From today's Tribune:
Quote:
Three and out
Final requests/rants from a guy who's heading back to the college football beat. Ed Sherman will serve your media needs for the next six months:
Will ESPN please spike its silly "SportsCenter Championship Series" already? No one wants to hear analysts debate make-believe playoff games. I love college football yet can't even watch. Use those three minutes every day to feature actual players from the teams.
Will Ed Farmer let Chris Singleton speak? For example, when the Sox's rookie radio analyst recently tried to make a point about umpires calling out batters on checked swings, he referred to the Tom Cruise movie "Minority Report."
"Didn't see that one," Farmer said. Then Farmer stepped on Singleton before he could explain the analogy. Let him breathe, Ed.
Comcast SportsNet hasn't been around long, but we already take it for granted. No doubt the network adds to our viewing experience with live postgame press conferences and "SportsNite." But its highlight packages often fail to go beyond the superficial.
Example: Tuesday night's Cubs-Phillies game. With two outs, Aramis Ramirez at the plate and the Cubs trailing by three runs in the seventh, Ryan Theriot got gunned down trying to steal third. Not only was it a key play, it perfectly symbolized a team lacking in baseball sense.
But CSN didn't show it. Also it didn't show Juan Pierre getting picked off. And, for that matter, it didn't show White Sox shortstop Juan Uribe dropping a routine popup a day after Ozzie Guillen had questioned his intensity.
Viewers shouldn't have to turn to ESPN for its Sox and Cubs highlights, right?
Nice job Teddy, its nice to see a media critic be
critical with facts to back himself up. Too bad we don't get this more often.
http://chicagosports.chicagotribune.com/sports/columnists/cs-060824teddy,1,5055672.column?page=2&coll=cs-home-headlines