Phil Mushnick

Phil Mushnick

MLB

Clueless TBS has made Yankees-Guardians ALCS unwatchable

Today we pause to give our eternal thanks to TBS for allowing us a few brief, presumably live moments of the last can’t-make-it-up inning of Thursday’s Yankees-Guardians playoff game

Until those final brief glimpses it was touch-and-go — whatever that means — as to whether TBS had any idea what was going on down on the field, as the national network had become immersed in scouring the stands to provide closeups of ꦫfans, many with thei𒁃r eyes closed, deep in spiritual devotion praying or at least meditating on behalf of the team in the religion of their choice. 

Picꦬk a praying fan! Pick 10! TBS found scores to choose among! 

TBS constantly cut to crowd shots during Game 3 of the ALCS between the Yankees and Guardians. Screengrab

Yep, standard, 21st Century live, big-event sports television. Anything worth doing is well worth overdoing as a matter of thoughtless habit, like sitting on a𓂃 bench carrying a “Wet Paint” sign just becaus꧋e. 

The games neꦍtworღks purchase for billions of dollars to exclusively televise? Nah! 

Show everyone 𓃲else in the ballpark watching what we tuned in to watch. Indiscriminately utilize all the TV cameras we schlepped along to fractionalize your attention! Best seat in the house? By pregame design it’s no longer in your house. 

But sports and TV now meet at the corner of Discomfort and Bloating. 𓂃;

Thursday’s frantic finish featured three current or former closers, rather than the standard two, 💃regardless of how the eighth-inning designated automaton pitched. 

The Yanks’ current closer Luke Weaver and former closer Clay 🐻Holmes allowed four hits, a home run each. 

TBS constantly cut to crowd shots during Game 3 of the ALCS between the Yankees and Guardians. Screengrab

Cleveland’s lights-out closer, Emmanuel Clase, brought in early as a matter of desperation, allowe🧸d three hits, two of them home runs. Thus another postseason single-game record: Three “closers,” all allowed at least one home run. 

🎃Cleveland eventually sent in Pedro Avila, the official winner. He allowed two walks in his one inning. He’d replaced Andrew Walters, who’d allowed no base runners and struck out Juan Soto looking, thus Walters had to 💝go. 

But that’s another matter. Mickey Mantle’s World Series records and totals have all been wiped out, according to MLB’s hype-headed TV partners, by what 21st Century players h🐭ave compiled starting with wild card games! 

Emmanuel Clase reacts during the Guardians-Yankees game on Oct. 17, 2024. Getty Images

Or as an ESPN graphic once r𝓰ead, Bobby Thomson homered “to win the꧙ 1951 NLCS.” 

Thursday’s Yanks💞-Guardian game, at least what we were allowed to see of it, was one for the ages. So was the telecast: the Stone Ages.

Can’t avoid Spike, no matter how hard you try

Reader Michael Mattice recognizes Spike Lee as the attention-starved, NBA and now WNBA game-intruding, Bozo-outfitted, front-row “sports fan” obligatorily seen to make a scene on Yankees postseason telecasts that … 

“I just opened my mailbox and Spike Lee jumped oඣut! He’s everywhere!” 

Any of TV’s back-slappers recall the 2012 episode in which Lee recklessly tweeted out the Florida address he thought was the residence🌺 of George Zimmerman, who was🎀 arrested in the shooting death of 17-year-old African-American Trayvon Martin? 

Spike Lee has attended Liberty games throughout the playoffs. NBAE via Getty Images

What was Lee’s motive? To have Zimmerman shot by vigilantes or just ha💜ve his house burned do𓂃wn? 

Either way, Lee nationally disseminated the wrong address. This selectively blind advocate for racial justice who thus creates fright among pandering media, had targeted an elderly couple, the McClains꧙. 

Where you and I ꦦwould’ve been widely condemned, our careers ended for what Lee did, Lee got away with an “Oops” and an undisclosed settlement. Then it was back to screaming “racism” and his self-entitled spoiled brat front-row🧜 presence at nationally televised ballgames. 

Not tha༺t it mattered to Lee, but Zimmerman was acquitted of second-degree𒐪 murder. ;

I guess what we can’t miss woꦦuld be too impolite to mention on the air, but Cleveland first baseman Josh Naylor, listed as 5-foot-11, 250 pounds, even by walk-around civilian standards, is fat. But the truth shall not be told. 

Reminds us of ESPN’s treatment of the two-year crime w🎶ave — at least 25 arrests, one for vehicular homicide — of the Georgia football team. Given that Georgia is an ESPN business partner via ESPN’s ownership of the SEC Network, ESPN plays exceptionally stupid — even for ESPN. 


Now that Peyton Manning endorses just about anything — he now appears in🌱 TV ads pitching Bush’s b🥂aked beans — he’s all set up to endorse a product that reduces flatulence. 


NFL TV local assignments for Sunday: 

Eagle𓆉s-Giants, 1 p.m. on Fox: Chris Myers, ∫. Jets-Steelers, 8:20, NBC: Mike Tirico, Cris Collinsworth. 


Kinda like C▨harles Barkley blowing up after endorsing Weight Watchers (Barkley, admitted problem gambler, appeared in ads enticing young males to gamble on sports) and ESPN’s Chris Berman endorsing weight-loss elixirs while starring in ads for Applebee’s three-cheese chicken penne. 

Then there’s “Blackish” star Anthony Anderson in a heartfelt, solemn public service ad on behalf of the American Diabetes Assoꦬciation is also seen in ads for sugar-enriched Smirnof🍎f vodka. 

Abu Dhabi, Knicks? Really?

Jimmy Dolan’s Knicks will take sports-washing blood and oil money to wear “Experience Abu Dhabi” patchesꦿ on their various Third World made u💜niforms this season

Yes, by all means, experience Abu Dhabi. 

Knicks owner James Dolan Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

But perhaps, given the United Arab Emirates continuing rotten record on basic human rights — arbitrary arrests and detentions, woဣmen as male-sub🐻servient servants and gays as personna non grata — it might be best to give this Islamist monarchy wedded to an ancient oppressive theocracy a look-away pass. 

But the altruism-cloaked NBA and its biggest stars — including knee-jerking, pick-and-choose justice-for-all LeBron James — will choose communist Chinese TV an🍌d merchandise money, and Arab oil and blood money over genuine pro-democracy altruꦓism every time. 

And now that Red China prepaওres its invasion of democratic 🧸Taiwan, what’s Adam Silver’s plan? Whose lives don’t matter? 


Mendy Rudolph come back to us! What I miss most about how the NBA and college hoops ignore violations for tಞraveling (steps) and palming the ball (dribbling from below to make cutting to the basket or beating tigh༺t defenses so much easier) are the say-it-all hand signals from the refs. 

Palming was shown as it was — dribbling from below or too much to the side.ꦅ Traveling was signaled by ro🍨tating the arms rotating at chest level. 

The indelicate trackside term for it is “bridge jumpers” — those who place big beꦬts on odds-on favorites to show for a return💮 of 10 or 20 cents on every two dollars wagered. 

In Oct. 5’s four-hꩵorse $100,000 Chllingworth Stakes at Santa Anita, Sweet Azteca went off at 1-9. Due to the short field, there was only win and place wagering, but how could a bridge-jumper lose a hefty place bet on a prohibitive favorite? 

Sweet Azteca, the sure thing, finished fourth — last. The place horse, Irish Wahnie, paid a whopping 74 bucks to fini𝓡𒆙sh second in a four-horse race. 

I’m gonna share th✨is with you, and only you, because you’ve♕ read this far: 

I know a guy who knows a guy who says that the key🅷 to Sunday’s Jets game is that their defense “has to get off the field.” Remember: Just between us.