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ESPN Sunday Night Baseball telecasts were exclusive. TBS televised 13 straight weeks of Sunday afternoon games and also televised the National League postseason. The American League postseason was split between ESPN, Fox/FS1, and MLB Network (AL Wild Card on ESPN, the ALDS split between FS1 and MLB Network, and the ALCS on Fox and FS1).
2020: Not held because of the COVID-19 pandemic: 2021: Jon Sciambi: Chris Singleton: Kevin Winter 2022: Jon Sciambi: Doug Glanville: Marc Kestecher: 2023: Jon Sciambi: Doug Glanville: Kevin Winter 2024: Karl Ravech: Doug Glanville: Marc Kestecher
Major League Baseball announced the 2021 regular season schedule on July 9, 2020. [9] A full 162-game season was played. As has been the case since 2013, all teams played their four division opponents 19 times each for a total of 76 games.
The 2020 Major League Baseball season began on July 23 and ended on September 27 with only 60 games amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.The full 162-game regular season was planned to begin on March 26, but the pandemic caused Major League Baseball (MLB) to announce on March 12 that the remainder of spring training was canceled and that the start of the regular season would be delayed by at least two ...
Mark Teixeira: analyst (2017–2020) Baseball Tonight and select MLB Regular Season Games; Gary Thorne: play-by-play (1990–1993), (1996–2000), (2003-2009) select games; Bobby Valentine: analyst (2003; 2009–2011) Baseball Tonight and Sunday Night Baseball; Matt Vasgersian- Sunday Night Baseball (2018–2021)
The 2020 American League Championship Series was a best-of-seven series in Major League Baseball's 2020 postseason between the two American League Division Series winners, the defending American League Champion and sixth-seeded Houston Astros and the top-seeded Tampa Bay Rays, for the American League (AL) pennant and the right to play in the 2020 World Series.
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On January 5, 1989, Major League Baseball signed a $400 million deal with ESPN, who would show over 175 games beginning in 1990.For the next four years, ESPN would televise six games a week (Sunday Night Baseball, Wednesday Night Baseball and doubleheaders on Tuesdays and Fridays), as well as multiple games on Opening Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day.