As someone who has contributed a number of baseball articles to
TAS, I must take issue with Joseph Lawler’s
assertion that “baseball is dying” because 0.7% fewer TV sets
were tuned into Game 3 of the American League Championship Series
between the New York Yankees and Texas Rangers than Monday
Night Football.
Of course, Monday Night Football is only one
night a week hence the name Monday Night Football. Chances
are more viewers tuned into Game 4 between the Yankees and Rangers
Tuesday night.
Critics of baseball have been speaking of its impending
death for nearly 150 years. To paraphrase Mark Twain, such rumors
have been greatly exaggerated. If baseball is dying then why did
more than 73 million people attend MLB games during the 2010
season? If baseball is dying then how come the New York Yankees are
valued at more than a billion dollars? If baseball is dying
then why did Hall of Famer Nolan Ryan and his partner Chuck
Greenberg
have to fight Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban tooth and nail
to keep him from buying the Texas Rangers? If baseball is dying
then why do fans show up at Wrigley Field to watch a team that
hasn’t won a World Series in over one hundred years?
Of course, there is always room for improvement. I
wouldn’t mind seeing at least one day game in the World Series.
There were no night games in the World Series until 1971. But for
the past quarter century all Fall Classic games have been under the
lights. The last day game played in the World Series took place in
1984 when the Detroit Tigers beat the San Diego Padres in Game 5 to
clinch what turned out to be their last World Series
title.
But don’t even think about speeding up the games. Don’t
make baseball into something that it isn’t. Baseball’s modulation
is unique. There is no clock. It has its own pace. Sometimes that
pace is leisurely and sometimes that pace is lightning quick. If
Joseph doesn’t think baseball can be fast paced then he ought to
watch Roy Halladay pitch sometime.