Phil Mushnick

Phil Mushnick

Sports

Vin Scully would be dumbfounded by today’s MLB broadcasters’ incessant screaming

♔The homicide detectives on “The First 48” frequently remind suspects that “There’s no such thing as coincidences.”

I tend to concur. Consider that since the summer day in 2022 when Vin Scully died at 94, he now must look down from his ethereal, misty broadcast booth to ask, “What the heck happened?” Has common sens✱e and good faith toward listeners and vi🔜ewers been eradicated or simply degraded?

Televised live sports events ha🐼ve now been flooded with hand-picked, overpaid and relentlessly annoying voices that either believe or have been coach♔ed to believe that the louder they holler — at anything, anytime — the more audiences will enjoy both their presence and the view.

Legendary announcer Vin Scully may not have been hired in this day and age because he’s not a screamer, The Post’s Phil Mushnick writes. AP

And hurry back for more.

It’s a matter of sustained and escalatiꦐng bad faith: Don’t be🔴lieve what you saw, believe what you’re told you just saw. And swallow the hype. Executive producers now rely on audiences arriving and spending three hours with their Moron Modes set to high.

TBS’s lead baseball voice, Brian Anderson, has n꧑ever been special. He has leaned toward tolerable, which these days is fine.

But this postseason, as if on orders or coincidence, he has chosen to holler at every batted ball, strikeout and grounder to second. Anderson’s sugar-high, occasionally hysterical guesswork-infused play-by-play simply hasn’t matched what we’ve seen, thus we’re eventualꦕly provoked to ask, “Who does he think he’s fool𝓡ing?”

Among many others, Anderson brings to mind what was said about Supreme C🍃ourt Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. After learning to play the violin, Holmes woul𝔉d perform drawing room recitals. A friend’s review noted “surprising industry and a satisfaction out of all proportion to his achievement.”

In Game 2 of Guardians-Yankees, Anthony Volpe advanced to third from first on an Anthony Rizzo single to deep right-center. Anderson credited Volpe foಞr “kinda dekeing” the outfielder into thinking he’d stop at second.

But there was no deke. Volpe just ran first to third. The outfielder made a bad, low bouncing t💮hrow back𒀰 to the infield.

Fox MLB play-by-play announcer Joe Davis AP

Fox’s lead MLB play-by-player, Joe Davis, twiꦓnned with dreary pitch-spin pathologist John Smoltz, has seen and dished the spectacular in every pitch. In the final game of the Padres-Dodgers series, won, 2-0 by Los Angeles, Pads pitcher Yu Darvish had just struck out Shohei Ohtani. Davis: “First inning but could be one of the game’s biggest pitches!”

It was the bottom of the first, Ohtani was leading off. It was Darvish’s sixth pitch of a 0-0 game. Yet the absurd hype had already begun to an audience that knew it was in for a long night of🃏 Fox’s Da🌺vis-Smoltz A-Team at the faulty hands of network execs who long ago proved that they don’t know very bad from far worse.

Of course, there’s no network more r📖eliably and clinically out of touch with sports than all-sports ESPN.

Saturday’s SEC Network/ESPN South Carolina at Alabama game was the kind of telecast that wins national TV Sports Emmys — even ESP🔥N’s crookedly self-bestowed Emmys — because it was a close game, ’Bama won by two, despite an insufferably bad production.

Play-by-player Joe Tessitore, another ESPN discard from “Monday Night Football,” showed up in full Gus Johnson mode, eager to growl and shout after every play. He, too, apparently figured it was time, as a matter of moderꦗn self-survival, to play the transparent hype game.

Joe Tessitore (right, with Jason Witten) was only on “Monday Night Football” for a short time. AP

His analyst, Jesse Palmer, stayed in his ESPN character as a relentless blabbermouth, eager to speak scrolls of post-play genuine pigskin gibberish unti✤l his standard excesses were lost as background no💖ise, like the leaf-blower next door.

Vin Scully gave us thꦛe best 67 of his 94 years. Almost everyone in the business saluted, admired and eulogized him as the best in the TV and radio business because he knew and practiced the difference between the two and that it was a fool’s mission to try to fool an intelligent audience.

They 🔥admired his greatness, yet chose to becom🦂e everything he wasn’t and refused to be.

Two and a half years later, Scully’s not only gone, his immaculate, less-is-much-more, we’re-not-stupid style has been deemed by network bosses 𒁃to be unacceptable.

Vin Scully AP

Finally: Would Vin Scully, the elegant Voice Emeritus of Ba🌺seball we came to cherish, be hired today? My guess: Not a chance.

Four pressing questions for fall

Question 1) Who adopts more phony regional or c🧔ultural accents to play to their audiences? Kamala Harris or Stephen A. Smith?

Stephen A. Smith Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Q 2: As seen in TV adღs during the MLB playoffs, who is less funny, Will Ferrell or Kevin Hart?

Q 3: Why did Carlos Mendoza star𒁃t Kodai Senga in Game 1 vs. the Dodgers when Senga was so clearly unprepared to pitch i𓆉n any game, let alone a big one?

Q 4: Why has it taken 10 year🐲s of dubious analytics for baseball media to begin questioning why managers have become so reliant on half-inning-each relievers as opposed to sticking with the one 𒀰who just made 1-2-3?


Reader Charles Legoff: Fox should rename its MLB studio show, with David Ortiz, Alex Rodriguez and Derek Jeter, “T𝐆he Jeter and the Cheaters Showꩲ.”

Meantime, Ortiz, “Big Greedy,” has joined the legions who have sold his name, image and presence to TꦓV ads suckering young male adults into🍌 losing their money gambling on sports.

Left to right: Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter and David Ortiz Kevin Jairaj-USA TODAY Sports

As for Rodriguez’s presence on ESPN and Fox𓆏 baseball, he keep🐈s hitting the exacta: Expensive and worthless.

And while we’re at it, ESPN and ESPN Radio’s Disney/ESPN shopping catalog regular, Mike Greenberg, is now pitching ESPN Bet parlays, the biggest sucker bet among them all, which is 🌸why, due to their bad odds and bad payouts, are sold so hard.

Go get ’em, Mike! I’ll be happy 🦂🉐to book your parlay bets!

A real MLB leader would suspend dirty-mouthed Dodger

Dodger Kiké Hernandezs proudly profane response on Fox was not exactly spontaneous. In fact, before saying that the secret to this team’s success is based on “not giving a f–k,” he asked Q&A man Ken Rosenthal, “Are we live?” After Rosenthal said they are live, Hernandez, the jerk, went as low 🌱as you can.

But not so low that it met with commissioner Rob Manfred’s silent approval. Despite countless opportunities to sanction and/or suspend players for their pu📖blic incivilities — sending a firm and lasting message — Manfred, who claims “kids are ♌MLB’s top priority,” did nothing we know about to try to restore some class to The Game.

Imagine the across-the-bow warning shot Manfred could have fired at all🧔 if he had courageous💛ly represented the best interests of The Game by suspending Hernandez for the next game.

Or at least sent him to bed witꦰhout his supper for a🔯cting like a childish, foul-mouthed reprobate on national TV.

But Manfred’s active sen🐟se of stewardship and legacy is adding Nike “City Connect” uniforms — tradition-stomping, street-cred clown costumes — for fools to purchas🧸e. He just keeps kicking the trash can down the road as continuing evidence of his leadership.