52 REASONS ESPN/ABC/DISNEY SUCKS
While not strictly a college football issue, we all as sports fans consort with the many-armed devil that is Disney/ESPN/ABC in our attempt to digest as much football in the precious time we’re allowed each season. And in doing so–either in watching the games, searching for highlights, or zoning out after downing five beers in front of the television–you will come across much, much, much to dislike. Actually, we thought of fifty-two things we don’t like.
1. Synergy. Promo the games you have the rights to while barely mentioning the big games on in other places, no matter how important they might be. Push your product over THE GAME. Vile corporate entertainment thinking that yields little but viewer disgust.
2. Regional broadcast fiascoes. No shit here–the Tampa Bay area enjoyed the Rutgers/WVU game on the weekend of the Texas/Oklahoma game because…well, because the evil spider god in charge of everything decreed it, we suppose. Here in Atlanta we frequently got the Tar Heels getting knocked around the yard instead of a better matchup across the country.
3. Stuart Scott. His poetry slam two days ago didn’t happen, because if we did admit it, then we’d wake up crying in a ball in the corner struck by the sadness of what has become Sportscenter.

Boo. Yeah, boo.
4. The absence of Keith Olbermann.
5. The continued, painful obsolescence of Keith Jackson. Yeah, that’s more of a complaint with God, but pending a response from the Deity himself, we’ll blame his corporate masters who act as accomplices.
6. Sportstainment! The next few are attached to this umbrella concept of the idea that sports isn’t entertainment all by itself. Consider them pieces of evidence in one long indictment of Disney’s attempt to force ESPN into becoming the story, not the medium.
7. Nick Lachey, interviewer.
8. ESPN Hollywood. Lower ratings than “Christopher Lowell, After Hours.”
9. “The Hot Seat” segment. Nothing more excruciating than watching former partial qualifiers attempting to think against the clock.
10. Dream Job.
11. Stephen A. Smith. Mark Shapiro, the prime mover behind Sportstainment! and former head of ESPN, said he just HAD to hire Smith after every focus group detested his ass. Well, there you go. Would love to kick the ass of the editor of Highlights magazine for bewitching him with those devilish puzzles all these years. Makes a sport we already don’t care about all the more ignoreable–and isn’t that what a great spokesman for the sport is supposed to do?
12. Tom Berenger’s horrible old man prosthetics in The Junction Boys. Bear Bryant as burn victim, evidently.
13. WHOOSH. Fox shares some blame here, but we’ll still fault ESPN for jumping on the bandwagon by putting sound effects to every gesture.
14. Chris Berman’s “WHOOP!” noise. Berman will make several appearances here, since he’s one of the worst things about the network, so we’ll just list the offense and the death strike we think is appropriate. In this case, we think the two hand spiral neck snap, an old Seagal move, would be perfect.
15. TomBob Ley’s banishment. Outside the Lines, one of the best shows on ESPN, is relegated to the status of “Sunday Morning Boring Old Man News Thing.” How Ley stays at the network when he could be at HBO’s Real Sports is a testament to his loyalty–or his laziness, perhaps.
16. Dan Patrick’s hair dye. Has now moved squarely into Wink Martindale territory.
17. I…love…highlights without shtick…songs that don’t suck dick…and twins!!!
18. Speaking of songs that suck…Big and Rich have made their way onto our Orbital Death Ray list, along with Mark Shapiro. For a long time college football existed as a fiefdom apart from the Sportstainmenttastic! world of ESPN–pleasantly stodgy, frills-free coverage of a sport that allowed you to soak in the atmosphere of each game through the screen. Now we have Nick Lachey interviewing people and Big and Rich suggesting that we need more Ying with our Ying Yang. Two old pieces of redneck jerky–including one who one of our readers pointed out, bears a striking resemblance to Phyllis Diller–who were pulled out of a hat at random by marketing schmucks in New York who were like, “Okay, people. Red state sport—we need us some edgy country!” Total, horrid, absolute fecality soiling the last show we watch on the network.
We’re coming…and we’re shit-tayyy!!!
19. Making the story, not reporting it. Two words: Terrell Owens.
20. High school kids committing live on the network. Recruiting’s creepy enough with Tom Lemming involved. Upping the ante to national coverage only adds to the ick factor.
21. Ron Jaworski’s backseat role. His explanation of schemes and coverages is pure, elegant analysis. So he’s forced to do it at 11:30 with a concussed madman and a very cute lesbian. That’s a push, we suppose.
22. Berman’s lack of preparation. He’s ad-libbing half the time and doing so badly, stuttering and stammering while barely concealing his head-tracking reading of the teleprompter. Appropriate death strike: spinning heel kick, Walker, Texas Ranger- style.
23. Desmond Howard. We just hear happy music while he blabs on about whatever he’s talking about. Mostly bossa nova, actually.
24. The Outdoor Games. In a typical move, ESPN takes our insomniac treats–including the World’s Strongest Man competitions–and packages them into Sportstainment!. What they fail to understand is that we liked them because they were on when we got home from the bar drunk enough to find them entertaining.
25. Lee Corso. Not so fast, my friend! His analyses come down to “Ooh! They’re tougher than the other guy!” or “Kirk said this, so I’ll disagree with him and put on this mascot head!” Makes the already superb Herbstreit look like a bona fide savant in comparison, which may be his role.
26. Mike Gottfried. America’s most dyspeptic college football announcer. Frowns at babies and accuses them of lack of discipline for shitting their diapers. Misses calls frequently. The opposite of fun.
27. Berman’s clip of him throwing a football to catching the ball from Doug Williams. Yes, you were skinny once. Now you’re fat and an easy target. Appropriate death strike: run over with Brinks Truck, chase him down with a lawnmower.
28. The forced animosity between John Clayton and Sean Salisbury. Team Under Armor vs. Goliath has more verisimilitude.
29. Wide angle shots, fades, and pensive shots of young athletes recounting the trauma of growing up poor/fatherless/in Bosnia/stricken with acne/slightly nervous/average/motherless/with rickets/etc in puff pieces. Adversity, dear ESPN, is boring. Show us how long it takes for Matt Leinart to pick up a girl in a bar–now that would be Sportstainmenttastic! Hey-yo!
30. Woody Paige. In our hometown, this guy cleaned your septic tank. On ESPN, he’s an “expert.”
31. The rape of Buster Olney, a fine sportswriter.
32. Fake news conferences.
33. Flavor in our broadcasts. Yes, Dan and Keith did it very well. But show us a goal, td, basket, point, or homer without a “SAY HELLO TO MY LITTLE FRIEND” once, and we will send you a shiny dollar in the mail.
34. Mark May. The youngest disciple of the Gottfried school of broadcasting, a nasty, choleric presence on the screen whose vagina-pelt-looking goatee only added to his dislikeable on-air demeanor. Makes pure evil presence of Lou Holtz seem agreeable in comparison. Oh, speaking of…
35. Lou Holtz. You have a speech defect, and should not make a living talking on television. Oh, and you’re a cheater. Would be entertaining only if they made him speak from behind his own salad bar shield; we’re guessing it would look like those shots of cobras striking at people behind plexiglass in zoos, with spit flying in gobs all over the surface.
36. Chris Berman’s nicknames. Appropriate death strike: in honor of their upcoming Big 12 championship game, how about a dim mak Brown shot to the throat?
37. Beano Cook. Beano’s visage just plain scares the hell out of us. Plus, he’s been trying to kill us for years, with the last incident being a failed stabbing on the streets of Singapore in 2003.
38. World Series of Poker. Not bad in an hour’s dose. Unbearable in four hour stretches.
39. 3: The Dale Earnhardt Story. Find us someone who thinks anyone actually calls their father “diddy” in the South NOT named Bowden, and we will show you an actor two years out of drama school.
40. ESPNU. Not even sure what this is, but it’s unknown and strange–therefore by instinct we must hate it.
41. Chris Berman referring to himself as “The Schwam.” Fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck you. Appropriate death strike: cruise missile while singing onstage with Huey Lewis.
42. ESPN, the Magazine. Huge pages, fellatio-style coverage of the shittiest citizens of the athletic world, and very, very little content.
43. Mark Shapiro, the man behind the Sportstaimentization! of the network. Gone, but not forgotten.
44. Mike Lupica. Only makes two statements a year about college football, both atrociously wrong and dumb. Abrasive without insight. We’d say he represents the worst of Northeastern sportswriting, but Dan Shaughnessy still breathes in Boston.
45. Mel Kiper, Jr. We shouldn’t really hate on Mel–to be this wrong and still get paid for it bespeaks of a certain grandiose swindletude we have to admire. But that said–no one gets their assigned pundit beat wrong with greater consistency. Built entire reputation on saying Trev Alberts sucks, which, well, duh?
46. Not enough Sumo. The Bashos rule, and we have no idea when they’re on.
47. The ESPYs.
48. Rush Limbaugh, football analyst. Yes, it’s ancient history–but the shame remains.
49. The disappearance of Chris Mortensen. He’s your NFL insider, and you put him–literally–behind the set. Because he’s working back there during the show! It Sportstainmenttastic!
50. PTI. Not for the show itself, but for its shambolic impact on ESPN programming, which now features argumentative elements in even the least confrontational formats.
51. Jim Donnan. Looks like he rolled out from beneath an overturned fishing boat in someone’s front yard, put on a tie and and a coat, and rolled into the studio for a segment or two.
52. Chris Berman’s BACK BACK BACK BACK BACK BACK call. Appropriate death strike: kicking knee break, joint-lock arm hold, thrown into path of oncoming commuter train.
1,370 Responses to “52 REASONS ESPN/ABC/DISNEY SUCKS”
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951
Mike says:
Even we up here in CT couldn’t care less about the Hurricanes formerly being the Whalers – and we didn’t give a damn when they were in Hartford, too. I’d rather not hear anything about their Hartford connection again, as it is thoroughly irrelevant. How about some real coverage?
On at least 3 separate occasions, I’ve heard prominent ESPN announcers mock the ratings for the NHL on their TV/radio. A real class act this ESPN.
June 2nd, 2006 at 2:02 pm
952
Jeff says:
Another useless ESPN poll. “Who is the best NSACAR driver right now?” And 2 of the 4 are Jeff Gordon and Dale Jr.. To repeat, NEITHER qualified for the Chase last year (meaning they’re not even in the top 10). Gordon may not make it this year either. He hasn’t won a “real” race in something like a year. Meanwhile, there’s no Kahne, Kenseth, Martin and the Busch brothers, just to name a few.
June 3rd, 2006 at 10:37 am
953
Jeff says:
Three new things:
1. Some guy from NEW YORK (of course) high-fives the fans after a home run, and ESPN instantly (and predictably) makes him an overnight celebrity. Hey ESPN, here’s a rule you should follow: if it isn’t newsworthy if it didn’t happen in New York, then it isn’t newsworthy at all. Please, for the love of God, begin observing the rule.
2 Quote from SportsCenter: “This is Mark Cuban’s first trip to the Finals.” MARK FUCKING CUBAN DOES NOT PLAY FOR THE DALLAS MAVERICKS. There’s no mention of it being the Mavs’ first trip to the finals. No mention of Dirk Novitski’s first trip to the finals. It’s all about Mark fucking Cuban. Congratulations. You just convinced me to not watch ONE FUCKING SECOND of the NBA Finals, because I don’t want to be subjected to your wall-to-wall Mark Cuban suckfest.
3. Ken Griffey Jr. hits a game-winning 3-run homer off Jason Isringhausen in the ninth inning on the road Monday. And it’s not even good enough to make SportsCenter’s “top ten” plays. But the mandatory “Michelle Wie qualifying for the U.S. Open” play made it, as did the English shin-kicking contest.
June 6th, 2006 at 11:21 pm
954
Mike says:
First it was every Bonds at bat. Now ESPN is pre-empting shows (ok, so it was an episode of poker, but listening to Harold Reynolds and John Kruk discuss anything is far worse, in my opinion) to air Roger Clemens’ start for some A-ball team. I would honestly love to know how much time out of a 24 hr broadcast day ESPN spends on their overblown coverage of seemingly never-ending stories about the usual suspects: Bonds, Clemens, Kobe, LeBron, T.O., Yankees/Red Sox, Danica Patrick, Tiger Woods, Michelle Wie, Sharapova, and shameless self-promotion of MNF and ESPN Mobile. I think that the %, especially during SportsCenter, would be staggering, even to us.
June 7th, 2006 at 12:43 am
955
Mike says:
Swap out Ronaldinho for T.O. and you would swear that this was written by someone at ESPN, not SI.
June 7th, 2006 at 12:53 am
956
Mike says:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/multimedia/photo_gallery/0606/gallery.exciting/content.1.html?cnn=yes
June 7th, 2006 at 12:54 am
957
Christina says:
ESPN has been on an obvious downslide in recent years, caring more about being glamourous than actually showing sports. They might be attracting the casual uneducated sports fan, but they’re isolating the people that actually know a few things about sports. Anyway, what’s up with having to go to the “more+” section to find the tennis link on espn.com? Page2, SportsNation, Insider and 360 all have their own links at the top, yet tennis doesn’t. Typical ESPN.
June 7th, 2006 at 4:59 pm
958
Brandon says:
Michael Wilbon nailed it today on PTI!!! He even prefaced his comment by saying that he hoped he wouldn’t be replaced by saying it. He was commenting on the American League All-Star votes, all but one position is going to be started by a Yankee or Red Sock. He said the reason for this is.. ESPN! He complained that yanks/red sox get shoved down our throats and the voting is reflecting that.
Amen, brother! Tony argued the fact saying that ratings prove that America wants to see those 2 teams… ratings schmatings, give us a variety please.
June 7th, 2006 at 5:44 pm
959
Mike says:
How does ESPN “salute” racing? Why, with a special music video by Rascal Flatts. Oh, did they forget to mention that much of the video is made up of clips from Disney’s new animated movie “Cars”? Oh, well, I’m sure that it’s just a coincidence.
Regarding the AS voting, it has become really absurd this season. The best catcher in the AL thus far this season, Joe Mauer, isn’t even in the Top 5 vote-getters. Some of blame has to go to MLB for the way that they drew up the ballots (Brandon Watson, who was demoted in mid-April and hasn’t played since is on the NL ballot, but Alexis Rios, arguably the AL’s top hitter this year, isn’t on the ballot at all), by I agree that the media has largely caused the ugly votes totals for Yankees/Red Sox players. Varitek and Cano shouldn’t even be sniffing a starting role. Ballot-stuffing in places like Boston, both New York cities, St. Louis, Chicago, and Houston (and in past years, the noted issues with Cincy and Cleveland) are another concern altogether. Yankees, Red Sox, and White Sox players are in the Top 5 at each of the 5 infield spots and 8 of their 9 OF’s make up the Top 15 OF vote-getters (Including Coco “I’ve played, whatm 10 games?” Crisp).
June 8th, 2006 at 12:21 pm
960
JT says:
here’s more to add to the list:
1. NOBODY CARES ABOUT MICHELLE WIE! ( i know this is kind of a repeat a guy a few days ago). she hasn’t even won a single professional event and yet ESuckPN is hellbent on convincing us that oh sure, she can compete with the men, hell she’ll be the next tiger one day. this goes the same for danica patrick. look i’m not saying anything against women in sports, if they want to compete in a male-dominated industry that’s all well and good. just don’t cram it down my throat making me try to care more about that then the teams/individuals that are actually out there winning. until Wee or Patrick actually WIN A F***ING EVENT just shut the hell up.
2. Blowjob Armstrong, worst NBA analyst ever. who did he screw to get that gig?
3.their neverending self-promotion of ESPN mobile. what? there’s a mobile phone with sports? oh, it’s NOT like sports on my current phone ok? this is a whole new service from espn?
4. it’s been said like 100 times already but the Trifecta simply has to go away. what is the point of this? the shows are so condensed that there’s no substance to any of them. the worst is baseball tonight i used to look forward to that show every night in the summer. now it’s just a huge shitpile with “h.r.” showing us those awesome tips on the field or the jackass steve phillips convincing us that cliff lee is the best lefthander in the A.L. (he’s not even the best lefty on his own team you dipshit!) then you have “OTL nightly” just a huge piece of garbage . at least Bob Ley is good but even then half the time you have to listen to Jeremy “i’m not dick but i am one” Schapp.
ok i feel better now. you have gained another reader. this is the best sports blog i’ve ever seen hands down. great list. i’m serious guys we need to all pool our resources and create a rogue sports network. i can contribute a few hundred. whos in?
June 10th, 2006 at 1:35 am
961
Mike says:
At least ESPN is making it easy to know whether an episode of BBTN will be watchable or not. If you see Reynolds and Kruk, run like F#$@. Anyone else, it’s moderately watchable. However, there is one aspect of a Reynolds/Kruk show that is worth watching for its typical nonsensical nature and that’s their concluding “Most Important Things.”
Karl “Kill Me Now” Ravech: “Big day in baseball, guys. Albert Pujols sets a new record with 5 HR’s in a game, we have two no-hitters, and there were three brawls in the White Sox/Tigers game. Krukie, what’s the Most Important Thing that you saw tonight?”
Fat Ass: “Well, for me it’s got to be Mike Lieberthal returning to the Phillies. The team’s ERA was 4.80 without Lieberthal in there, but he returned behind the plate, went 1-5 in the game, and the Phils won 7-6. It looks like they’re turning it around, for sure.”
Ravech: “Yeah, just like every other 86 win season. HR, what about you?”
HR stands for Habitually Retarded: “Well, my most important thing is Kerry Wood making a rehab start tonight. Yeah, he allowed 7 runs in one inning against a team in Class A, but if he and Prior and Derrek Lee and Aramis Ramirez’ ability to hit all return, and the team trades for a bullpen and some guys who reach base more than 28% of the time, the Cubs could make a run.”
Ravech: “So, to recap – 5 HR game, two no-hitters, super brawl and the most important things are a washed-up catcher and an overrated pitcher returning? I’m Karl Ravech – someone please end my misery.”
June 10th, 2006 at 12:31 pm
962
GO SOX!! says:
I hope these deadsox/yankoff loving bastards don’t notice they have a REAL winning team on tonight.
I’d like to shove the deadsox & yankoffs up sperman’s ass but, which end is that?
I could hear him puking last year when the REAL SOX won the WS.
Let him croak when they repeat this year.
They have lost me.
June 11th, 2006 at 7:32 pm
963
Jeff says:
Let’s see. What’s happening in sports?
For starters, there’s the French Open final, World Cup Soccer, the NBA Finals, the NHL Finals, the Arenabowl, college baseball SuperRegionals, various auto races, various golf tournaments, various MLB baseball games, lots of track & field, and other things.
So, what’s the top story on Sunday night’s SportsCenter?
You guessed it: Roger Clemens makes a start in double-A.
Fuck you, ESPN. Fuck you sideways. You should be ashamed of yourselves for the way you treat real sports fans like dog shit.
June 11th, 2006 at 11:49 pm
964
Jeff says:
Wow, ESPN. You were right. This is the best USA soccer team ever that you’ve been shoving down our throats. I’d hate to see what one of our worst teams would have done against the Czech Republic. I’d ask for an apology, but you don’t do that. I don’t expect a network that gave us Danica Patrick as the next great sports hero to issue apologies. You’ll just move on to the next overhyped athlete or team.
Either that, or you’ll give us a dramatic feature story about how T.O. is teaching kids to be role models to make up for it.
Oh wait…
June 13th, 2006 at 12:03 am
965
Jeff says:
More of the hard-hitting investigative journalism we’ve come to expect from ESPN.com:
“Mary Buckheit isn’t a NASCAR fan, but after heading to North Carolina to see the premiere of “Cars,” she’s starting to have second thoughts.”
It has nothing to do with both of these now being ESPN/Disney properties, right?
June 13th, 2006 at 11:11 am
966
Joe Estepe says:
HERE’S MY NOMINATION FOR ESPNs WORST HOST CATEGORY: JASON SMITH
Listen, if you think daytime ESPN radio is bad, check out their overnight “host?”. Used to be Todd Wright, but ESPN canned him in favor of JASON SMITH. If you’re into 10th rate wannabe comics who are off their Prozac, JASON SMITH fits the bill. He holds conversations with himself in various voices (which he evidently finds hilarious because he ends most of these routines with a fake laugh)…..it is unbelievable.
TO ESPN: People who work nights do so because they want to, or have to, not because they are dumb as rocks so why are you palming this loser off on us? One night a couple of weeks ago he spent at least 15 minutes talking about how he was viewing the Hurricaines on TV while naked. The mental picture was repulsive! Three hours later, having reached the bottom of his intellectual barrel, he revisited the same subject again in gross detail! Because the Hurricanes won that night, he vowed to watch them naked until the end. One night last week i checked in to see what was up. Evidently the Hurricanes are still winning because the previous night he had watched the game naked under a blanket because they had company!! He obviously thinks this is 1st class sports radio–what a dumb ass!!
NOTE TO THOSE WHO HIRE ON-AIR TALENT FOR ESPN: Whoever hired this clown should be forced to listen to 5 hours of JASON SMITH 5 nights a week!! Someone have pity on us and hire a host who takes sports seriously. Enough of the supposed comedy already!! Actually, they could repeat 5 hours of their daytime programming. No matter how bad it is, it would be 100% better than JASON SMITH–believe me!
June 14th, 2006 at 3:35 pm
967
Paul B says:
Well, when it comes to “incredibly and delightfully bad ESPN Radio personalities,” (think Dan Ackroyd’s Leonard Pith Garnell character from the original SNL) I have to nominate Freddie Coleman who constantly mangles the English language and once referred to Leigh Montville’s biography of Ted Williams as “Ted Williams’s autobiography.” I guess Freddie’s head has been cryogenically preserved too!!! While we’re also on the subject of their “radio personalities,” can Mike Greenwood possibly become any more annoying? If wearing out the “I’m a metrosexual wimp who loves sports” angle weren’t bad enough, he now seems to be channeling Jim Rome as he repeats each point and question about 17 times before moving on. Well, “Greenie” your wife may think you’re an idiot, but we know it!!!
June 17th, 2006 at 12:43 pm
968
Joe says:
Re Mike Greenberg: Irritating as the metrosexual thing is, worse are the never-ending references to his book—especially painful in the month after it came out. I’m surprised Disney higher-ups didn’t tell him to “just shut up.” However, despite the painful self-promotion, I was never driven to turn off Mike & Mike the way I had to dump JASON SMITH.
Speaking of JASON SMITH (I assume he’s still watching the Hurricanes naked), one good thing came of my search for alternative programming–I found Todd Wright! Evidently he has a couple of evening hours on the Sporting News Network—I caught him on a station called The Score out of Chicago. Unfortunately, the reception here is lousy, but it is nice to hear 5 or 6 minutes of literate sports coverage every now and then before the signal fades. By the way, there is an online site that is petitioning for Todd’s return to ESPN—but, it is a lost cause. They wanted 10,000 signatures and last time I checked they only had a little over 500.
On the subject of dumb statements, I have a nomination. Jason Whitlock was on PTI subbing for Wilbon a couple of months ago. The subject was outstanding athletes. Whitlock said, “Michael Jackson–back when he was around 16.” He had to mean THE Michael Jackson, right? I can’t think of anyone in sports named Michael Jackson. Unbelievable.
June 19th, 2006 at 6:13 am
969
Dino says:
Since when does ESPN give a flying fuck about soccer? If the U.S. was not in the World Cup, there wouldnt be a second of coverage on their wonderful network. Also, I didnt know that ESPN knew that the CFL existed. All they do is laugh and mock the league but now that Ricky Williams is playing for the Argos, its all of a sudden newsworthy.
ESPN also LOVES hockey. Carolina wins the Stanley Cup last night….Sportscenters order of stories:
1) Dallas/Miami Controversy (approx. 10 minutes)
2) Phil Mickelsons US Open chokefest (approx. 10 minutes)
3) Ben Roethlisberger (approx. 5 minutes)
4) Yankees/Phillies highlights (a few minutes)
5) Stanley Cup Game 7 (approx. a half hour into the show)
I guess because the NHL isnt bling bling like the NBA and doesnt have guys like Wade and Shaq up on a pedestal, it has to take a back seat to stories that have been talked about non-stop for the past 2 days. We know what happened in Miami, we know what happened to that asshole Mickelson, we know what happened to Roethlisberger. Thank you for shoving it down our throats non-stop. Why not talk about the NBA playoffs a little more, which are a complete fuckin joke. If its taking you until now to realise that its all a scam and games are fixed, you are as retarded as ESPN. Cuban comes out and says the leage is fixed but then has a change of heart a day later. Give me a break.
I couldnt believe when Stuart Moron called out the NBA and its officiating about the phanton foul on Wade in OT. Thats almost like blasphemy and mutiny.
June 20th, 2006 at 3:57 pm
970
BFA says:
Now that the Carolina Hurricanes have won the Stanley Cup, I think that espn should officially not refer to them as the former Hartford Whalers henceforth!
June 21st, 2006 at 10:18 pm
971
Jeff says:
During the CWS two days ago, there was a shot of the guy in the stands reading a sports page with the Hurricanes as the front page story. The announcer, Sean McDonough, said “Congratulations to the Carolina Hurricanes for winning the Cup. I still wish they were the Hartford Whalers, though.”
They also predictably found a way last night to make this year’s CWS about Roger Clemens. “We’re here live at the College World Series. Roger Clemens pitched in the College World Series 25 years ago. By the way, he’s pitching tomorrow on ESPN…”
And they wouldn’t shut up about how the “family of networks” made some big deal to televise Big Ten sports for the next 10 years. In their self-serving announcements that ran across the tickers, they never mentioned that the Big Ten also made a separate television network that would air other Big Ten sporting events. I’m sure that curious omission had nothing to do with Fox Sports running that particular channel.
June 22nd, 2006 at 10:35 am
972
Jeff says:
Top three headlines copied and pasted from the front page of ESPN.com:
• Neyer: Roger Clemens’ 22 greatest moments
• Stark: We’re not crazy for being mesmerized by Clemens
• Short Hops: Age-defying Clemens will boost Astros
I’d like to find the people in the focus group ESPN conducted that told them that “America” is obsessed with Roger Clemens, and kick each one of their asses individually. I’m sure the focus group was conducted in New York City.
June 22nd, 2006 at 1:42 pm
973
Black Bart says:
Todd Wright rules. He used to be a local guy here in Tampa before he got his ESPN gig, so he fills in on local shows every now and then. I did hear him on Sporting News Radio once or twice also–he’s better than any of the regulars on that network, for sure. Back before the internet was very popular, every time I needed to know something obscure, I’d call Todd at the local station. Sometimes, he wouldn’t even have to think about it before rattling off the correct answer. Guy was incredible.
June 25th, 2006 at 5:48 pm
974
Jeff says:
Coming up at halftime of the World Cup: Is There Racism in Soccer? How fucking predictable.
Of course, I wouldn’t expect less from a network that thinks that David Beckham (Mr. “I’ve had a movie about me and I’m married to a Spice Girl”) scoring the goal was more important than England advancing to the quarterfinals.
June 27th, 2006 at 11:36 am
975
dg says:
Why doesn’t ESPN ever talk about Roger Clemens and steroids. The guys is 43 freaking years old! The guy is throwing the ball in the mid 90s! Not to mention he looks like a 250 lbs linebacker. Doesn’t this make any sense? Look at other 40+ pitchers:
Tom Glavine – high 80’s
Randy Johnson – velocity is greatly reduced. Now pitches in the low 90’s
I bet you in 5 years once we all find out Clemen’s juiced, your going to hear Peter Gammons and Steve Philips go, I knew it all the time and he shouldn’t be inducted in the all of fame.
June 27th, 2006 at 2:24 pm
976
Jeff says:
In his latest column, ESPN’s ombudsman wrote that it’s not a good idea for ESPN to continue interviewing Disney-related celebrities who have nothing to do with sports (such as the actors who provided the voices in “Cars”) in the “Budweiser Hot Seat” on SportsCenter.
One hour after I read this, Jim Belushi (star of ABC/Disney’s “According to Jim”) was being interviewed in the “Budweiser Hot Seat.” I guess he’s “sports related” because he was conveniently in the “Monday Night Football” booth every time they did a Bears game.
This situation tells me everything I need to know about concern for public interest and complaints.
June 28th, 2006 at 11:50 am
977
JC says:
A couple of suggestions:
Quit talking about NY period. Since when were the Knicks or Rangers EVER – EVER! basketball or hockey powers? All of a sudden Willis Reed’s 4-point game after injury is the most inspirational sports story ever. Actually it’ll be on their Top 10 segment surely.
When they give you one of their countless poll questions, the last option should be E. WHO CARES?
There’s gotta be a way to find a sports network that will give you the straight poop instead of this schlock.
June 28th, 2006 at 2:55 pm
978
Jeff says:
They usually do a decent job labeling material on the websites, but I’m getting SICK AND TIRED of clicking on a story on the ESPN.com webpage, only to discover that it’s actually premium content. Either label it or give it to all of us. Do you think I’m gonna whip out a credit card so that I can look at your stupid mock draft, especially when I can see thousands of them on thousands of other websites?
June 28th, 2006 at 6:25 pm
979
Mike says:
I can’t take the Ombudsman’s comments seriously after reading him praise Harold Reynolds. HR and Joe Morgan are the leading culprits of repeatedly saying stupid, and often incorrect, stuff and getting away with it since they once played/the public is too dumb to notice.
June 29th, 2006 at 2:42 am
980
Roberto says:
53. Because all idiot Buffalo Bills fans think ESPN has some underlying conspiracy against the Bills. They think ESPN “Hates” the Bills.
June 29th, 2006 at 3:09 pm
981
Brian says:
54. They praise Tedy Bruschi like he is a God
June 29th, 2006 at 4:16 pm
982
Jeff says:
I swear to God, if I see the same four guy playing dominoes after a World Cup soccer game ONE MORE TIME, I’m going to fuckng kill somebody.
June 30th, 2006 at 5:57 pm
983
Jeff says:
And now with Wimbledon and World Cup coverage, both SportsCenter and ESPN News are holding results hostage. “The Germans won today. They will play the winner of the Italy/Ukraine match, which was also played today. We’ll tell you who won that game later on in the show.” Then they get to the result at the end of the show, after a number of completely unrelated stories.
Could you imagine the outrage if other news programs starting doing this.
And I’m sad that Northwestern’s football coach died, but please don’t deify him. They talked about his greatest accomplishments at the beginning of the show. They called him “intense,” but chose to omit the fact that a player once DIED during one of those “intense” workouts. I guess Northwestern alum Brent Musberger accidently omitted that when he talked about him.
June 30th, 2006 at 6:29 pm
984
Jeff says:
Like the Mexico and USA games earlier, could ABC and ESPN be more obviously be pulling for England to win in the World Cup? Now that all three (including David Beckham) are out, are they even going to bother talking about it at all?
July 1st, 2006 at 2:15 pm
985
Jeff says:
Coming up next on SportsCenter: What’s it like to be Roger Clemens’ teammate?
It never fucking ends.
July 2nd, 2006 at 11:53 am
986
Wildog says:
How has John Buccigross gone un touched. What a disgrace this guy is talking about hockey (or anything for that matter) “Travis Haefner is to the Indians as Rob Thomas is to Matchbox 20″ I think Mike “Greeny” Greenburg gets some of his material from this jackass.
July 3rd, 2006 at 1:51 am
987
Corliss says:
Can ESPN PLEASE stop WHORING out children’s moments? For the love of God. LLWS, Spelling Bees, showing high schoolers’ games(i.e. LeBron)or ANYTHING Michelle Wie does; ESPN just HAS
to be there. DO we REALLY want to see 12-year kids(alleged)crying after they lose the LLWS just for the sake of “capturing the moment.”? What a JOKE and complete utter horseshit.
July 3rd, 2006 at 9:22 am
988
Jeff says:
Coming up on SportsCenter: Did Roger Clemens make a mistake signing with the Astros?
It’s still about Roger Fucking Clemens.
And let me take one wild guess at which team you think he should have signed with.
Congratulations on “creating” more news.
July 3rd, 2006 at 5:59 pm
989
Jeff says:
Is anyone completely fed up with SportsCenter spending more time talking about “pretend” NFL games instead of talking about sports that are taking place right now? I know the NFL is the most popular sport out there, but stop spending half the show trying to predict what will happen six months from now. You’re supposed to report the news, not predict it.
July 5th, 2006 at 11:50 pm
990
Jim says:
God do I hate ESPN. Look at the total waste of time that is the fantasy football rankings hosted the idiots that anchor the NFL coverage. Is it really necessary to have a posterboard and have Trey FUCKING Wingo slide in the names of the teams into their supposed ranking slot? I’m so tired of my sports highlights being corrupted by ESPN. Thank GOD FoxSportsNet has created a new show that is all about the athletes and highlights, not the stupid fat has been overweight analysts.
July 6th, 2006 at 2:15 am
991
Jeff says:
The front page of ESPN.com today
“WHEN SOCCER RULED THE USA”
In the Disco Era of 1970s New York, these three words could get you anywhere: “I’m with Pele”
OK. I get it. A few thousand socialites in NEW YORK CITY liked soccer in the late 1970s, and, therefore, it “Ruled the USA.” I remember this era. I was alive in it. Soccer never came even close to capturing the imagination of the entire country AT ANY POINT IN TIME, EVER. But some New Yorker hung out with Pele in 1978, and he’s trying to turn it into a “national” phenomenon. That’s what’s wrong with New York and the “national” media in general. They’re synonymous, and they beleive that what they do and like is what “America” likes (or it’s better). They are so out of touch, it’s pathetic. Just like we were all freaking out because the Yankees lost by 18 runs 2 nights ago. The sky is falling. Oops, they won by 10 the next night. Oh well, sorry to freak everyone out. Too bad nobody outside of the Northeast actually cared.
July 6th, 2006 at 11:12 am
992
Jeff says:
And now O.J. Mayo says he’s going to USC because he saw all the ridiculous media attention Matt Leinart and Reggie Bush got, and he wants some of that.
But shame on us for saying that ESPN and the media in general have no impact on who gets to have good teams. Shame on us for suggesting that USC’s 2003 “national championship” is a media-concocted load of shit.
July 6th, 2006 at 7:16 pm
993
Wildog says:
The stupid fake NFL season is an embarassment. I am guessing that most normal people just flip the channel when that is going on. I use ESPN news soley now. Sportcenter is like a tabloid now. Also how come Sportscenter isnt leading with the Tour De France? I thought that race was really important? I wonder why it is less important now? The race is still the same, the riders are still trying just as hard…
July 6th, 2006 at 9:47 pm
994
dg says:
There is a reason why the NFL is the greatest sport. It’s because football is the least predictable. An injury to your QB could make a preseason favorite into a 2-14 team. I don’t understand when we have every baseball team in action, the World Cup, the Tour de France and NBA/NHL free agent signings going on, they spend so much freaking time talking about something that is going to be completely pointless once the NFL season starts. I WANT MY HIGHLIGHTS BACK!
July 7th, 2006 at 11:26 am
995
Chris says:
“Can ESPN PLEASE stop WHORING out children’s moments? For the love of God. LLWS, Spelling Bees, showing high schoolers’ games(i.e. LeBron)or ANYTHING Michelle Wie does; ESPN just HAS to be there. DO we REALLY want to see 12-year kids(alleged)crying after they lose the LLWS just for the sake of “capturing the moment.”? What a JOKE and complete utter horseshit.”
Michelle Wie is a professional golfer, not a grade schooler. Sure, she gets more airplay than one would normally offer the world’s second-best female golfer, but how is covering Michelle Wie’s pro exploits comparable to covering a grade school spelling bee or Little League baseball?
July 8th, 2006 at 3:27 am
996
Chris says:
Michael Wilbon nailed it today on PTI!!! He even prefaced his comment by saying that he hoped he wouldn’t be replaced by saying it. He was commenting on the American League All-Star votes, all but one position is going to be started by a Yankee or Red Sock. He said the reason for this is.. ESPN! He complained that yanks/red sox get shoved down our throats and the voting is reflecting that.
Amen, brother!
Re: comments 958 and 959 –
Yes, it is silly that Robinson Cano would be the starting AL 2nd baseman in the ASG if he hadn’t gotten hurt, but I don’t buy Wilbon’s argument that ESPN is the guilty party.
Look at another Yankee second baseman, Bobby Richardson. Career OPS .634, career OBP just .299. In 1961 he played 162 games and batted leadoff for the Yankees, setting the table for Maris and Mantle, and still managed to score just 80 runs because he couldn’t find first base with a map. He really wasn’t any better than Jerry Lumpe, a forgotten player who started at 2nd base for the KC A’s after the Yankees gave him away. Yet Bobby Richardson was an all-star seven times. Even in the talent-depleted AL of the early ’60s, he probably didn’t deserve to be an all-star more than twice.
Yes, the situation is regrettable — fans vote for players who get more ink and who play on the glamorous teams. But this has been going on since long before the ESPN era.
July 8th, 2006 at 4:11 am
997
Jeff says:
Fans didn’t vote for players between 1958 and 1969 (The Bobby Richardson era).
And there’s a point to what he was saying. Back then, there were many reason why it was all about the Yankees. The Yankees won the World Series all the time. There was no cable. You didn’t get 10 nationally televised games per week. You were lucky to get one, and it was provided by a television network (all situated in New York City).
Now you have cable. The Yankees haven’t won a World Series in a few years. You have many opportunities to give all teams equal attention. You have the opportunity to televise many teams and many games.
But ESPN still thinks it’s all about the Yankees.
Cable and wall-to-wall coverage should have democratized the process. Instead, they created an aristocracy. Instead of covering all teams and all games, ESPN treats like EVERY SINGLE Yankees/Red Sox game and/or “Subway Series” the same way C-SPAN treats Congress or a presidential election.
That’s why we have a problem with ESPN.
July 8th, 2006 at 1:13 pm
998
Chris says:
Jeff –
That’s true, Richardson came along right after the Cincinnati ballot stuffing scandal, so it was mostly his peers voting him into the all star game and not the fans. It’s silly that he was an all star seven times, but he doesn’t really support the argument I was making. Serves me right for commenting at 4am. Who is a better example of a guy who was always an all-star primarily because he played in a big media market — Steve Garvey went a lot more times than he deserved it, although he was a much better player than Bobby Richardson.
Cable hasn’t democratized coverage because cable itself is rife with monopoly privileges and barriers to entry. Television is always the medium most likely to dig in its heels and resist change. I don’t know what network coverage was like in the ’60s, but I remember that in the ’80s — a decade defined by parity in baseball — the Yankees, Mets or Dodgers were on NBC’s Game of the Week virtually every week. Success in baseball was much more distributed in the ’80s than it is now, but the networks kept covering the same few teams even back then when nobody could establish anything like a dynasty. So again I would say that ESPN is really propogating the same old problems rather than creating new ones.
July 8th, 2006 at 3:51 pm
999
Jeff says:
I think we both agree that it was a problem before ESPN, and it’s still a problem. It’s just a shame to me that a network with an endless number of cable channels, websites, and Disney “synergy” power can’t find the time to talk about more than the New York teams, the Red Sox, Roger Clemens and Barry “Chasing Aaron” Bonds.
I mean, The Tigers have won two-thirds of their games this year. And the only time I’ve seen them on ESPN was on back-to-back nights when they were playing (of course) the Yankees. That’s absolutely offensive. I mean, couldn’t they at least sneak a Tigers game or two on ESPN Classic (which no longer shows “classic” sports) instead of showing a poker game?
July 9th, 2006 at 5:34 pm
1000
Jeff says:
POST #1000. WOW
ESPN is now saying that Danica Patrick wants to join NASCAR. GREAT. There’s a poll in the story: Will Danica Patrica succeed in NASCAR? Well, considering how well she’s done in IRL…
And 5 minutes after the World Cup ended, ESPN was asking who will win the 2010 World Cup. We can’t even digest this year’s final (outside of Zidane’s head butt), or let Italy enjoy their accomplishment. ESPN’s already moved on to asking their analysts the MOST IMPORTANT question: will WE have a better team in 4 years?
July 10th, 2006 at 12:05 pm