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Hardball is an American baseball sitcom that aired Sunday nights at 8:30 pm on Fox from September 4, 1994 to November 4, 1994. The series premiered in the middle of the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike and was canceled around the time that the year's World Series would have been played. [1]
During the season YouTube produced two special broadcasts. On June 30, YouTube featured a special stat focused statcast broadcast between the Mariners and Blue Jays. [6] YouTube's game between the Orioles and Rays on July 20 featured the first all-female announcing crew on an MLB broadcast.
This Week in Baseball (abbreviated as TWiB, pronounced phonetically) was an American television series that focused on Major League Baseball highlights. Broadcast weekly during baseball season (and in its second incarnation, prior to marquee MLB games and during rain-delays) the program featured highlights of recent games, interviews with players, and other regular features.
Even as managers yank them quicker than at any time in history, with the average one lasting less than 5½ innings per thus far this season, the starting pitcher is nevertheless having a moment.
Whacked Out Sports is an American syndicated reality television series which features professional and amateur videos of sports-related mishaps, crashes and bloopers. The show has a comedic theme and uses a narrative voiceover to highlight aspects of the clips.
Additionally, the MLB Network posted a long YouTube video showcasing Uecker's character and impressive career. Uecker, born in Milwaukee, Wis. , in 1934, was a fan of the Minor League Baseball ...
The first televised baseball game in the world was actually... two baseball games. The first MLB telecast was aired on Aug. 26, 1939, and was actually a double-header between the Brooklyn Dodgers ...
The live-ball era also had a lasting impact on pitchers. Between 1910 and 1920, the last decade of the dead-ball era, eight pitchers had 30-win seasons. Since the beginning of the 1921 season, the first full season of the live-ball era, only three pitchers have had 30-win seasons: Lefty Grove in 1931; Dizzy Dean in 1934; and Denny McLain in 1968.