Angeles at Chicago Cubs
Washington at Detroit
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
May 27, 1967 Los Angeles at San Francisco Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
June 3, 1967 Atlanta at Cincinnati
Detroit at New York Yankees
Curt Gowdy
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
June 10, 1967 Baltimore at Minnesota
Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees
Curt Gowdy
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
June 17, 1967 St. Louis at San Francisco
Kansas City at Detroit
Curt Gowdy
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
June 24, 1967 Chicago White Sox at Minnesota Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
July 1, 1967 Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
July 8, 1967 Boston at Detroit Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
July 15, 1967 Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
July 22, 1967 Atlanta at St. Louis Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
July 29, 1967 Detroit at Chicago White Sox Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
August 5, 1967 Boston at Minnesota Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
August 12, 1967 Chicago White Sox at Minnesota Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
August 19, 1967 California at Boston[39] Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
August 26, 1967 Boston at Chicago White Sox Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
September 2, 1967 Chicago White Sox at Boston Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
September 9, 1967 Detroit at Chicago White Sox Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
September 16, 1967 Baltimore at Boston Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
September 23, 1967 Chicago White Sox at Cleveland Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
September 30, 1967 Minnesota at Boston
California at Detroit
Curt Gowdy
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
April 13, 1968 St. Louis at Chicago Cubs Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
April 20, 1968 Cleveland at Boston
Detroit at Chicago White Sox
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
April 27, 1968 Chicago White Sox at Minnesota Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
May 4, 1968 St. Louis at San Francisco Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
May 11, 1968 Chicago White Sox at Oakland Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
May 18, 1968 Cincinnati at Pittsburgh Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
May 25, 1968 Boston at Minnesota Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
June 1, 1968 St. Louis at New York Mets
Baltimore at Boston
Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
June 15, 1968 Detroit at Chicago White Sox Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
June 22, 1968 Atlanta at St. Louis
Detroit at Cleveland
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
June 29, 1968 Cleveland at Boston
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
July 6, 1968 St. Louis at San Francisco
Minnesota at Boston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
July 13, 1968 Los Angeles at Atlanta
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
July 20, 1968 Baltimore at Detroit
Oakland at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
July 27, 1968 St. Louis at Pittsburgh Jim Simpson Tony Kubek
August 3, 1968 Detroit at Minnesota
Oakland at Cleveland
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
August 10, 1968 Boston at Detroit
Pittsburgh at Houston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
August 17, 1968 Detroit at Boston
Baltimore at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
August 24, 1968 Detroit at New York Yankees
Cleveland at Washington
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
August 31, 1968 Baltimore at Detroit Curt Gowdy Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
September 7, 1968 San Francisco at St. Louis
Chicago White Sox at Baltimore
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
September 14, 1968 Oakland at Detroit
St. Louis at Houston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
September 21, 1968 St. Louis at Los Angeles
Atlanta at San Francisco
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Pee Wee Reese and Sandy Koufax
Tony Kubek
September 28, 1968 Houston at St. Louis
Washington at Detroit
April 12, 1969 San Francisco at San Diego Curt Gowdy Tony Kubek
April 19, 1969 Oakland at Kansas City
Seattle at Chicago White Sox
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
April 26, 1969 Boston at Detroit
Minnesota at Chicago White Sox
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 3, 1969 Philadelphia at St. Louis
San Diego at Cincinnati
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 10, 1969 Cincinnati at Montreal
San Francisco at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 17, 1969 Detroit at Minnesota
Washington at Chicago White Sox
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 24, 1969 St. Louis at Los Angeles
Pittsburgh at San Francisco
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 31, 1969 Detroit at Seattle
Minnesota at Boston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 7, 1969 Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs
Washington at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 14, 1969 Baltimore at Chicago White Sox
Cleveland at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 21, 1969 San Francisco at Atlanta
Montreal at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 28, 1969 Detroit at Baltimore
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 5, 1969 Oakland at Minnesota[40]
Baltimore at Detroit
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 12, 1969 Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs
Pittsburgh at St. Louis
Curt Gowdy[41]
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 19, 1969 Los Angeles at San Francisco
New York Mets at Montreal
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 26, 1969 Los Angeles at Chicago Cubs
San Francisco at St. Louis
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 2, 1969 Baltimore at Minnesota
Chicago White Sox at Detroit
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 9, 1969 California at Boston
New York Mets at Atlanta
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 16, 1969 Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
St. Louis at Atlanta
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 23, 1969 Houston at Chicago Cubs
New York Yankees at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 30, 1969 Boston at Minnesota
Chicago Cubs at Atlanta
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 6, 1969 Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs
Philadelphia at New York Mets
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 13, 1969 Cincinnati at San Francisco Curt Gowdy Tony Kubek
September 20, 1969 Los Angeles at San Francisco Curt Gowdy Tony Kubek
September 27, 1969 San Francisco at Los Angeles Curt Gowdy Tony Kubek
Additional notes
  • As previously mentioned, before 1966, NBC typically paired the top announcers for the respective World Series teams to alternate play-by-play during each game's telecast. For example, if the Yankees played the Dodgers in the World Series, Mel Allen (representing the Yankees) would call half the game and Vin Scully (representing the Dodgers) would call the other half of the game. However, in 1966, NBC wanted its regular network announcer, Curt Gowdy, to call most of the play-by-play at the expense of the top local announcers. So instead of calling half of every World Series game on television (as Vin Scully had done in 1953, 1955, 1956, 1959, 1963 and 1965) they would only get to call half of all home games on TV, providing color commentary while Gowdy called play-by-play for the remaining half of each game. The visiting teams' announcers would participate in the NBC Radio broadcasts. In broadcasts of Series-clinching (or potentially Series-clinching) games on both media, NBC would send the announcer for whichever team was ahead in the game to that team's clubhouse in the ninth inning in order to help cover the trophy presentation and conduct postgame interviews.
  • In the early years of the League Championship Series,[42] NBC typically televised a doubleheader on Saturday, a single game on Sunday (because of football coverage). At the time, the network covered the weekday games with a 1½-hour overlap, joining the second game in progress when the first one ended. NBC usually swapped announcer crews after Game 2.
  • In 1967, main Game of the Week broadcasts were blacked-out in the cities of the two participating teams. In some cases, those games were aired by way of the teams' respective local flagship stations, with their local announcing crews – for example, the May 27, DodgersGiants contest in San Francisco was not carried by either KRON-TV in the originating city or KNBC in Los Angeles. The game was, however, telecast in Los Angeles over the Dodgers' flagship station KTTV, with Jerry Doggett and Vin Scully providing play-by-play. At the time, Dodgers' broadcasts over KTTV were limited to road games in San Francisco. Conversely the Giants' broadcast partner, KTVU, did not broadcast the team's home games in 1967.[43] Viewers in the San Francisco Bay Area may have been able to view this game on one of two NBC affiliates from nearby areas, KSBW-TV in Salinas and KCRA-TV in Sacramento, California.
  • The June 8, 1968 Game of the Week broadcast was cancelled due to coverage of the funeral/burial of Robert F. Kennedy. Cleveland at Detroit and Atlanta at Chicago Cubs were the games scheduled to air on that date.
  • Games 3, 4, and 5 of the 1969 World Series are believed to be the oldest surviving color television broadcasts of World Series games (even though World Series telecasts have aired in color since 1955). However, they were "truck feeds" in that they do not contain the original commercials, but show a static image of the Shea Stadium field between innings. Games 1 and 2 were saved only as black-and-white kinescopes provided by the CBC. CBC also preserved all seven games of the 1965 and 1968 World Series (plus the 1968 All-Star Game) in black-and-white kinescope.

1970s

1970–75

In 1971, Sandy Koufax signed a ten-year contract with NBC for $1 million to serve as a broadcaster on the Saturday Game of the Week. Koufax never felt comfortable being in front of the camera, and quit before the 1973 season.

On October 13, 1971, the World Series held a night game for the very first time.[44] Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who felt that baseball could attract a larger audience by featuring a prime time telecast (as opposed to a mid-afternoon broadcast, occurring when most fans either worked or attended school), pitched the idea to NBC. An estimated 61 million people watched Game 4 on NBC; television ratings for a World Series game during the daytime hours would not have approached such a record number.

For World Series night games, NBC normally began baseball coverage at 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time with a pre-game show (with first pitch occurring around 8:20 to 8:25 p.m.). However, in 1986 and 1988, for Game 5 of the World Series (on Thursday night), NBC's coverage did not begin until 8:30. This allowed the network to air its highly rated sitcom The Cosby Show in its normal Thursday 8:00 p.m. timeslot. NBC went with carrying a very short pre-game show and got to first pitch at around 8:40 p.m. Eastern Time.

Date Teams Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Times (EST)
April 11, 1970 Cincinnati at San Francisco
New York Mets at St. Louis
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
April 18, 1970 Boston at Detroit
San Francisco at Cincinnati
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
April 25, 1970 Atlanta at Pittsburgh
Detroit at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 2, 1970 Minnesota at Baltimore
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 9, 1970 San Francisco at New York Mets
Pittsburgh at Houston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 16, 1970 Chicago Cubs at St. Louis
Minnesota at Milwaukee
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 23, 1970 California at Minnesota
Chicago Cubs at New York Mets
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 30, 1970 Houston at New York Mets
Chicago White Sox at Boston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 6, 1970 San Francisco at Chicago Cubs
Baltimore at Milwaukee
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 13, 1970 Atlanta at New York Mets
Boston at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 20, 1970 Los Angeles at Cincinnati
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 27, 1970 Boston at New York Yankees
California at Kansas City
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 4, 1970 Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs
Washington at New York Yankees
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 11, 1970 Baltimore at Detroit
Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 18, 1970 Minnesota at Baltimore
Cleveland at Kansas City
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 25, 1970 Houston at Pittsburgh
Baltimore at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 1, 1970 Pittsburgh at Atlanta
New York Yankees at Milwaukee
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 8, 1970 New York Mets at Pittsburgh
Oakland at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 15, 1970 Minnesota at Boston
Montreal at Houston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 22, 1970 Cincinnati at New York Mets
Washington at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 29, 1970 Oakland at Detroit
New York Mets at Houston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 5, 1970 New York Mets at Chicago Cubs
Baltimore at Boston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 12, 1970 Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs
St. Louis at New York Mets
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 19, 1970 Pittsburgh at New York Mets
Chicago Cubs at Montreal
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 26, 1970 New York Mets at Pittsburgh
Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
April 10, 1971 Detroit at Baltimore
Minnesota at Chicago White Sox
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
April 17, 1971 Atlanta at Philadelphia
California at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
April 24, 1971 Los Angeles at Cincinnati Curt Gowdy Tony Kubek
May 1, 1971 Minnesota at Boston
Milwaukee at New York Yankees
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 8, 1971 St. Louis at New York Mets
Washington at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 15, 1971 Baltimore at Boston
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 22, 1971 Atlanta at New York Mets
Milwaukee at Kansas City
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
May 29, 1971 Oakland at Boston
Baltimore at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 5, 1971 St. Louis at Cincinnati
Cleveland at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 12, 1971 San Francisco at New York Mets
Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 19, 1971 Montreal at Pittsburgh
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
June 26, 1971 Baltimore at Boston
Milwaukee at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 3, 1971 Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs
Atlanta at New York Mets
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 10, 1971 Boston at New York Yankees Curt Gowdy Tony Kubek
July 17, 1971 Los Angeles at Atlanta
Cleveland at Kansas City
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 24, 1971 Oakland at Detroit
Boston at Minnesota
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
July 31, 1971 Boston at Chicago White Sox
California at Detroit
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 7, 1971 Baltimore at New York Yankees
Detroit at Boston
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 14, 1971 Kansas City at Boston
Oakland at New York Yankees
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 21, 1971 Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
Houston at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
August 28, 1971 Los Angeles at New York Mets
Atlanta at Chicago Cubs
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 4, 1971 Chicago Cubs at St. Louis
Montreal at Pittsburgh
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 11, 1971 St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Pittsburgh at Montreal
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 18, 1971 Baltimore at Detroit
New York Mets at Pittsburgh
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
September 25, 1971 San Francisco at Cincinnati
Los Angeles at Atlanta
Curt Gowdy
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
April 8, 1972 Boston at Detroit (PPD due to strike) 2:15
April 15, 1972 Los Angeles at Cincinnati
Pittsburgh at New York Mets[45]
2:15
April 22, 1972 Pittsburgh at Philadelphia
Chicago Cubs at New York Mets
1:15
April 29, 1972 Chicago White Sox at Detroit
Minnesota at Milwaukee
2:15
May 6, 1972 Houston at Chicago Cubs 2:15
May 13, 1972 Boston at Oakland
Detroit at Kansas City
3:15
May 20, 1972 Atlanta at San Francisco
Minnesota at Texas
3:15
May 27, 1972 Chicago White Sox at Oakland
Texas at Minnesota
3:15
June 3, 1972 Pittsburgh at San Francisco
Boston at Kansas City
3:15
June 10, 1972 Chicago Cubs at San Francisco[46][47]
Boston at California
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek 3:15
June 17, 1972 Los Angeles at Chicago Cubs
Baltimore at Minnesota
2:15
June 24, 1972 St. Louis at New York Mets
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs
2:15
July 1, 1972 Baltimore at Detroit[48]
Milwaukee at Boston
Curt Gowdy
Tony Kubek
2:15
July 8, 1972 Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati[49]


Los Angeles at New York Mets

Curt Gowdy[50]
Jim Simpson
Tony Kubek
Sandy Koufax
2:15
July 15, 1972 Houston at Pittsburgh
Oakland at New York Yankees
2:15
July 22, 1972 Oakland at Boston[51]
Cleveland at Chicago White Sox
Curt Gowdy Tony Kubek 2:15
August 5, 1972 Baltimore at Boston 2:15
August 12, 1972 Cleveland at Detroit 2:15
August 19, 1972 Boston at Chicago White Sox
Cincinnati at New York Mets
2:15
August 26, 1972 Baltimore at Oakland 2:15
September 2, 1972 Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees 2:15
September 16, 1972 Baltimore at Detroit
New York Mets at Houston
2:15
September 23, 1972 Detroit at Boston 2:15
September 30, 1972 Milwaukee at Detroit 2:15
Monday Night Baseball (1972–75)

In 1972,[52] NBC began televising prime time regular-season games on Mondays, under a four-year contract worth $72 million. In 1973, NBC extended the Monday night telecasts (with a local blackout) to 15 consecutive games. NBC's last Monday Night Baseball game aired on September 1, 1975, in which the Montréal Expos beat the Philadelphia Phillies, 6–5. Curt Gowdy called the games with Tony Kubek from 1972 to 1974, being joined in the 1973 and 1974 seasons by various guest commentators from both within and outside of the baseball world (among them Dizzy Dean, Joe DiMaggio, Satchel Paige, Bobby Riggs, Dave DeBusschere, Howard Cosell, Mel Allen, Danny Kaye and Willie Mays). Jim Simpson and Maury Wills called the secondary backup games. Joe Garagiola hosted the pre-game show, The Baseball World of Joe Garagiola, and teamed with Gowdy to call the games in 1975.

During NBC's telecast of the Monday night DodgersBraves game on April 8, 1974, in which Hank Aaron hit his record-breaking 715th career home run,[53] Kubek criticized Commissioner Bowie Kuhn on-air for failing to be in attendance at Fulton County Stadium in Atlanta on that historic night; Kuhn argued that he had a prior engagement that he could not break.

Date Teams Guest commentator
June 12, 1972 Detroit at Minnesota
Montreal at Houston
June 19, 1972 Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
New York Mets at Houston
June 26, 1972 Pittsburgh at New York Mets
Oakland at Texas
July 3, 1972 Baltimore at Detroit
Atlanta at Houston
July 17, 1972 St. Louis at Houston
Atlanta at Pittsburgh
July 31, 1972 Boston at Detroit
San Diego at Houston
August 7, 1972 Atlanta at Cincinnati
Cleveland at Boston
August 14, 1972 Oakland at Baltimore
San Francisco at Houston
August 28, 1972 Chicago White Sox at Boston
Baltimore at Minnesota
September 4, 1972 Cleveland at Detroit
New York Yankees at Baltimore
May 21, 1973 San Francisco at Houston Dizzy Dean
May 28, 1973 Oakland at Detroit
Boston at Kansas City
Joe DiMaggio

June 4, 1973 Kansas City at Boston
Philadelphia at Houston
Satchel Paige

June 11, 1973 San Francisco at New York Mets Bobby Riggs
June 18, 1973 California at Chicago White Sox
Oakland at Kansas City
Dave DeBusschere

June 25, 1973 Detroit at Boston
Cincinnati at Houston
Howard Cosell

July 2, 1973 Los Angeles at Cincinnati
San Diego at Houston
Mel Allen

July 9, 1973 Cincinnati at Montreal
Los Angeles at New York Mets
Danny Kaye

July 16, 1973 San Francisco at St. Louis
Los Angeles at Montreal
Dizzy Dean

July 30, 1973 Detroit at Baltimore
Atlanta at Houston
Charley Pride

August 6, 1973 New York Yankees at Detroit
Boston at Baltimore
George C. Scott

August 13, 1973 Cincinnati at Pittsburgh
Oakland at Boston
Red Barber

August 20, 1973 New York Yankees at Kansas City
Pittsburgh at Houston
Bob Uecker

August 27, 1973 Los Angeles at Montreal
St. Louis at Houston
Glen Campbell

September 3, 1973 Los Angeles at San Francisco
Cincinnati at Houston
Chuck Connors

April 8, 1974 Los Angeles at Atlanta Joe Garagiola
May 27, 1974 Baltimore at Kansas City Joe Garagiola
June 3, 1974 Atlanta at Philadelphia
Boston at Minnesota
Emmett Ashford

June 10, 1974 Oakland at Boston
Philadelphia at Houston
Dick Williams

June 17, 1974 Montreal at Cincinnati
Houston at Philadelphia
Dizzy Dean

June 24, 1974 Philadelphia at Monteal
Cincinnati at Houston
Leo Durocher

July 1, 1974 Kansas City at Chicago White Sox
Boston at Baltimore
Willie Mays

July 8, 1974 Los Angeles at Philadelphia
St. Louis at Houston
Joe Garagiola

July 15, 1974 Cincinnati at St. Louis
Oakland at Baltimore
Jack Brickhouse

July 29, 1974 New York at Boston[54]
San Francisco at Houston
Bob Uecker

August 5, 1974 Cincinnati at Los Angeles
Boston at New York Yankees
Don Drysdale

August 12, 1974 Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
Los Angeles at New York Mets
Don Meredith

August 19, 1974 Philadelphia at Cincinnati
New York Mets at Houston
Monte Irvin

August 26, 1974 Cincinnati at Philadelphia
Oakland at Milwaukee
Red Barber

September 2, 1974 San Francisco at Los Angeles
Cincinnati at Houston
Joe Garagiola

April 14, 1975 Cincinnati at Los Angeles
Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh
April 21, 1975 San Diego at Houston
June 2, 1975 Los Angeles at Montreal
June 9, 1975 Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
Chicago Cubs at Houston
June 16, 1975 Boston at Detroit
Milwaukee at New York Yankees
June 23, 1975 New York Yankees at Baltimore
Los Angeles at Houston
June 30, 1975 St. Louis at Philadelphia
Houston at Cincinnati
July 7, 1975 Milwaukee at Kansas City
Philadelphia at Cincinnati
July 21, 1975 Oakland at Baltimore
Milwaukee at Chicago
July 28, 1975 Milwaukee at Boston
San Francisco at Cincinnati
August 4, 1975 Pittsburgh at St. Louis
Baltimore at Boston
August 11, 1975 Los Angeles at Philadelphia
St. Louis at Houston
August 18, 1975 Cincinnati at St. Louis
New York Mets at Houston
August 25, 1975 Baltimore at Kansas City
Atlanta at Pittsburgh
September 1, 1975 Montreal at Philadelphia
New York Yankees at Boston
Joe Garagiola replaces Curt Gowdy

Starting in 1975, Joe Garagiola and Curt Gowdy alternated as the Saturday Game of Week play-by-play announcers with Tony Kubek doing color analysis. Then on weeks in which NBC had Monday Night Baseball, Gowdy and Garagiola worked together. One would call play-by-play for 4½ innings, the other would handle color analysis. Then in the bottom of the 5th inning, their roles switched. Ultimately, in November 1975, Chrysler forced NBC to totally remove Curt Gowdy from NBC's top baseball team. Instead, the company wanted their spokesman, Joe Garagiola, to call all "A" regular season games, All-Star Games (when NBC had them), the top League Championship Series (when NBC had it), and the World Series (when NBC had it).

NBC hoped that, in replacing Curt Gowdy, Joe Garagiola's charm and unorthodox dwelling on the personal would stop the decade-long ratings dive for the Game of the Week. Instead, the ratings bobbed from 6.7 (1977) via 7.5 (1978) to 6.3 (1981–82). "Saturday had a constituency, but it didn't swell" said NBC Sports executive producer Scotty Connal. Some believed that millions missed Dizzy Dean while local-team television broadcasters split the audience. Scotty Connal believed that the team of Joe Garagiola and Tony Kubek were "A great example of black and white". Connal added by saying "A pitcher throws badly to third, Joe says, 'The third baseman's fault.' Tony: 'The pitcher's'." Media critic Gary Deeb termed theirs "the finest baseball commentary ever carried on network TV."

Another factor behind Gowdy's dismissal was the criticism from the national media which alleged that he sided with the Boston Red Sox (a franchise that he had covered prior to his days at NBC) on a controversial play in the 10th inning of Game 3 of the 1975 World Series. Cincinnati Reds pitcher Ed Armbrister reached base on what was ruled an error by Red Sox catcher Carlton Fisk on Armbrister's bunt attempt. Gowdy said numerous times that, in his opinion, Armbrister had interfered with Fisk. Gowdy had been given the correct interpretation by NBC Radio Producer Jay Scott (who was a Triple-A fill-in umpire at the time as well), but did not use it.[55] Umpire Larry Barnett claimed he had received death threats on account of Gowdy's criticism. More to the point, Tony Kubek, on the NBC telecast, immediately charged that Armbrister interfered (with the attempted forceout), even though home plate umpire Barnett did not agree. Later, Kubek got 1,000 letters dubbing him a Boston stooge. Prior to Game 2 of the 1986 World Series, NBC did a feature on replays narrated by Bob Costas. One of the plays cited by Costas was the Armbrister play, and Barnett and Costas both insisted that Barnett had made the correct call, although Barnett declared, "You won't find many people in Boston who believe it was the right call." Costas used the feature to condemn the suggested notion of instant replay to settle calls, noting that it was the "same kind of mentality that adds color to classic movies and calls it progress."

While Gowdy was on hand in the press box for Carlton Fisk's legendary home run in Game 6 of the 1975 World Series,[56] the actual calls went to two of Gowdy's Red Sox successors, Dick Stockton on television and Ned Martin on radio. Gowdy was Martin's color commentator on that home run. Meanwhile, according to the NBC cameraman Lou Gerard located above the third base stands, cameramen at the time were instructed to follow the flight of the ball. Instead Gerard was distracted by a rat nearby, thus he lost track of the baseball and instead decided to capture the image of Fisk "magically" waving the ball fair.[57]

Notes
  • In 1970, NBC televised the second games of both League Championship Series on a regional basis. Some markets received the NLCS at 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time along with a 4:00 p.m. football game, while other markets got the ALCS at 4:00 p.m. along with a 1:00 p.m. football game.
  • In 1971, Game 1 of the ALCS was rained out on Saturday, October 2. NBC did not televise[58] the rescheduled Game 1 the following day (the network had only planned an NLCS telecast that day), but added a telecast of Game 2 on Monday, October 4 (which had been a scheduled travel day).
  • NBC did not air Game 2[59] of the 1972 NLCS or the 1974 NLCS.
  • Except for Game 1 in both series, all games in 1975 were regionally televised. Game 3 of both League Championship Series were aired in prime time, the first time such an occurrence happened.
1976–79

On June 18, 1977, in the New York Yankees' 10–4 loss to the Boston Red Sox in a nationally televised game at Fenway Park in Boston, Jim Rice, a powerful hitter but a slow runner, hit a ball into right field that Reggie Jackson seemed to get to without much speed, and Rice reached second base. Furious, Yankees manager Billy Martin removed Jackson from the game without even waiting for the end of the inning, sending Paul Blair out to replace him. When Jackson arrived at the dugout, Martin yelled that Jackson had shown him up. The two men argued, and Jackson said that Martin's heavy drinking had impaired his judgment. Despite Jackson being eighteen years younger, about two inches taller and maybe 40 pounds heavier, Martin lunged at him, and had to be restrained by coaches Yogi Berra and Elston Howard. Red Sox fans could see this in the dugout and began cheering wildly; NBC television cameras showed the confrontation to the entire country.

Date Teams Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Times (EST)
April 10, 1976 Houston at Cincinnati
2:25
April 17, 1976 San Francisco at Cincinnati
2:25
April 24, 1976 Baltimore at Minnesota
2:25
May 1, 1976 Oakland at Baltimore (Postponed)
Milwaukee at Minnesota
2:25
May 8, 1976 Cincinnati at Chicago
2:25
May 15, 1976 Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
2:25
May 22, 1976 Kansas City at Minnesota
2:25
May 29, 1976 Los Angeles at Cincinnati
2:25
June 5, 1976 Oakland at New York
2:25
June 12, 1976 Boston at Minnesota
2:25
June 19, 1976 Cincinnati at Philadelphia
2:25
June 26, 1976 Detroit at Boston
2:25
July 3, 1976 Philadelphia at Pittsburgh
2:25
July 10, 1976 Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
2:25
July 17, 1976 Atlanta at Pittsburgh
2:25
July 24, 1976 Boston at New York
Detroit at Cleveland
2:25
July 31, 1976 New York at Boston
Oakland at Minnesota
2:25
August 7, 1976 Philadelphia at St. Louis
2:25
August 14, 1976 New York at Minnesota
2:25
August 21, 1976 Baltimore at Chicago
2:25
August 28, 1976 Philadelphia at Cincinnati
2:25
September 4, 1976 Philadelphia at New York
2:25
September 11, 1976 Kansas City at Minnesota
2:25
September 18, 1976 Philadelphia at Chicago
2:25
September 25, 1976 Pittsburgh at St. Louis
2:25
October 2, 1976 Minnesota at Kansas City
Detroit at Milwaukee
2:25
May 7, 1977 Cincinnati at Pittsburgh[60] Joe Garagiola
June 18, 1977 New York Yankees at Boston
April 15, 1978 Philadelphia at St. Louis[61]
Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees[62]
Joe Garagiola
Monte Moore
Tony Kubek
Maury Wills
September 23, 1978 New York Yankees at Cleveland
Pittsburgh @ Montreal[63]
Joe Garagiola
Monte Moore
Tony Kubek
Maury Wills
June 9, 1979 New York Yankees at Kansas City[64] Joe Garagiola Tony Kubek
June 16, 1979 Baltimore at Minnesota
California at Detroit[65]
2:00
September 29, 1979 Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh[66] Joe Garagiola Tony Kubek
Alternating coverage with ABC (1976–79)

Under the initial agreement with ABC, NBC and Major League Baseball (running through the 1976 to 1979 seasons), both networks paid $92.8 million for the league broadcast rights. ABC paid $12.5 million per year to show 16 Monday night games in 1976, 18 in the next three years, plus half the postseason (the League Championship Series in even-numbered years and World Series in odd-numbered years). NBC paid $10.7 million per year to show 25 Saturday Games of the Week and the other half of the postseason (the League Championship Series in odd-numbered years and World Series in even-numbered years).

Major League Baseball media director John Lazarus said of the new arrangement between NBC and ABC "Ratings couldn't get more from one network so we approached another." NBC's Joe Garagiola was not very fond of the new broadcasting arrangement at first saying "I wished they hadn't got half the package. Still, 'Game', half of the postseason – we got lots left." By 1980, income from television broadcasts accounted for a record 30% of the game's $500 million in revenues.

1980s

1980–82

The 1980 World Series is tied with the 1978 Series for having the highest overall television ratings for a World Series to date, with the six games averaging a Nielsen rating of 32.8 and a share of 56.[67]

In 1981, as a means to recoup revenue lost during a players' strike, Major League Baseball set up a special additional playoff round (as a prelude to the League Championship Series). ABC televised the American League Division Series while NBC televised the National League Division Series.[68] The Division Series round would not be officially instituted until 14 years later. Games 1, 3, and 5 of the Phillies/Expos series and Games 2, 3, and 5 of the Dodgers/Astros series were regionally televised.

Even though Dick Enberg did play-by-play for the 1981 NLCS for NBC (working alongside Tom Seaver), Merle Harmon was, for the most part, NBC's backup baseball play-by-play announcer (serving behind Joe Garagiola, who called that year's ALCS for NBC with Tony Kubek) in 1981. Harmon's broadcast partner during this period was Ron Luciano.[69] In late 1979, Harmon left the Milwaukee Brewers completely in favor of a multi-year pact with NBC. Harmon saw the NBC deal as a perfect opportunity since according to The Milwaukee Journal he would make more money, get more exposure, and do less traveling. At NBC, Harmon did SportsWorld, the backup Game of the Week, and served as a field reporter for the 1980 World Series. Most of all, Harmon had hoped to cover the American-boycotted 1980 Summer Olympics from Moscow. After NBC pulled out of their scheduled coverage of the 1980 Summer Olympics, Harmon considered it to be "a great letdown." To add insult to injury, NBC fired Harmon in 1982 in favor of Bob Costas.[70]

According to his autobiography, Oh My,[71] Dick Enberg (then the lead play-by-play voice for The NFL on NBC) was informed by NBC that he would become the lead play-by-play voice of the Major League Baseball Game of the Week beginning with the 1982 World Series (sharing the play-by-play duties for that game with Joe Garagiola, alongside analyst Tony Kubek) and through subsequent regular seasons. Enberg wrote that on his football trips, he would read every edition of The Sporting News to make sure he was current with all the baseball news and notes. He then met with NBC executives in September 1982, who informed him that Vin Scully[72][73] was in negotiations to be their lead baseball play-by-play announcer (teaming with Garagiola, while Kubek would team with Bob Costas[74]) and would begin with the network in the spring of 1983. Therefore, rather than throw him in randomly for one World Series, Enberg wrote that he hosted the pre-game/post-game shows while the team of Joe Garagiola and Tony Kubek did the games. According to the book, Enberg was not pleased about the decision (since he loved being the California Angels' radio voice in the 1970s and was eager to return to baseball) but the fact that NBC was bringing in Scully, arguably baseball's best announcer, was understandable. Enberg added that NBC also gave him a significant pay increase as a pseudo-apology for not coming through on the promise to make him the lead baseball play-by-play announcer.

Date Teams Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Times (EST)
April 12, 1980 Los Angeles at Houston Joe Garagiola Tony Kubek
April 19, 1980 Texas at Boston Merle Harmon Ron Luciano
April 26, 1980 Baltimore at Kansas City Joe Garagiola Tony Kubek
May 3, 1980 Los Angeles at Philadelphia Joe Garagiola
May 10, 1980 Philadelphia at Cincinnati
May 17, 1980 Oakland at Toronto
May 24, 1980 Los Angeles at Chicago Cubs
May 31, 1980 Milwaukee at Boston
California at Detroit
June 7, 1980 St. Louis at Montreal
June 14, 1980 Boston at California
New York Yankees at Oakland
June 21, 1980 California at Boston
June 28, 1980 Baltimore at Boston
July 5, 1980 Boston at Baltimore
July 12, 1980 Milwaukee at Toronto
July 19, 1980 Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
July 26, 1980 Boston at Minnesota
August 2, 1980 Chicago Cubs at San Francisco
California at Toronto
Joe Garagiola[75]
Merle Harmon
Tony Kubek
Ron Luciano
August 9, 1980 Philadelphia at Pittsburgh
August 16, 1980 Cincinnati at Los Angeles
August 23, 1980 Baltimore at Oakland
New York Yankees at California
August 30, 1980 Cincinnati at Pittsburgh
September 6, 1980 Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs
September 9, 1980 Los Angeles at Houston
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia[76]
September 13, 1980 Pittsburgh at Montreal Joe Garagiola Tony Kubek
September 20, 1980 Montreal at St. Louis
September 27, 1980 Montreal at Philadelphia
October 4, 1980 Philadelphia at Montreal
April 11, 1981 Philadelphia at St. Louis
Texas at New York Yankees
April 18, 1981 Pittsburgh at Houston
St. Louis at Cincinnati
April 25, 1981 Boston at Baltimore
Kansas City at Milwaukee
May 2, 1981 Minnesota at Boston
May 9, 1981 San Francisco at Montreal Merle Harmon[77] Ron Luciano
May 16, 1981 Houston at Cincinnati
Kansas City at Boston
Joe Garagiola
Merle Harmon
Tony Kubek
Ron Luciano
May 23, 1981 Los Angeles at Cincinnati
May 30, 1981 Oakland at Toronto
June 6, 1981 Los Angeles at Chicago Cubs
August 15, 1981 St. Louis at Montreal[78]
August 22, 1981 Houston at Philadelphia
August 29, 1981 Oakland at Boston
September 5, 1981 Houston at Montreal
September 12, 1981 Montreal at Chicago Cubs
Boston at New York Yankees
September 19, 1981 Pittsburgh at Philadelphia
September 26, 1981 Los Angeles at Houston[79]
Milwaukee at Detroit
Joe Garagiola[80]
Merle Harmon
Tony Kubek
Ron Luciano
October 3, 1981 Detroit at Milwaukee[81]
Atlanta at Cincinnati
Joe Garagiola[82]
Merle Harmon[83]
Tony Kubek
Ron Luciano
April 10, 1982 San Diego at Los Angeles Joe Garagiola Tony Kubek
April 17, 1982 Philadelphia at St. Louis
New York Yankees at Detroit
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Dick Enberg
Tony Kubek
April 24, 1982 St. Louis at Philadelphia
Detroit at New York Yankees
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Sal Bando
May 1, 1982 St. Louis at Cincinnati
Oakland at Cleveland
Milwaukee at Minnesota
Montreal at Los Angeles (DOUBLEHEADER)
Dick Enberg
Bob Costas
Charlie Jones
Joe Garagiola
Jay Randolph
Sal Bando
Freddie Patek
Tony Kubek
May 8, 1982 Los Angeles at Montreal
San Francisco at New York Mets
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Jay Randolph
May 15, 1982 Boston at Kansas City
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Phil Stone
May 22, 1982[84] Philadelphia at Atlanta
Oakland at Boston
Joe Garagiola[85]
Bob Costas[86]
Tony Kubek
Sal Bando
May 29, 1982[87] Cincinnati at Montreal[88]
Chicago White Sox at Cleveland
Atlanta at Philadelphia
Milwaukee at California (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Charlie Jones
Joe Garagiola
Dick Enberg
Freddie Patek
Tim McCarver
Tony Kubek
1:00
June 5, 1982 Seattle at Detroit
San Francisco at Chicago Cubs[89]
Joe Garagiola
Jay Randolph
Tony Kubek
Bob Costas
2:00
June 12, 1982 California at Chicago White Sox
Cleveland at Boston
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Freddie Patek
June 19, 1982 Philadelphia at Pittsburgh
Texas at Minnesota
Los Angeles at Cincinnati
Toronto at Oakland (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Charlie Jones
Tim McCarver
Sal Bando
Tony Kubek
Freddie Patek
June 26, 1982 Milwaukee at Boston[90]
Los Angeles at Houston
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Sal Bando
July 3, 1982 Texas at Oakland
Seattle at Chicago White Sox
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Jay Randolph
Tony Kubek
July 10, 1982 Minnesota at Boston Joe Garagiola Tony Kubek
July 17, 1982 Kansas City at Boston
Cincinnati at St. Louis
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Sal Bando
July 24, 1982 Houston at St. Louis
Oakland at Baltimore
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Sal Bando
July 31, 1982 Los Angeles at Atlanta
Cleveland at Milwaukee
Joe Garagiola
Phil Stone
Tony Kubek
Bob Costas
August 7, 1982 Texas at New York Yankees
Chicago White Sox at Boston
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Jay Randolph
August 14, 1982 Baltimore at Boston
Philadelphia at Montreal
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Sal Bando
August 21, 1982 Montreal at Houston
San Diego at Chicago Cubs
Joe Garagiola
Phil Stone
Tony Kubek
Bob Costas
August 28, 1982 California at Boston
Houston at Montreal
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Sal Bando
September 4, 1982 New York Yankees at Kansas City
Houston at Philadelphia
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Jay Randolph
September 7, 1982 Los Angeles at Cincinnati
New York Yankees at Baltimore
Joe Garagiola
Dick Enberg
Tony Kubek
Bob Costas
September 11, 1982 Los Angeles at Houston
Detroit at Boston
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
Willie McCovey
September 18, 1982 California at Toronto
Kansas City at Minnesota
Joe Garagiola
Jay Randolph
Tony Kubek
Bob Costas
September 25, 1982 San Diego at Atlanta
Philadelphia at New York Mets
Kansas City at Oakland (DOUBLEHEADER)
Joe Garagiola
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Tony Kubek
Sal Bando
Freddie Patek
2:15

6:15
October 2, 1982 Milwaukee at Baltimore
Oakland at Kansas City
Los Angeles at San Francisco
Atlanta at San Diego (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Phil Stone
Tony Kubek
Sal Bando
Dick Enberg
Freddie Patek
2:15

4:00
Additional notes
  • As previously mentioned, the 1980 World Series is tied with the 1978 World Series for the highest overall television ratings to date, with the six games averaging a Nielsen rating of 32.8 and a share of 56.[67]
    • Although Bryant Gumbel anchored NBC's pregame coverage for Game 5 of the 1980 World Series, he was not present at Royals Stadium in Kansas City. Game 5 was scheduled on a Sunday, which conflicted with Gumbel's hosting duties for the network's NFL pre-game show NFL '80. As a result, Gumbel had to anchor the World Series coverage from the NBC Studios in New York City. Gumbel, however, would be present at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia for Game 6, which turned out to be the clincher for the Phillies.
  • During the 1981 strike,[91] NBC used its Saturday Game of the Week time-slot to show a 20-minute strike update, followed by a sports anthology series hosted by Caitlyn Jenner (then Bruce)[n1 1][92] called NBC Sports: The Summer Season.[93][94]
  • On June 26, 1982, before the bottom of the 9th inning of NBC's Game of the Week between Boston and Milwaukee the power went out at Fenway Park. All television equipment stopped functioning except for one camera and the intercom. Luckily, the director of the telecast was Harry Coyle, who had previously guided 36 World Series broadcasts for NBC. He told the lone cameraman, Mario, “We’ll show ’em what one cameraman can do!” and proceeded to direct the final inning of the game with just a single camera and zoom lens, located above home plate — including a frantic near-comeback by the Red Sox, who before the start of the inning, was down 11–8.
  • Tom Seaver provided periodic commentary during the 1982 World Series, but was not in the booth. As previously mentioned, Dick Enberg and Joe Garagiola traded off play-by-play duties (just as Tony Kubek had done with Garagiola in NBC's previous World Series broadcasts) for NBC's coverage in 1982. Garagiola called the first three and last three innings. Enberg, meanwhile, hosted the pregame show and then called the middle innings.
Alternating coverage with ABC (1983–89)

On April 7, 1983, Major League Baseball agreed to terms with ABC and NBC on a six-year television package, worth $1.2 billion. The two networks would continue to alternate coverage of the playoffs (ABC in even-numbered years and NBC in odd-numbered years), World Series (ABC would televise the World Series in odd-numbered years and NBC in even-numbered years) and All-Star Game (ABC would televise the All-Star Game in even-numbered years and NBC in odd-numbered years) through the 1989 season, with each of the 26 clubs receiving $7 million per year in return (even if no fans showed up). This was a substantial increase over the last package, in which each club was being paid $1.9 million per year. ABC contributed $575 million for the rights to televise prime time and Sunday afternoon regular season games and NBC paid $550 million for the rights to broadcast 30 Saturday afternoon games.[95]

USA Network's coverage became a casualty of the new $1.2 billion television contract between Major League Baseball, ABC and NBC. One of the provisions to the new deal was that local telecasts that aired opposite network games had to be eliminated.[96]

Through the deal, the two networks paid $20 million in advance for the 1983 season; both networks paid a total of $126 million in 1984 (NBC $70 million and ABC $56 million). For the 1985 season, the rights fee totaled $136 million (with NBC paying $61 million and ABC paying $75 million), although the networks got $9 million when Major League Baseball expanded the League Championship Series from a best-of-five to a best-of-seven in 1985. The total rights fee increased to $141 million for 1986 (NBC $75 million, ABC $66 million), $171 million for 1987 (NBC $81 million, ABC $90 million) and then to $186 million for the 1988 (NBC $90 million, ABC $96 million). For the final year of the contract in 1989, NBC paid a fee of $106 million and ABC paid $125 million to the league, with the total rising to $231 million.

1984 was the first year that the Game of the Week was not subject to blackout. NBC and ABC generally still aired two games each week, with a primary game carried to most of the country and a secondary game to mostly the markets that would carry that game. This was mostly done for insurance in the event that a game was rained out. During the 1970s and early 1980s, many of the "rainout insurance" games involved the Houston Astros since that team played in a domed ballpark. Therefore, if the Astros were at home on a given Saturday or Monday night, then it was a safe bet that the game would be shown on network television, due to the Astros being the only "dome" team (until the Seattle Mariners began play in the Kingdome in 1977).

The New York Times observed the performance of the team of Vin Scully and Joe Garagiola by saying "That the duo of Scully and Garagiola is very good, and often even great, is no longer in dispute." A friend of Garagiola's said "he understood the cash" concerning 407% hike in Major League Baseball fees paid by NBC for the 1984–89 contract. At this point the idea was basically summarized as Vin Scully "being the star", whereas Joe Garagiola was Pegasus[clarification needed] or NBC's junior light. When NBC inked a six-year, $550 million contract in the fall of 1982, a return on the investment, so to speak, demanded that Vin Scully be their star baseball announcer. Scully reportedly made $2 million a year during his time with NBC in the 1980s. NBC Sports head Thomas Watson said about Scully, "He is baseball's best announcer. Why shouldn't he be ours?" Dick Enberg mused "No room for me. 'Game' had enough for two teams a week." Henry Hecht once wrote "NBC's Curt Gowdy, Tony Kubek, and Monte Moore sounded like college radio rejects vs. Scully." Vin Scully earned approximately $2 million per year for his NBC baseball broadcasting duties. Scully also reworked his Dodgers schedule during this period, as he would broadcast only home games on the radio and road games for television.

When Tony Kubek first teamed with Bob Costas in 1983, Kubek said "I'm not crazy about being assigned to the backup game, but it's no big ego deal." Costas said about working with Kubek "I think my humor loosened Tony, and his knowledge improved me." The team of Costas and Kubek proved to be a formidable pair. There were even some who preferred the team of Kubek and Costas over the musings of Vin Scully and the asides of Joe Garagiola. Costas was praised by fans for both his reverence and irreverence while Kubek was praised for his technical approach and historical perspective. One of the pair's most memorable broadcasts was the "Sandberg Game" on June 23, 1984. Bob Costas considered the Game of the Week his dream job saying "You can put a personal stamp on a baseball broadcast, be a reporter, something of a historian, a storyteller, conversationalist, dispenser of opinion."

For the 1983 season, NBC introduced a wraparound studio show (airing for about 15 minutes) co-hosted by Bill Macatee and Mike Adamle called 30 Rock (a reference to the New York City skyscraper that housed NBC's headquarters). The show would offer sports news, highlights and feature reports from Len Berman. It would actually handle breaking news as well. NBC canceled the 30 Rock pregame show after one year. It was also used to wraparound college basketball games, golf, and NBC SportsWorld.

Ratings for the Game of the Week had dropped from an average of 6.1 in 1984 to 5.5 in 1988 and an average of 4.8 by July 1989. According to a Major League Baseball report, an average of fewer than five million households viewed the Saturday afternoon Game of the Week in 1988. In an effort to push the ratings higher, NBC tried to feature a club from one of the major media markets.[97] Of the 32 games it aired during 1988, only three did not feature a club from New York City, Chicago, or Los Angeles.[98]

NBC also would normally television two prime time games during the regular season (not including All-Star Games). Generally, NBC would broadcast one game on a Tuesday and the other on a Friday. They however, would have to compete against local teams' over-the-air broadcasts, putting NBC at risk of hampering its ratings.

Date Teams Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Times (EST)
April 9, 1983 Montreal at Los Angeles
Milwaukee at Kansas City
Vin Scully[99]
Bob Costas[100]
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
April 16, 1983 Kansas City at Milwaukee
Montreal at Houston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
April 23, 1983 Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
Seattle at Detroit
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
April 30, 1983 Houston at Philadelphia
Los Angeles at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 7, 1983[101] California at Detroit
Philadelphia at Montreal
Vin Scully
Bob Costas[102][103]
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 14, 1983 Montreal at St. Louis
New York Yankees at Chicago White Sox
Seattle at Oakland
Los Angeles at San Diego (DOUBLEHEADER)[104]
Jay Randolph
Bob Costas
Phil Stone
Vin Scully
Mike Shannon
Tony Kubek
Freddie Patek
Joe Garagiola
May 21, 1983 Chicago White Sox at Kansas City
San Diego at Philadelphia
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 28, 1983 Pittsburgh at Cincinnati
Boston at Toronto
San Francisco at Los Angeles
Texas at Chicago White Sox (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Len Berman
Vin Scully
Phil Stone
Tony Kubek
Mike Shannon
Joe Garagiola
Freddie Patek
1:15
4:00
June 4, 1983 California at Milwaukee
St. Louis at Atlanta
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
June 11, 1983 Baltimore at Boston
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
June 18, 1983 California at Toronto
Oakland at Chicago White Sox
Cincinnati at Los Angeles
Atlanta at San Francisco (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Vin Scully
Phil Stone
Tony Kubek
Mike Shannon
Joe Garagiola
Freddie Patek
June 25, 1983 Pittsburgh at St. Louis
Philadelphia at New York Mets
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
July 2, 1983 Baltimore at Detroit
Montreal at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Mike Shannon
July 9, 1983 California at Boston
Milwaukee at Chicago White Sox[105]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
July 16, 1983 Texas Rangers at New York Yankees
Oakland at Boston
Vin Scully[106]
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
July 23, 1983 Philadelphia at Atlanta
San Diego at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
July 30, 1983 Milwaukee at Boston
Kansas City at Detroit
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 6, 1983 New York Mets at Chicago Cubs
Montreal at Pittsburgh
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 13, 1983 Pittsburgh at Montreal
San Francisco at Houston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 20, 1983 Kansas City at Baltimore
Atlanta at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 27, 1983 Toronto at Detroit
St. Louis at Cincinnati
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Bob Costas
Tony Kubek
September 3, 1983 Pittsburgh at Atlanta
Chicago White Sox at Boston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 6, 1983 New York Yankees at Milwaukee
California at Toronto
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 10, 1983 St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Kansas City at Minnesota
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 17, 1983 St. Louis at Philadelphia
Detoit at Boston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 24, 1983 Los Angeles at Atlanta
Pittsburgh at Montreal
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
October 1, 1983 Pittsburgh at Philadelphia
Los Angeles at San Francisco
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
April 7, 1984 Detroit at Chicago White Sox[107]
Baltimore at Minnesota
Vin Scully[108]
Bob Costas[109]
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:30
April 14, 1984 Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees
San Francisco at Los Angeles
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:00
April 21, 1984 San Diego at Los Angeles (PPD)
New York Mets at Philadelphia
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:00
April 28, 1984 St. Louis at Montreal
Atlanta at Houston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
12:00
May 5, 1984 Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
Chicago White Sox at Boston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:00
May 12, 1984 Chicago Cubs at Houston (DOUBLEHEADER)
California at Detroit
New York Mets at Los Angeles
Texas at Chicago White Sox
Phil Stone
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Bucky Dent
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
Jim Kaat
1:00
May 19, 1984 California at New York Yankees
Houston at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
May 26, 1984 Los Angeles at New York Mets
St. Louis at Atlanta
Baltimore at California
Kansas City at Boston (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Vin Scully
Ken Harrelson
Tony Kubek
Jim Kaat
Joe Garagiola
Bucky Dent
1:00
4:00
June 2, 1984 Baltimore at Detroit
Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
June 9, 1984 Atlanta at Los Angeles
Detroit at Baltimore
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:00
June 16, 1984 Pittsburgh at Montreal
Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs
Baltimore at New York Yankees
Chicago White Sox at Oakland (DOUBLEHEADER)
Jay Randolph
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Dick Enberg
Jim Kaat
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
Ken Harrelson
1:00
4:00
June 23, 1984 Los Angeles at Atlanta
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas[110]
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:30
June 30, 1984 Atlanta at New York Mets
New York Yankees at Kansas City (PPD)
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:30
July 7, 1984 California at Boston (PPD)
Atlanta at Philadelphia
Chicago Cubs at San Francisco[111]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph[112]
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
Mike Shannon
2:00
July 14, 1984 Chicago White Sox at Baltimore
San Francisco at Pittsburgh
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:30
July 21, 1984 Baltimore at Kansas City
Philadelphia at Atlanta
Boston at California
Los Angeles at St. Louis (DOUBLEHEADER)
Jay Randolph
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Dick Enberg
Mike Shannon
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
Ken Harrelson
1:00
4:00
July 25, 1984 Atlanta at Los Angeles
Chicago White Sox at Boston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
8:15
July 28, 1984 Chicago Cubs at New York Mets
St. Louis at Pittsburgh
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:30
August 4, 1984 Los Angeles at Cincinnati
Chicago White Sox at Milwaukee[113]
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
2:00
August 11, 1984 Baltimore at Toronto
Chicago Cubs at Montreal
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
2:00
August 18, 1984 California at Baltimore
Atlanta at St. Louis
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
August 25, 1984 Atlanta at Chicago Cubs
Los Angeles at Philadelphia
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
September 1, 1984 Chicago Cubs at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Montreal
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:30
September 7, 1984 Chicago Cubs at New York Mets[114][115]
California at Chicago White Sox
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
8:15
September 8, 1984 California at Chicago White Sox
Detroit at Toronto
Jay Randolph
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
2:00
September 15, 1984 Chicago White Sox at California
Toronto at Detroit
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
September 22, 1984 Oakland at Kansas City
Cleveland at Minnesota
Vin Scully
Phil Stone
Joe Garagiola
Mike Shannon
2:00
September 29, 1984 Kansas City at Oakland
Minnesota at Cleveland
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:00
April 13, 1985 Detroit at Kansas City[116][117]
San Diego at Atlanta
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
April 20, 1985 Boston at Chicago White Sox
New York Mets at Philadelphia
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:20
April 27, 1985 Kansas City at Boston
New York Yankees at Chicago White Sox[118]
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
1:20
May 4, 1985 San Diego at Chicago Cubs
New York Mets at Cincinnati
Vin Scully
Bob Costas[119]
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:20
May 11, 1985 Detroit at Chicago White Sox
New York Mets at Philadelphia
New York Yankees at Kansas City
Pittsburgh at Los Angeles[120] (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Vin Scully
Phil Stone
Tony Kubek
Ken Harrelson
Joe Garagiola
Mike Shannon
1:20
4:05
May 18, 1985 New York Yankees at California
Chicago Cubs at Atlanta
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:20
May 25, 1985 Los Angeles at New York Mets
Chicago White Sox at Kansas City[121]
Vin Scully[122][123]
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:20
June 1, 1985 California at Detroit
Cincinnati at St. Louis
Vin Scully
Bob Costas[124]
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:20
June 8, 1985 Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs
Los Angeles at Atlanta
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
1:20
June 15, 1985 Los Angeles at Houston
Chicago White Sox at California
Detroit at New York Yankees (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Ken Harrelson
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Torre
Joe Garagiola
1:20
4:05
June 22, 1985 California at Chicago White Sox[125]
Atlanta at Cincinnati
New York Yankees at Detroit[126]
San Francisco at San Diego (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Vin Scully
Ken Harrelson
Tony Kubek
Joe Morgan
Joe Garagiola
Mike Shannon
1:20
4:05
June 29, 1985 Philadelphia at Montreal
Atlanta at Los Angeles
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
3:50
July 6, 1985 Los Angeles at St. Louis
Boston at California
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Mike Shannon
2:20
1:20 PDT for Boston at California
July 13, 1985 Los Angeles at Chicago Cubs
San Francisco at Pittsburgh
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:20
July 20, 1985 Oakland at Toronto
Kansas City at Baltimore
Atlanta at New York Mets
Pittsburgh at San Diego[127] (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Phil Stone
Vin Scully[128]
Jay Randolph
Tony Kubek
Ken Harrelson
Joe Garagiola
Mike Shannon
1:20
4:05
July 26, 1985 Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles Vin Scully Joe Garagiola 8:20
July 27, 1985 St. Louis at San Diego
Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles[129]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:20
August 2, 1985 Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees[130]
San Diego at Houston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
8:20
August 3, 1985 Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees
Milwaukee at Detroit
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:20
August 10, 1985 Chicago Cubs at New York Mets
California at Minnesota
Vin Scully[131]
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:20
August 17, 1985 Boston at New York Yankees
Kansas City at Toronto
Vin Scully
Bob Costas[132]
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:20
August 24, 1985[133] Detroit at California
Minnesota at Boston
Vin Scully[134]
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:20
August 31, 1985 California at New York Yankees
Chicago White Sox at Toronto[135]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:20
September 7, 1985 New York Mets at Los Angeles Vin Scully[136][137]
Joe Garagiola 3:20
September 14, 1985 New York Mets at Montreal
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
1:20
September 21, 1985 Montreal at St. Louis
Pittsburgh at New York Mets
Vin Scully[138][139]
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:20
September 28, 1985 St. Louis at Montreal
New York Mets at Pittsburgh
Vin Scully[140][141]
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:50
October 5, 1985 Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Vin Scully
Joe Garagiola
3:50
April 12, 1986 New York Mets at Philadelphia
Toronto at Kansas City
Vin Scully[142]
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:00
April 19, 1986 Los Angeles at Atlanta
St. Louis at Montreal
Chicago White Sox at Boston
Minnesota at California (doubleheader)
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Bob Costas
Phil Stone
Joe Garagiola
Joe Morgan
Tony Kubek
Jim Kaat
1:00
4:00
April 26, 1986 New York Mets at St. Louis
Chicago White Sox at Detroit[143]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:00
May 3, 1986 California at Milwaukee[144]
Atlanta at Philadelphia[145]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:00
May 10, 1986 Cincinnati at New York Mets
San Diego at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:00
May 17, 1986 California at Detroit
Kansas City at Chicago White Sox
New York Mets at Los Angeles (DOUBLEHEADER)
Vin Scully
Ted Robinson
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
John Lowenstein
Tony Kubek
1:00
4:00
May 24, 1986 California at New York Yankees
Houston at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:00
May 31, 1986 St. Louis at Cincinnati
San Diego at Philadelphia
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:00
June 7, 1986 Houston at Los Angeles
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:00
June 14, 1986 New York Yankees at Baltimore[146]
Cincinnati at Atlanta
Kansas City at California[144][147][148] (DOUBLEHEADER)
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Jim Kaat
Joe Garagiola
1:00
4:00
June 21, 1986 Baltimore at Boston[149]
New York Yankees at Toronto
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:00
June 28, 1986 New York Mets at Chicago Cubs
Boston at Baltimore
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:00
July 5, 1986 New York Yankees at Chicago White Sox
Baltimore at Minnesota
St. Louis at San Francsico
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
Joe Morgan
2:00
1 PDT for St. Louis at San Francisco
July 11, 1986 Atlanta at New York Mets
Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
8:30
July 12, 1986 Atlanta at New York Mets
Philadelphia at Houston
Vin Scully
Jim Donovan
Joe Garagiola
Joe Morgan
1:30
July 19, 1986 Los Angeles at St. Louis
Philadelphia at Cincinnati
Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees
Toronto at California (DOUBLEHEADER)
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Bob Costas
Ted Robinson
Joe Garagiola
Mike Shannon
Tony Kubek
Joe Morgan
1:00
4:00
July 26, 1986 Boston at California Vin Scully Joe Garagiola 3:00
August 2, 1986 Atlanta at San Francisco
Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
3:00
August 9, 1986 Kansas City at New York Yankees
Los Angeles at Cincinnati
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
August 16, 1986 New York Yankees at Kansas City
St. Louis at New York Mets
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
August 20, 1986 New York Mets at Los Angeles Vin Scully Joe Garagiola 8:00
August 23, 1986 California at Baltimore
Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
August 30, 1986 Los Angeles at New York Mets
Chicago Cubs at Atlanta
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
September 6, 1986 San Diego at New York Mets
St. Louis at Houston
Vin Scully
Jon Miller
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
September 13, 1986 Boston at New York Yankees
Cincinnati at Los Angeles
Vin Scully[150]
Jon Miller
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
September 20, 1986 Boston at Toronto
Chicago White Sox at California
Vin Scully
Jon Miller
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
September 27, 1986 Toronto at Boston
Houston at Atlanta[151]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
2:00
October 4, 1986 Atlanta at Houston Vin Scully[152] Joe Garagiola 2:00
April 11, 1987 Atlanta at New York Mets
San Francisco at Los Angeles
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
April 18, 1987 Boston at Toronto (DOUBLEHADER)
Montreal at Chicago Cubs
Los Angeles at San Diego
Chicago White Sox at Detroit
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Vin Scully
Jon Miller
Tony Kubek
Joe Morgan
Joe Garagiola
Ken Harrelson
April 25, 1987 New York Yankees at Cleveland
Baltimore at Milwaukee[153]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 2, 1987 Montreal at New York Mets[154][155]
San Diego at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 9, 1987 California at Boston
New York Mets at Atlanta
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 16, 1987 Baltimore at California[156] Vin Scully
Joe Garagiola
May 23, 1987 Los Angeles at New York Mets[157]
Atlanta at Chicago Cubs[158]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 30, 1987 Philadelphia at Los Angeles
Boston at Chicago White Sox
Vin Scully[159]
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
June 6, 1987 Los Angeles at Cincinnati[160]
Detroit at Boston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
June 13, 1987 Chicago Cubs at St. Louis
Boston at Detroit
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
June 20, 1987 New York Yankees at Boston (DOUBLEHEADER)
Cincinnati at Atlanta[161]
Los Angeles at Houston
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Morgan
Joe Garagiola
June 27, 1987 New York Mets at Philadelphia[162]
Houston at San Francisco
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
July 4, 1987 Texas at New York Yankees
St. Louis at Atlanta[163]
Boston at Oakland
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Ted Robinson
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
Joe Morgan
July 10, 1987 New York Mets at Houston Vin Scully Joe Garagiola
July 11, 1987 New York Mets at Houston Vin Scully Joe Garagiola
July 18, 1987 Chicago Cubs at San Francisco
Baltimore at Kansas City
Vin Scully[164]
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
July 25, 1987 California at Detroit (DOUBLEHEADER)
New York Yankees at Chicago White Sox
Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles
Ken Harrelson
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Joe Morgan
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
August 1, 1987 Detroit at New York Yankees
San Francisco at Cincinnati
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 8, 1987[165] New York Yankees at Detroit
Atlanta at Los Angeles
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 11, 1987 New York Yankees at Kansas City[166]
Cincinnati at Los Angeles
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 15, 1987 New York Mets at Chicago Cubs
Texas at Boston
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 22, 1987 New York Yankees at Oakland[167]
Los Angeles at Philadelphia
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 29, 1987 Atlanta at St. Louis
California at Baltimore
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 5, 1987 California at New York Yankees
Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 12, 1987 St. Louis at New York Mets
Los Angeles at Atlanta
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 19, 1987 Toronto at New York Yankees
Milwaukee at Detroit[168]
Cincinnati at San Francisco[169]
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Bob Carpenter
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
Joe Morgan
September 26, 1987 Detroit at Toronto[170]
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 27, 1987 Detroit at Toronto
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
1:00
October 3, 1987 Toronto at Detroit[171]
New York Mets at St. Louis
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
April 9, 1988 Toronto at Minnesota
New York Mets at Philadelphia
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
April 16, 1988 St. Louis at New York Mets
Cincinnati at Houston
Atlanta at Los Angeles
New York Yankees at Milwaukee (DOUBLEHEADER[172])
Vin Scully
Jay Randolph
Bob Costas
Jon Miller
Joe Garagiola
Jim Kaat
Tony Kubek
Kurt Bevacqua
April 23, 1988 Boston at Milwaukee
Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh[173]
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
PPD Rain
April 30, 1988[174] Oakland at Cleveland[175][176]
California at Toronto
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 7, 1988 San Francisco at Chicago Cubs
Boston at Minnesota
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 14, 1988 California at New York Yankees (DOUBLEHEADER)
Chicago Cubs at Houston
New York Mets at San Francisco
Minnesota at Detroit
Jay Randolph
Bob Costas
Vin Scully
Jon Miller
Steve Garvey
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
Jim Kaat
May 21, 1988 California at Boston
Minnesota at Chicago White Sox
Jon Miller
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
May 28, 1988 Houston at Chicago Cubs
San Francsico at Philadelphia
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
June 4, 1988 Cincinnati at Los Angeles[177]
Chicago Cubs at New York Mets
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
June 11, 1988 Baltimore at New York Yankees
Kansas City at California
Vin Scully
Bob Costas[178]
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
June 18, 1988 New York Yankees at Cleveland
San Francisco at Cincinnati
San Diego at Los Angeles
Toronto at Detroit (DOUBLEHEADER)
Jay Randolph[179]
Steve Zabriskie
Vin Scully
Ted Robinson
Tony Kubek
Kurt Bevacqua
Joe Garagiola
Jim Kaat
June 25, 1988 New York Mets at Chicago Cubs
Minnesota at Oakland[180]
Vin Scully
Ted Robinson
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
July 2, 1988 New York Yankees at Chicago White Sox
Cincinnati at Philadelphia
California at Detroit
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Jay Randolph
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
Jim Kaat
1 PDT for Callifornia at Detroit
July 8, 1988 New York Mets at Houston Vin Scully Joe Garagiola
July 9, 1988 New York Mets at Houston Vin Scully Joe Garagiola
July 16, 1988 Los Angeles at Chicago Cubs (DOUBLEHEADER)
Kansas City at Boston
Chicago White Sox at New York Yankees
Detroit at California
Vin Scully
Jon Miller
Bob Costas
Ted Robinson
Joe Garagiola
Jim Kaat
Tony Kubek
Joe Torre
July 23, 1988 San Francisco at St. Louis[181]
Montreal at Cincinnati[182]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
July 30, 1988 Houston at Los Angeles
New York Yankees at Toronto
Vin Scully
Don Chevrier
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
Fergie Olver
August 6, 1988 Boston at Detroit
Montreal at St. Louis
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 9, 1988 New York Mets at Chicago Cubs[183][184]
Los Angeles at Cincinnati[185]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 13, 1988 Detroit at Boston[186]
New York Yankees at Minnesota
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 20, 1988 Oakland at Boston[187]
Houston at Pittsburgh
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
August 27, 1988 New York Yankees at California
Chicago Cubs at Atlanta
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 3, 1988 Los Angeles at New York Mets
Kansas City at Minnesota
Vin Scully
Jim Simpson
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 10, 1988 Detroit at New York Yankees
Chhicago Cubs at St. Louis
Vin Scully
Jon Miller
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 17, 1988 New York Yankees at Boston[188]
San Francisco at Houston
Vin Scully
Jon Miller
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
September 24, 1988 Boston at New York Yankees
Oakland at Milwaukee
Vin Scully
Jon Miller
Joe Garagiola
Tony Kubek
October 1, 1988 Boston at Cleveland
St. Louis at New York Mets
Ted Robinson[189]
Vin Scully
Tony Kubek
Joe Garagiola
Additional notes
  • In the latter part of his career, National League umpire Doug Harvey became known for appearing in the "You Make the Call" segments on NBC's Game of the Week telecasts.[190]
  • For NBC's coverage of the 1983 All-Star Game, Don Sutton was in New York, periodically tracking pitches with the aid of NBC's "Inside Pitch" technology.
  • During the 1984 regular season, the reason for most of the changes from the traditional 2:00 p.m. Eastern Time start was because of NBC's golf or tennis commitments as well as September 1 title fight featuring Eusebio Pedroza.
    • 1984 World Series – As champions of the National League, the San Diego Padres had home-field advantage (at the time, the NL automatically gained home-field advantage in even years of the World Series). However, had the Chicago Cubs won the National League Championship Series (which appeared likely after the Cubs took a 2–0 lead in the best-of-five series), the Detroit Tigers would have gained home-field advantage despite the fact the American League's Baltimore Orioles had it the season before. NBC was contractually obligated to show all mid-week series games in prime time, something that would have been impossible at Wrigley Field, since the Cubs' venerable facility lacked lights at the time (they would not install lights until four years later). Had the Cubs advanced to the Series, Detroit would have hosted Games 1, 2, 6, and 7 (on Tuesday and Wednesday nights), while the Cubs would have hosted Games 3, 4, and 5 (on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday), with all three games in Chicago starting no later than 1:30 p.m. Central Time.
  • In 1985, NBC's telecast of the All-Star Game out of the Metrodome in Minnesota was the first program to be broadcast in stereo[191] by a television network.
  • On Thursday, October 10, 1985, NBC didn't come on the air for Game 2[192] of the NLCS until 8:30 p.m. ET to avoid disrupting The Cosby Show at 8.[193] NBC would do the same thing for Thursday night games in subsequent postseasons. Dick Enberg hosted the 1985 NLCS pregame shows with Joe Morgan.[194] It was Enberg who broke the news to most of the nation that Vince Coleman had been injured before Game 4. NBC even aired an interview with one of the few people who actually saw the incident, a Dodger batboy.
  • Dick Enberg was at Exhibition Stadium in Toronto for Games 1 and 7[195] of the 1985 ALCS on NBC. Enberg hosted the pregame show alongside Rick Dempsey (who was still active with Baltimore at the time). Meanwhile, Bill Macatee provided a report on Game 2 of the ALCS during the pregame of the NLCS opener.
  • Vin Scully's call of the final play in Game 6 of the 1986 World Series on NBC television would quickly become an iconic one to baseball fans, with the normally calm Scully growing increasingly excited: "So the winning run is at second base, with two outs, three and two to Mookie Wilson. [A] little roller up along first... behind the bag! It gets through Buckner! Here comes Knight, and the Mets win it!" Scully then remained silent for more than three minutes, letting the pictures and the crowd noise tell the story. Scully resumed with "If one picture is worth a thousand words, you have seen about a million words, but more than that, you have seen an absolutely bizarre finish to Game 6 of the 1986 World Series. The Mets are not only alive, they are well; and they will play the Red Sox in Game 7 tomorrow!"
    • Game 6 caused the first preemption of Saturday Night Live, due to extra innings. The preempted episode would air two weeks later on November 8, with an introduction by Ron Darling, who explained that when the Mets entered the locker room, they were informed that they caused the first delay in SNL's 11-year history (at the time) to their dismay.
    • NBC's broadcast of Game 7 of the 1986 World Series (which went up against a Monday Night Football game between the Washington Redskins and New York Giants on ABC) garnered a Nielsen rating of 38.9 and a 55 share, making it the highest-rated single World Series game to date. Game 7 had been scheduled for Sunday, but a rain-out forced the game to Monday.
    • NBC's telecast of the Series ended with the song "Limelight" from Stereotomy, penultimate album of The Alan Parsons Project.
  • NBC used Don Sutton as a pre- and post-game analyst for their 1987 LCS coverage. Sutton also made an appearance in the booth during Game 3 of the ALCS. Sutton talked with Bob Costas and Tony Kubek about Twins pitcher Les Straker's borderline balk in that game. Sutton later interviewed Detroit Tigers manager Sparky Anderson following their loss in Game 5.[196] Meanwhile, Marv Albert went back-and-forth during both 1987 LCS.[197] He hosted the pregame for Game 1[198] of the NLCS with Joe Morgan, and in fact had to read the lineups to the viewing audience. There was a problem with the P.A. feed at Busch Memorial Stadium in St. Louis, so he ended up reading the script from the Cardinal dugout while the players were introduced to the crowd. He then went to Minneapolis the next night to host the ALCS pregame with Don Sutton at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome. Jimmy Cefalo hosted the pregame coverage for Game 5 of the NLCS, as Marv Albert was away on a boxing assignment for NBC.
  • The 1988 World Series marked the last time that NBC[202] would televise a World Series for seven years. Beginning in 1990, NBC would be shut out of Major League Baseball coverage completely, after CBS signed a four-year, exclusive television contract. After splitting coverage of the 1995 World Series with ABC, NBC would next cover a World Series exclusively in 1997.
    • Also as previously mentioned, longtime Los Angeles Dodgers' broadcaster Vin Scully called the 1988 World Series for a national television audience on NBC with Joe Garagiola. Unknown to the fans and the media at the time, Kirk Gibson was watching the game on television while undergoing physical therapy in the Dodgers' clubhouse.[203] At some point during the game, television cameras scanned the Dodgers dugout and Scully, observed that Gibson was nowhere to be found.[203] This spurred Gibson to tell Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda that he was available to pinch hit.[203] Gibson immediately returned to the batting cage in the clubhouse to take practice swings.[203] Bob Costas, who, along with Marv Albert, hosted NBC's World Series pre-game coverage and handled post-game interviews, made on-air statements that enraged many in the Dodgers' clubhouse (especially Tommy Lasorda). After the Dodgers won Game 4, Lasorda (during a post-game interview with Marv Albert) sarcastically said that the MVP of the World Series should be Bob Costas. While Kirk Gibson was taking practice swings in the Dodgers' clubhouse during Game 1, Orel Hershiser set up the hitting tee for his teammate. Along the way, Costas could hear Gibson's agonized-sounding grunts after every hit.[204] Costas said that the 1988 Dodgers possibly had the weakest hitting line-up in World Series history.
      • The following is Vin Scully's call of Kirk Gibson's game inning home run in Game 1[205][206] of the 1988 World Series[180][207] of the 1988 World Series: "All year long, they looked to him to light the fire, [Scully began] and all year long, he answered the demands, until he was physically unable to start tonight – with two bad legs: The bad left hamstring, and the swollen right knee. And, with two out, you talk about a roll of the dice... this is it." Scully made repeated references to Gibson's legs, noting at one point that the batter was "shaking his left leg, making it quiver, like a horse trying to get rid of a troublesome fly." Gibson worked the count to 3–2 as Mike Davis stole second base; the camera turned at that point to Steve Sax getting ready for his turn at the plate, and Scully reminded the viewers that Sax was waiting on deck, but that the game right now is at the plate. "High fly ball into right field, she i-i-i-is... gone!!" Scully said nothing for over a minute, allowing the pictures to tell the story. Finally, he said, "In a year that has been so improbable... the impossible has happened!" Returning to the subject of Gibson's banged-up legs during a replay, Scully joked, "And, now, the only question was, could he make it around the base paths unassisted?!" "You know, I said it once before, a few days ago, that Kirk Gibson was not the Most Valuable Player; that the Most Valuable Player for the Dodgers was Tinkerbell. But, tonight, I think Tinkerbell backed off for Kirk Gibson. And, look at Eckersley – shocked to his toes!" "They are going wild at Dodger Stadium – no one wants to leave!" As NBC showed a replay of Gibson rounding second base in his home run trot, Scully then made a point to note Eckersley's pitching performance throughout the 1988 season, to put things in perspective. "Dennis Eckersley allowed five home runs all year. And we'll be back."
The end of an era

After calling the 1988 World Series with Vin Scully, Joe Garagiola resigned from NBC Sports.[208][209][210] Although it was not official at the time, NBC was on the verge of losing the television rights to cover Major League Baseball to CBS.[211][212][213][214] Garagiola claimed that NBC left him "twisting" while he was trying to renegotiate his deal. Joe Garagiola was replaced by Tom Seaver[215][216] for the 1989 season.[217]

NBC's final Major League Baseball broadcast was televised on October 9, 1989; Game 5 of the National League Championship Series between the San Francisco Giants and Chicago Cubs from Candlestick Park. Vin Scully said "It's a passing of a great American tradition. It is sad. I really and truly feel that. It will leave a vast window, to use a Washington[218] word, where people will not get Major League Baseball and I think that's a tragedy. It's a staple that's gone. I feel for people who come to me and say how they miss it,[219] and I hope me."

Bob Costas[220][221] said that he would rather do a Game of the Week that got a 5 rating than host a Super Bowl. "Who thought baseball killed its best way to reach the public? It coulda kept us and CBS – we'd have kept the 'Game'[222] – but it only cared about cash. Whatever else I did, I'd never have left 'Game of the Week' Costas claimed. Tony Kubek,[223] who (as previously mentioned) teamed with Bob Costas since 1983, said "I can't believe it!" when the subject came about NBC losing baseball for the first time since 1947.

Author and presidential speechwriter Curt Smith went a step further in saying that Major League Baseball's deal with CBS Sports was "sportscasting's Exxon Valdez." Had baseball valued national promotion provided by the Game of the Week, said Smith, it never would have crafted a fast-bucks plan that has cut off the widest viewership. "It's an obscene imbalance", Smith also said, "to have 175 games going to 60 percent of the country [in reference to Major League Baseball's corresponding cable television deal with ESPN, which at the time was only available in about 60% of the country] and 16 games going to the rest." He added: "Baseball has paid a grievous price for being out of sight and out of mind. It's attacked the lower and middle classes that forms baseball's heart. ... In the end, the advertising community has come to view baseball as a leper."[224]

Arthur Watson, president of NBC Sports, said in a statement that NBC had "aggressively" bid to continue its 41-year involvement in baseball (NBC's bid was reportedly in the $800 million range[225]) and was "deeply saddened" when learning of CBS' deal.[226]

After NBC lost the Major League Baseball package to CBS, the network aggressively counterprogrammed[227][228] CBS's postseason baseball coverage with made-for-TV movies and miniseries geared towards female viewers.[229]

Since this is indeed...a sad moment for us as we sever our relationship with baseball...for a while at least, we would like to ask your indulgence and let us take this time to thank a lot of people!

— Vin Scully prior to reading off the credits for NBC's 1989 NLCS coverage following the San Francisco Giants' pennant clinching victory against the Chicago Cubs.

And to all of the marvelous and wonderful cameramen and technicians who have represented NBC...over the 42 years of baseball broadcasts...and I think that can sum it up, each and everyone of us...we gave it our best shot! As did the Giants and the Cubs! And it's the Giants who go to the World Series, beating the Cubs 3 to 2. And we get the BART Series, the Bay Area Rapid Transit, the series that will be played in the memory of A. Bartlett Giamatti. There's a sweetness to that thought! It's over for us...time to surrender the stage...and the Giants have won the pennant! For Tom Seaver and for Mike Schmidt, this is Vin Scully saying so long...for the last time...from San Francisco!

— Vin Scully's final words as NBC signs off from its Major League Baseball coverage for the final time on October 9, 1989.[230]

To those of you at NBC, for 41 years you made this an art form! And to people especially like Curt Gowdy, Sr., the fabulous announcer...to the Hall of Fame director Harry Coyle...and down through the years...to Tony Kubek and the people of the present like Bob Costas and all the men and women at NBC, at the peacock...take a bow, you were terrific!

— ABC's Al Michaels eulogizing NBC at the end of ABC's coverage of Game 4 the 1989 World Series.[231]
Date Teams Play-by-play Color commentator(s) Times (EST)
April 8, 1989 Los Angeles at Atlanta[232]
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs
3:00
April 15, 1989 New York Mets at St. Louis[233]
April 22, 1989 Chicago Cubs at New York Mets
Detroit at Milwaukee
April 29, 1989 Los Angeles at St. Louis
May 6, 1989 Houston at New York Mets
Oakland at Detroit[234]

Bob Costas

Tony Kubek
May 13, 1989 Toronto at Minnesota
New York Yankees at California
Milwaukee at Oakland (DOUBLEHEADER)[235]
Ted Robinson[236]

Jay Randolph[237]
Bobby Murcer

Joe Torre
May 20, 1989 San Francisco at New York Mets[238]
Pittsburgh at Houston
Vin Scully
Tom Seaver
May 27, 1989 Oakland at New York Yankees
Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs[239][240]

Bob Costas

Tony Kubek
June 3, 1989 Chicago Cubs at St. Louis
San Francisco at Atlanta
Vin Scully[241]
Tom Seaver
June 10, 1989 Detroit at Toronto Bob Costas[242] Tony Kubek
June 17, 1989 Cincinnati at San Francisco[243][244]
Oakland[245] at Baltimore[246]

Bob Costas[247]

Tony Kubek
June 24, 1989 Los Angeles at Cincinnati
July 1, 1989 New York Mets at Cincinnati
July 8, 1989 New York Yankees at Boston
July 15, 1989 Kansas City at New York Yankees
July 22, 1989 San Francisco at Chicago Cubs
Cincinnati at Montreal[248][249]
Vin Scully[250] Tom Seaver
July 29, 1989 San Francisco at Houston
August 1, 1989 San Francisco at Los Angeles Vin Scully[251] Tom Seaver
August 5, 1989 Houston at San Francisco
Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh
August 12, 1989 Oakland at California
August 19, 1989 Los Angeles at New York Mets
Boston at Milwaukee
August 26, 1989 Baltimore at New York Yankees
Milwaukee at Toronto
September 2, 1989 New York Mets at San Francisco[252]
September 9, 1989 New York Yankees at Oakland
September 16, 1989 Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh
September 23, 1989 Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs[253][254]
Montreal at New York Mets[255]
Vin Scully
Bob Costas
Tom Seaver
Tony Kubek
September 30, 1989 Baltimore at Toronto[256][257] Bob Costas Tony Kubek
Additional notes (1989)

The Baseball Network (1994–95)

After a four-year hiatus, ABC and NBC[270] returned to Major League Baseball under the umbrella of a revenue sharing venture called "The Baseball Network". The Baseball Network kicked off its coverage on July 12, 1994[271], with the All-Star Game[272] out of Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh. The game was televised on NBC with Bob Costas, Joe Morgan and Bob Uecker calling the action, and Greg Gumbel hosting the pre-game show. Helping with the interviews were Hannah Storm and Johnny Bench. The 1994 All-Star Game reportedly sold out all its advertising slots; this was considered an impressive financial accomplishment, given that one 30-second spot cost $300,000.

After the All-Star Game, NBC was scheduled to televise six regular season games on Fridays or Saturdays in prime time. The networks had exclusive rights for the twelve regular season dates, in that no regional or national cable service or over-the-air broadcaster may telecast a Major League Baseball game on those dates. In even-numbered years, NBC would have the rights to the All-Star Game and both League Championship Series, while ABC would have the World Series and newly created Division Series.[273] In odd-numbered years, the postseason and All-Star Game television rights were supposed to alternate.

The long-term plans for The Baseball Network crumbled when the Major League Baseball Players' Association went on strike on August 12, 1994 (thus forcing the cancellation of the World Series). In July 1995, ABC and NBC, which wound up having to share the duties of televising the 1995 World Series as a way to recoup (with ABC broadcasting Games 1, 4 and 5, and NBC broadcasting Games 2[274] 3,[275] and 6[276]), announced that they were opting out of their agreement with Major League Baseball. Both networks figured that as the delayed 1995 baseball season[277] opened without a labor agreement, there was no guarantee against another strike. Both networks soon publicly vowed to cut all ties with Major League Baseball for the remainder of the 20th century.

Five years after The Baseball Network dissolved, NBC Sports play-by-play announcer Bob Costas wrote in his book Fair Ball: A Fan's Case for Baseball that The Baseball Network was stupid and an abomination. Costas wrote that the agreement involving the World Series being the only instance of The Baseball Network broadcasting a national telecast, believed that it was an unprecedented surrender of prestige, as well as a slap to all serious fans. Unlike the National Hockey League and the National Basketball Association the so-called "Big Two" of North American professional sports leagues, the National Football League and Major League Baseball had nationally televised all playoff games for decades. While he believed that The Baseball Network fundamentally corrupted the game (except in Costas' point-of-view, the sense that the fans held steadfast, spaniel-like loyalty), Costas himself acknowledged that the most impassioned fans in baseball were now prevented from watching many of the playoff games they wanted to see. Costas added that both the divisional series and the League Championship Series now merited scarcely higher priority than regional coverage provided for a Big Ten football game between Wisconsin and Michigan.

Additional notes

  • Prior to Game 3 of the 1995 World Series, Cleveland Indians slugger Albert Belle unleashed a profanity-laced tirade at NBC reporter Hannah Storm as she was waiting in the Indians' dugout for a prearranged interview with Indians lead-off man, Kenny Lofton. On the same day, Belle snapped at a photographer near the first base line during batting practice. Belle was ultimately fined US$50,000 for his behavior towards Storm. This particular World Series was remembered for baseball television history being made twice by Storm. Prior to Game 2, she became the first female sportscaster to serve as solo host of a World Series game, and after Game 6 she would be the first female sportscaster to preside over the presentation of the Commissioner's Trophy to the World Series champions. However, she was not the first female sportscaster to cover the World Series: that honor fell to CBS Sports reporter Lesley Visser, who served as a field reporter for the Series from 1990 to 1993. She would also cover that same World Series but for a different network, ABC Sports.
  • During the 1995–96 television season, the World Series, Super Bowl, NBA Finals and Summer Olympics were all telecast by NBC, marking the only time in history that all four marquee events were aired by the same network.

Trouble at NBC (1996–2000)

File:AppsPitch.gif
NBC viewers followed every pitch in the 1997 World Series with the aid of SuperVision, a pitch-tracking system developed by QuesTec Imaging Inc.

Despite of the failure of The Baseball Network, NBC decided to retain its relationship with Major League Baseball, but on a far more restricted basis. Under the five-year deal signed on November 7, 1995[278] (running from the 1996 to 2000 seasons) for a total of approximately $400 million, NBC did not televise any regular season games. Instead, NBC only handled the All-Star Game, three Division Series[279] games[280] (on Tuesday,[281] Friday and Saturday nights), and the American League Championship Series in even-numbered years and the World Series,[282] three Division Series games (also on Tuesday, Friday and Saturday nights) and the National League Championship Series[283] in odd-numbered years. Fox, which assumed ABC's portion of the league broadcast television rights, gained the rights to the Saturday Game of the Week during the regular season, in addition to alternating rights to the All-Star Game, League Championship Series (the ALCS in odd-numbered years and the NLCS in even-numbered years), Division Series and the World Series.[284][285]

Also around this particular period, NBC adapted composer Randy Edelman's theme from the short-lived Fox series The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. as the main theme music[281] for its baseball telecasts. However, NBC used Edelman's "Emotions Run High" from the film The Big Green as the theme[286] for the network's coverage[287] of the 1996 All-Star Game.[288]

1997–98

In 1997,[289] just before the start of NBC's coverage of the World Series, Don Ohlmeyer, president of the network's West Coast entertainment division and former executive producer for NBC Sports, came under fire after publicly announcing that he hoped that the World Series would end in a four-game sweep.[290] Ohlmeyer[291] believed that baseball now lacked broad audience appeal (especially in the aftermath of the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike). As opposed to teams from the three largest television markets (New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago) in the U.S., the 1997 World Series[292] featured the matchup of the upstart Florida Marlins and the Cleveland Indians, which made their second World Series appearance in three years. In addition, Ohlmeyer feared that the World Series would disrupt NBC's efforts to attract enough viewers for its new fall roster in order to stay on top of the ratings heap. Ohlmeyer said "If the A&E channel called, I'd take the call." Game 5 fell on a Thursday, which had long been the highest rated night on NBC's schedule,[293][294] if not on all of television.

In 1998, Bob Uecker abruptly left NBC Sports before a chance to call the All-Star Game[295][296] from Coors Field in Colorado. Uecker underwent a back operation in which four discs were replaced. For the remainder of the contract (1998–2000), only Bob Costas and Joe Morgan[297] called the games. Also in 1998, NBC's coverage of the ALCS was the highest rated for any League Championship Series since before the 1994 strike. NBC averaged a 9.4 rating for the six games, which was a 6% increase than the network's coverage of the 1997 NLCS in the same time slot. The rating was 13% more than Fox's ALCS coverage in 1997 and 12% more than NBC's coverage in 1996.

File:NOM025m.jpg
A NBC Sports media pin for the 1997 World Series.

The Jim Gray/Pete Rose interview

In 1999,[298] NBC field reporter Jim Gray, who had previously covered Major League Baseball for CBS, came under fire for a confrontational interview with banned all-time hit king Pete Rose.[299] Just prior to the start of Game 2 of the World Series,[300] Gray pushed Rose – on hand (by permission of Commissioner Bud Selig) at Turner Field in Atlanta as a fan-selected member of MasterCard's All-Century Team – to admit to having wagered on baseball games as manager of the Cincinnati Reds ten years earlier. After NBC was flooded with tons of viewer complaints, Gray was forced to clarify his actions to the viewers at home prior to Game 3. Regardless of Gray's sincerity, Game 3 hero Chad Curtis of the New York Yankees boycotted Gray's request for an interview live on camera;[301] Curtis had hit a game-winning home run to send the World Series 3–0 in the Yankees' favor. Curtis said to Gray, "Because of what happened with Pete, we decided not to say anything."[302][303]

Despite the heavy criticism he received, Gray offered no apology for his line of questioning toward Rose:

I stand by it, and I think it was absolutely a proper line of questioning. I don't have an agenda against Pete Rose. Pete was the one who started asking me questions. I definitely wouldn't have gone (that) direction if he had backed off. My intent was to give Pete an opportunity to address issues that have kept him out of baseball. I thought he might have had a change of heart. He hadn't had an opening in 10 years.[304]

Although Dick Ebersol (then-president of NBC Sports)[305] and Keith Olbermann – among others – have maintained that Gray was simply doing his job,[306] it should be noted that in 2004, Pete Rose would admit to betting on baseball (along with other sports) while he was the manager of the Cincinnati Reds.[307]

2000

File:Mlb13M.jpg
A NBC Sports media pin for their coverage of the 2000 Major League Baseball All-Star Game.

In 2000, NBC was caught in the dilemma of having to televise a first-round playoff game between the New York Yankees and Oakland Athletics over the first presidential debate between George W. Bush and Al Gore. NBC decided to give its local stations the option of carrying the debate or the baseball game.[308] If an NBC affiliate decided to carry the debate, then the Pax TV affiliate in their local market could carry the game. NBC also placed a crawl at the bottom of the screen to inform viewers that they could see the debate on its sister channel MSNBC.

On the other end, Fox said that it would carry baseball on the two nights when its schedule conflicted with the presidential or vice presidential debates. NBC spokeswoman Barbara Levin said "We have a contract with Major League Baseball. The commission was informed well in advance of their selecting the debate dates. If we didn't have the baseball conflict we would be televising it." Although there has not been confirmation, anecdotal reports indicated that many NBC affiliates in swing states (such as Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania) chose to air the debate over the baseball game. This is an option that CBS affiliates did not have in 1992, when that network refused to break away from Game 4 of the American League Championship Series (which had gone into extra innings) to the first ClintonBushPerot debate. Like NBC and Fox would do in 2000, CBS cited its contract with Major League Baseball.

During NBC's coverage of the 2000 Division Series between the New York Yankees and Oakland Athletics, regular play-by-play announcer Bob Costas decided to take a breather after anchoring NBC's prime time coverage of the Summer Olympic Games from Sydney. In Costas' place was Atlanta Braves announcer Skip Caray,[309][310][311] who teamed with Joe Morgan before Costas' return for the ALCS. It wasn't just Costas but all of NBC's production crews who were down in Sydney. The Olympics ended just two or three days before the MLB playoffs started that year, so the TBS crew worked the Division Series games for NBC.

Baseball leaves NBC again

In September 2000, Major League Baseball signed a six-year, $2.5 billion contract with Fox[312] to televise Saturday afternoon regular-season baseball games, the All-Star Game and coverage of the Division Series, League Championship Series and World Series. 90% of the contract's value to Fox, which was paying the league $417 million per year, came from the postseason, which not only attracted large audiences, but also provided an irreplaceable opportunity for the network to showcase its fall schedule. Under the previous five-year deal with NBC (running from 1996 to 2000), Fox paid $115 million ($575 million overall), compared to the $80 million ($400 million overall) that NBC paid. The difference between the Fox and the NBC contracts was that Fox's Saturday Game of the Week was implicitly valued at less than $90 million for five years. Before NBC officially decided to part ways with Major League Baseball (for the second time in about 12 years) on September 26, 2000,[313] Fox's payment would have been $345 million, while NBC would have paid $240 million. NBC Sports president Ken Schanzer said regarding the loss of Major League Baseball rights for the second time since 1990:[314]

We have notified Major League Baseball that we have passed on their offer and we wish them well going forward.

NBC Sports chairman Dick Ebersol[315] added that it was not cost-effective for NBC to be paying out the kind of money that Major League Baseball wanted. The network was also reportedly concerned over disruptions to its regular fall prime time lineup that would result from having to broadcast the playoffs and World Series. In addition, NBC had several NASCAR races scheduled during the summer.

The last Major League Baseball game that NBC has televised to date was Game 6 of the 2000 American League Championship Series, occurring on October 17, 2000.[316] In Houston, due to the coverage of the 2000 Presidential Debate, KPRC-TV elected to carry NBC News' coverage of the debate while independent station KNWS-TV carried the ALCS game via NBC.

The loss of Major League Baseball was part of a slow decline for NBC's sports division.[317] This began with its loss of the rights to the NFL's American Football Conference to CBS at the end of the 1997 season. In 2002, NBC lost its NBA rights to ABC. This all culminated in the unproductive 2004–05 prime time season (despite heavy promotion of its lineup during the 2004 Summer Olympics), when NBC carried no major championship sports events during prime time. NBC did, however, acquire the television rights to the National Hockey League in 2004,[318] however that league ended up in a lockout that delayed the start of the contract by two years.

In 2001, Bob Costas claimed that despite still loving the game, he now felt a certain alienation from the institution. By the time that NBC lost Major League Baseball for the second time in twelve years, the sport endured a strike, realignment, the introduction of the wild card round, and NBC's complete loss of the regular season Game of the Week. Costas would add that since NBC only did a few games each year and he lacked the forum that he would eventually have (on HBO's On the Record with Bob Costas, Inside the NFL and Costas Now as well as Costas on the Radio) to express his views, he to some extent, started editorializing in games. When asked about whether or not the fact that NBC no longer had the baseball rights was disappointing, Bob Costas said "I'm a little disappointed to lose baseball, but that's the way the business is. And it's not nearly as disappointing as it was when we lost it at the end of the '80s. Because then it was like baseball was the birthright for NBC. ... (Baseball is) not going to affect any decision that I have in the future. It's nowhere near as devastating as a decade ago. Different circumstances, different time. I miss it a little bit but not a lot. I am very philosophical about this stuff. I have had wonderful opportunities in my career and no one wants to hear me complain about anything." In 2009, Costas would become a contributor and occasional play-by-play announcer for MLB Network.

Future of Major League Baseball on NBC
2007–13

A June 4, 2006 Broadcasting & Cable article stated that Fox may have considered a partnership with another network (which ultimately, turned out to be TBS) for the next contract. NBC was the only network named in connection to a possible partnership in the article. The setup being suggested was similar to the last time NBC had the rights to baseball, that being the network would get the rights to some League Championship Series games and alternate rights to the World Series and All-Star Game with Fox, which may or may not have kept the Game of the Week. After weeks of speculation and rumors, on July 11, 2006, at the All-Star Game, Major League Baseball announced a renewal of its existing current with Fox Sports through 2013, allowing the Fox network to retain exclusivity of the television rights to the World Series and the All-Star Game (the World Series would begin the Wednesday after the League Championship Series are completed). The deal also allowed Fox to retain the Saturday Game of the Week and gave it broadcast rights to one League Championship Series annually. This ruled out baseball returning to NBC, as the two annual showpiece events were not be available in any contract the network might obtain before then.

OLN (now NBCSN) briefly considered acquiring the rights to the Sunday and Wednesday games, which expired after the 2005 season. However, on September 14, 2005, existing rightsholder ESPN signed an eight-year contract with the league, highlighted by the continuation of ESPN's Sunday Night Baseball with additional, exclusive team appearances. Currently, NBCUniversal parent Comcast owns 5.44% of the MLB Network and featured a New York MetsSan Francisco Giants game with Bob Costas and Al Michaels (who while working for the Cincinnati Reds had previously helped call the 1972 World Series for NBC and as of 2006, serves as the play-by-play voice for NBC's Sunday Night Football telecasts) in July 2011.

The New York Times, however, reported that it was unlikely that NBC would get baseball, as the network would have to preempt up to three weeks of NFL coverage on Sunday nights. However, the NFL used to not schedule a Sunday night game on the second night of the World Series, which meant that NBC gaining the rights was not completely out of the question (however, the following Sunday, in which a possible World Series Game 7 is scheduled, a Sunday night NFL game is also scheduled). In addition to this, other Sunday playoff games, such as the ALCS and NLCS could be pushed to the afternoon. This might not be appetizing to league officials, as major playoff games would go up head-to-head against highly rated afternoon NFL games (as opposed to today's system, in which only one game out of two for the day would go up against network NFL broadcasts).[319]

2014–21

During the summer of 2012, NBC Sports was reportedly involved in negotiations for a television contract with Major League Baseball.[320] NBCSN was expected to play a large part in NBC's bid.[321] However, it was likely that NBC would want either marquee event (All-Star Game and World Series) to air on the broadcast network rather than cable. This could have potentially conflicted with the network's broadcasts of Sunday Night Football, which has generally had a game or two scheduled on nights when a World Series game is held since 2010; however, prior to this, no game was scheduled on these nights so it would not have been unprecedented. Besides the potential conflicts with Sunday Night Football, another disadvantage[322] for NBCSN is that it was available in fewer than 80 million homes, trailing the national reach of both Fox Sports 1 and TBS.

On August 28, 2012, Major League Baseball and ESPN agreed to an eight-year, $5.6 billion contract extension, the largest broadcasting deal in Major League Baseball history. It gave ESPN the rights to up to 90 regular-season games, alternating rights to one of the two Wild Card games (between American League and National League teams) each year, and the rights to all regular-season tiebreaker games. On September 19, 2012, Sports Business Daily[323][324] reported that the league would agree to separate eight-year television deals[325] with Fox Sports and Turner Sports[326] through the 2021 season. On October 2, 2012, the new deal between Major League Baseball and TBS was officially confirmed;[327][328][329] NBC looked to be left without a package,[330] because though it made an offer, Major League Baseball did not consider NBC a serious bidder after the ESPN deal was made public. Sources said that NBC did not make a strong offer, and that it was most interested in ESPN's package, which includes exclusivity on Sunday night and rights to the two mid-week games. When ESPN took that package, NBC's interest waned.[331]

Major League Baseball on NBC Radio

For many years, the NBC Radio Network also had a role in Major League Baseball coverage. The network shared World Series broadcast rights with CBS beginning in 1927, with All-Star Game broadcasts added in 1933. The Mutual Broadcasting System joined NBC and CBS in 1935; the three networks continued to share coverage of baseball's "jewels" in this manner through 1938, with Mutual gaining exclusive rights to the World Series in 1939 and the All-Star Game in 1942.

In 1957, NBC replaced Mutual as the exclusive national radio broadcaster for the World Series and All-Star Game. The network would continue in this role through 1975, with CBS taking over the rights the following year. NBC Radio did not air regular season games during this period (save for the three-game National League pennant playoff series in 1959 and 1962); nor did the network cover the League Championship Series from 1969 to 1975, those series instead having local team radio broadcasts syndicated nationally over ad hoc networks.

NBC ended its radio association with baseball after the 1975 season in order to clear space for its 24-hour "News And Information" service programming.[332]

Major League Baseball on former NBC-owned radio stations

Team/Market Station Years
Chicago Cubs WSCR 2016–present
Chicago White Sox 19241934; 19671970; 19731979; 19821995; 20062015
Cleveland Indians WTAM 19291931; June 28, 1946; 19731991; 1998–present
Colorado Rockies KOA 1993–present
New York Mets WFAN 19882013
New York Yankees 2014–present
San Francisco Giants KNBR 1979–present

Major League Baseball coverage on NBC owned-and-operated television stations

Team Stations Years
New York Yankees W2XBS/WNBT 4
(now WNBC)
19391945
Philadelphia Phillies WCAU 10 2014–present
San Diego Padres KCST-TV 39
(now KNSD)
19711972; 19841986
San Francisco Giants KNTV 11 2008–present

NBC Sports Regional Networks

After Comcast bought NBC Universal in 2011, the Comcast SportsNet operations were aligned with the national NBC Sports division. In 2017, Comcast SportsNet was re-branded as the NBC Sports Regional Networks.

Name Region served MLB team rights Notes
SportsNets
Comcast SportsNet Bay Area[n1 2] Northern and central California, northwestern Nevada (including the Lake TahoeRenoCarson City region), and parts of southern Oregon San Francisco Giants Acquired majority interest from Cablevision in April 2007. Comcast owns 45%, while the Giants and Fox Entertainment Group each own 25%.[citation needed] While previously branded as an FSN affiliate, it switched to the Comcast SportsNet branding in March 2008.[333]
Comcast SportsNet California[n1 3] Northern and central California Oakland Athletics Created in conjunction with Maloof Sports & Entertainment, owners of the Sacramento Kings NBA and Sacramento Monarchs WNBA franchises, after the company did not renew its previous contract with FSN Bay Area.
Comcast SportsNet Chicago[n1 4] Illinois, northwestern Indiana, Iowa, non-Milwaukee market areas of southern Wisconsin Chicago Cubs
Chicago White Sox
Shares rights to the Cubs and White Sox with WGN-TV, WLS-TV and WPWR-TV (the latter two effective with the 2015 season).
Comcast SportsNet Houston[n1 5] Houston area Houston Astros
SportsNet New York (SNY) New York City, New York state, Connecticut (except northeastern areas), northern and central New Jersey, northeastern Pennsylvania New York Mets Owned jointly by the New York Mets, Time Warner Cable and Comcast.
Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia[n1 6] Philadelphia, eastern Pennsylvania, Delaware, southern and central New Jersey Philadelphia Phillies Flagship of the Comcast SportsNet slate of regional sports networks. Originally a joint venture between Comcast, the Phillies and Spectacor (owner of the Philadelphia Flyers of the NHL and Philadelphia 76ers of the NBA), controlling interest in Spectacor was acquired by Comcast in 1997.

Announcers

Notes

  1. ^ Jenner changed her name due to gender transition in 2015.
  2. ^ Formerly known as the Pacific Sports Network (PSN) from 1989 to 1991, SportsChannel Bay Area from 1990 to 1991, SportsChannel Pacific from 1991 to 1998 and FSN Bay Area from 1998 to 2008.
  3. ^ Originally launching as Comcast SportsNet West, the channel was renamed Comcast SportsNet California on September 4, 2008.
  4. ^ Launched in 2004, as a joint venture between Comcast in conjunction with the White Sox, Cubs, the NBA's Chicago Bulls and the NHL's Chicago Blackhawks (which own 20% each). Effectively replaced FSN Chicago as the local cable broadcasters of the four teams.
  5. ^ Launched in 2012, replacing Fox Sports Houston as the local broadcaster of the Houston Astros and the Houston Rockets.
  6. ^ Replaced PRISM and SportsChannel Philadelphia as the local broadcasters of the Phillies in 1997. Due to its use of the microwave relay and fiber optic infrastructure previously used by PRISM, it was legally exempt from requirements to offer its programming to satellite providers until the Federal Communications Commission passed legislation closing the "terrestrial loophole" in 2010. Until then, Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia was exclusive to Comcast and Verizon FiOS systems in the market.

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