Sports
Ranking the 18 MLB teams that didn’t make the playoffs: Who is best-positioned for 2025?
There are 18 teams that didn’t make the MLB postseason, so while we all enjoy October baseball, I thought I’d power-rank the non-playoff teams based on who is best-positioned to contend in 2025.
I did the same thing a year ago, listing the Padres, Mets and Yankees as three of the top five non-playoff teams most likely to make the postseason this year — and they all did. I also had the Mariners and Reds in that top five, but both underachieved this season, leading to the dismissals of their respective managers.
With trades, free agency, injuries and other developments, a lot will change between now and next spring. But here’s where these clubs stand and how quickly I think they can turn things around and put themselves in position to make the playoffs next year.
1. Seattle Mariners
The Mariners had the best rotation in baseball this year based on scouts’ evaluations, analytics and ERA (3.38). Their overall pitching staff finished first in the American League in ERA and yet they still somehow missed the playoffs. How did that happen? Their offense didn’t produce enough runs and struck out way too much. They finished 21st in runs scored and 30th in strikeouts. The Mariners fired manager Scott Servais and replaced him with Dan Wilson, changed hitting coaches three times before convincing Edgar Martinez to take the job and made key midseason trades to acquire Randy Arozarena and Justin Turner. But by the time they made those moves, it was too late to salvage the season. With arguably the game’s best rotation heading into 2025, they just have to put together an average offense — but reduce the strikeouts significantly — and they’ll be a serious playoff threat for the AL West title and/or a wild-card berth.
2. Arizona Diamondbacks
The Diamondbacks were not able to defend their 2023 National League championship as they collapsed down the stretch in September, losing five of their final seven games. However, Arizona will be well-positioned to rebound in 2025 thanks to a strong rotation led by Zac Gallen, Merrill Kelly and Eduardo Rodriguez, who all dealt with injuries and underperformance this season. Brandon Pfaadt and Ryne Nelson took significant steps forward, setting themselves up nicely for next year. Jordan Montgomery, their last-minute free agent signing, finished with a 6.23 ERA and was demoted to the bullpen. He has a player option for 2025 but Diamondbacks owner Ken Kendrick has said publicly he hopes Montgomery turns it down. Corbin Carroll, the 2023 NL Rookie of the Year, had an inconsistent sophomore season but was much better in the second half than the first. Ketel Marte will finish in the top five, at least, in the NL MVP voting, after a career year. The Diamondbacks also have some key impending free agents, highlighted by first baseman Christian Walker.
3. Texas Rangers
The Rangers’ offense didn’t live up to expectations as Corey Seager was limited to 123 games due to injuries (yet still managed to hit 30 homers) and Adolis García slashed .224/.284/.400 with a 94 OPS+. The biggest disappointments offensively were rookie outfielders Evan Carter and Wyatt Langford who didn’t live up to lofty expectations. Carter was limited to 45 games because of injuries and hit .188 in 144 at-bats. Langford didn’t get going until the second half but showed flashes of his future as he hit 16 homers, drove in 74 runs and stole 19 bases. Nathan Eovaldi was their best starter and the only one with double-digit wins, going 12-8 with a 3.80 ERA. He’s eligible for free agency but would like to return and the feeling is mutual. Jacob deGrom made three starts at the end of the season and looked like he’ll be a comeback player of the year candidate in 2025 if he can stay healthy. Rookie Kumar Rocker made a strong impression in his three September starts and could be the AL’s top rookie pitcher next season if the stars align. The Rangers have some work to do in the offseason to improve their pitching staff and lineup, but the core is there to make a playoff push in 2025.
4. Boston Red Sox
The Red Sox finished the season 81-81 under the leadership of manager Alex Cora, who did what he always does — overachieve. However, his greatest accomplishment this year was the development of Boston’s younger players including outfielders Jarren Duran and Wilyer Abreu, middle infielder/center fielder Ceddanne Rafaela and first baseman Triston Casas. The Red Sox have a plethora of top prospects who will be ready to make their major-league debuts in 2025 including second baseman Kristian Campbell, shortstop Marcelo Mayer, right fielder Roman Anthony and catcher Kyle Teel, all of whom profile as future All-Stars. However, the key to next season will be the pitching staff. To make the playoffs, Boston needs to land two top-of-the-rotation-type starters this winter. This free-agent class will likely include Corbin Burnes, Blake Snell and Max Fried, and if the Red Sox can land at least one of them and then trade for another front-line starter, they’ll be primed for the playoffs a year from now.
5. Cincinnati Reds
The Reds underachieved the most of any team last season, finishing with a 77-85 record despite an expected win-loss record of 82-80. Manager David Bell was axed near the end of the season and replaced by future Hall of Famer Terry Francona, who has won three pennants, two World Series and 1,950 games in his career. It reminded me of the Cubs hiring Joe Maddon and the Rangers hiring Bruce Bochy, two moves that led to World Series titles. The Reds have a strong young rotation led by Hunter Greene, Nick Lodolo, Andrew Abbott and Rhett Lowder. They have young position players with incredible upside, including some who should return from injury-plagued (Matt McLain, Christian Encarnacion-Strand) or suspension-marred (Noelvi Marte) seasons. The Reds will be led by All-Star shortstop Elly De La Cruz, who hit 25 home runs and stole 67 bases, and Spencer Steer, who hit 20 home runs with a team-high 92 RBIs. They need to add another outfield slugger, but it’s clear they have the talent to be next year’s version of the Royals or Tigers.
6. Minnesota Twins
I often say this, but it’s true. The Twins just need to find a way to keep their stars healthy, and if they do, they’ll be back in the playoffs next year. However, it’s disheartening to watch their three best position players — shortstop Carlos Correa, center fielder Byron Buxton and third baseman Royce Lewis — frequent trips to the injured list. (Buxton, at least, topped 100 games for the first time since 2017 and the second time ever in his career.) If Joe Ryan can bounce back from his shoulder injury and Pablo López returns to his 2023 form, the Twins’ rotation should be much better next year. Bailey Ober and Simeon Woods Richardson were two other bright spots in the rotation and the Twins have young starters with potential, but the team needs to acquire another middle-of-the-rotation starter this winter; if they do that and stay healthy, they could make it back to the playoffs.
7. Chicago Cubs
Last offseason, the Cubs front office thought if they hired Craig Counsell away from the Brewers and basically kept the same team together, they could win the NL Central this year. They were wrong. The Cubs did finish the year well, tied for second place with the Cardinals (83-79) and 10 games behind the Brewers. (They were six games out of the last wild-card spot.) Counsell acknowledged at the end of the season that his team “has a long way to go” to match the Brewers. Despite the 10-game margin, I’m not sure I agree that they’re “a long way” behind Milwaukee, but I do believe they’ll need to be active this winter to catch them and fend off the improving Reds, Cardinals and Pirates. The Cubs have a strong rotation that includes Shota Imanaga, Justin Steele, Jameson Taillon and Javier Assad. They need to bolster their bullpen and have work to do in the middle of their lineup to catch up to the Brewers, but a smart offseason could get them much closer than Counsell’s remarks suggest.
8. Tampa Bay Rays
The Rays had their first losing record since 2017, when they also finished 80-82. However, they rebounded to win 90 games in 2018, and I won’t be surprised if history repeats itself in 2025. The key will be getting the rotation healthy and those starters living up to their potential. It is expected to be led by Shane McClanahan followed by Taj Bradley, Shane Baz, Ryan Pepiot, Jeffrey Springs and Zack Littell. It’s a rotation with huge upside. Offensively, they’ll need a group of their young hitters to have breakout seasons including third baseman Junior Caminero, shortstop Carson Williams and outfielder Josh Lowe. The Rays have one of the best front offices in the sport, led by president of baseball operations Erik Neander, and should never be taken lightly.
9. Toronto Blue Jays
The Blue Jays have a formidable rotation led by Kevin Gausman, José Berríos, Chris Bassitt and the emerging Bowden Francis. They also have two stars in their primes in first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and shortstop Bo Bichette. However, they have more questions than answers. They need to retool their bullpen with power arms and depth and must add at least two legitimate bats around Bichette and Guerrero if they want to contend in 2025. They don’t have a strong or deep farm system and will have to be active in both trades and free agency this offseason to be contenders next year. They also need to extend or trade Guerrero and Bichette as both are eligible for free agency after 2025. This is the most important offseason in the career of general manager Ross Atkins and it will be interesting to see what he does this offseason. Will he make short-term moves to win now or punt with a total rebuild? They are on the clock.
10. Pittsburgh Pirates
The Pirates are building a strong young starting rotation with soon-to-be NL Rookie of the Year Paul Skenes, Jared Jones, Mitch Keller and Bubba Chandler. In terms of position players, they have a solid group to build around in center fielder Oneil Cruz, left fielder Bryan Reynolds, shortstop Nick Gonzales and third baseman Ke’Bryan Hayes. They’ll be getting back another key top position player prospect in Endy Rodríguez, who missed all of this year after having elbow surgery last offseason. Some of their young position players will need to make significant improvements next year for the Pirates to make a playoff push, but they have potential.
11. Washington Nationals
The Nationals promoted outfielders James Wood and Dylan Crews this year and next year they will probably promote a few more key prospects, such as third baseman Brady House, outfielder Robert Hassell III and right-hander Cade Cavalli after he finishes his rehab from Tommy John surgery. The Nationals are expected to re-engage in free agency this offseason and will target middle-of-the-order bats. Some executives believe they could make another run at Juan Soto in free agency or target the Orioles’ Anthony Santander. Their rotation is starting to come together with the recent development of MacKenzie Gore, Jake Irvin and Mitchell Parker. The Nationals are making progress and could make some noise earlier than most are expecting.
12. San Francisco Giants
The Giants shook up their front office at the end of the season, firing Farhan Zaidi and hiring three-time World Series champion Buster Posey as president of baseball operations; he plans to hire a GM who will report to him. The Giants will try to retain soon-to-be free agent Blake Snell, which will not be easy considering he’ll be looking for a long-term deal after not getting one last offseason. They have a core of solid starters led by veterans Logan Webb and Robbie Ray to go along with lefty Kyle Harrison and righties Hayden Birdsong and Keaton Winn. They were able to extend third baseman Matt Chapman, which was an important move, but they have a lot of work to do to build the middle of their lineup around him if they want to contend next year.
13. St. Louis Cardinals
The Cardinals announced president of baseball operations John Mozeliak will step down after the 2025 season and be replaced by Chaim Bloom, who will oversee their player development department in the meantime. They won’t re-sign Paul Goldschmidt this offseason and are expected to listen to offers on Nolan Arenado, Sonny Gray, Willson Contreras and other veterans on the roster. The Cardinals are ready to build around a core of young players that includes shortstop Masyn Winn, DH/outfielder Alec Burleson, second baseman Nolan Gorman, center fielder Victor Scott II and corner infielder/outfielder Jordan Walker. They might have to take a step backward in 2025 as they prepare and build for 2026 and beyond.
14. Miami Marlins
After making the playoffs in 2023, the Marlins endured a rough year as practically their entire rotation dealt with season-ending injuries including 2022 Cy Young Award winner Sandy Alcantara and future Cy Young winner Eury Pérez (Tommy John surgeries), Jesús Luzardo (lumbar stress reaction) and Braxton Garrett (forearm flexor strain), not to mention other injuries to their pitchers. The Marlins traded their best position players — Jazz Chisholm Jr. (Yankees) and Luis Arraez (Padres) in separate midseason deals to fortify their farm system. Ultimately, they were among the most active teams at the trade deadline and took advantage of a strong sellers’ market to add loads of young talent. Manager Skip Schumaker left the club after the season and the Marlins have made sweeping changes throughout the organization, including moving on from their entire coaching staff and firing most of their front office. President of baseball operations Peter Bendix is committed to revamping the organization from top to bottom in line with the Tampa Bay Rays model he’s familiar with from working under Erik Neander. The Marlins have a long way to go but appear to be headed in the right direction for the long term.
15. The Athletics
It’s impossible to think about the Athletics’ present and future without the context of their move to Sacramento. It will be weird to not see “Oakland” in their name, as the team will just be known as “The Athletics” for the next several years until its planned first season in Las Vegas in 2028 or 2029. On the field, the A’s made progress in their rebuild this year, with solid seasons from right fielder Lawrence Butler (22 home runs, 18 steals), catcher Shea Langeliers (29 homers and above-average defense) and center fielder JJ Bleday (20 homers, 120 OPS+). Brent Rooker set career-highs with 39 homers and a 165 OPS+ despite dealing with a right forearm injury that required surgery after the season, and the slugger remains under team control for three more years. Rookie Mason Miller developed into one of the game’s best closers and starting pitchers JP Sears (4.38 ERA, 180 2/3 innings) and Osvaldo Bido (3.41 ERA) both logged solid seasons. The A’s also have more future stars in their pipeline including shortstop Jacob Wilson, first baseman Nick Kurtz and right-handed pitcher Luis Morales.
16. Colorado Rockies
The Rockies might have finished last in the NL West again, but several of their young players established themselves this season including shortstop Ezequiel Tovar, who hit 26 homers and played great defense, and center fielder Brenton Doyle, who hit 23 homers and stole 30 bases. They’re hoping outfielder Nolan Jones, who had a disappointing, injury-plagued year, will bounce back and be the player he was in 2023 (.931 OPS, 20 homers, 20 steals). Charlie Blackmon’s retirement will create an opportunity for several of the Rockies’ outfield prospects including Yanquiel Fernandez, Zac Veen and Jordan Beck. They also are excited about second-base prospect Adael Amador and their future right fielder Charlie Condon, the No. 3 pick in this year’s draft, who is a couple of years away. The Rockies’ future looks promising, but to be more competitive next year, the key will be the development of right-handed pitchers Chase Dollander and Gabriel Hughes.
17. Los Angeles Angels
The Angels are optimistic about their young core of position players — which is led by shortstop Zach Neto, catcher Logan O’Hoppe and first baseman Nolan Schanuel — and hope to get a healthy season next year out of Mike Trout, who was limited to 29 games in 2024. They are high on second baseman Christian Moore, whom they took with the eighth overall pick in this year’s draft; there’s a strong possibility he makes it to the big leagues sometime next year. On the pitching side, they got a solid season from lefty Tyler Anderson (3.81 ERA, 179 1/3 innings), but he was the only consistent starter on their staff due to underperformance and injuries. They are also high on rookie starter Caden Dana, who could be key for them next season.
18. Chicago White Sox
The 2024 White Sox were the most embarrassing major-league team I’ve ever seen. They lost a record 121 games. They finished last in the majors in runs scored, with 97 fewer than the 29th-ranked team (Tampa Bay). Their pitching staff finished last in the AL with a 4.67 ERA. Speaking during a game broadcast on NBC Sports Chicago in September, GM Chris Getz indicated the White Sox won’t be heavily involved in free agency. “We’ve got guys out on the field right now who need to improve their game — a lot of these guys are young players and need to make the adjustments to be more productive,” Getz said. If that’s really their game plan, then another 100- to 120-loss season awaits. They don’t have a deep farm system to trade from and will pick 10th in the first round despite their historically bad record because of the new MLB Draft rules in the latest Collective Bargaining Agreement. If they’re not going to be active in free agency and don’t trade their best player assets, outfielder Luis Robert Jr. and left-hander Garrett Crochet, I don’t see much of a path to improve in 2025.
(Top image: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic. Photos: Elly De La Cruz: Michael Reaves / Getty Images; Logan Gilbert: Alika Jenner / Getty Images; Jarren Duran: Cole Burston / Getty Images)
Sports
The State of Punditry – part 2: How the world analyses football – and the U.S. lead the way
Football coverage is a divisive subject.
Some think the standard of punditry is great, others will tell you it needs some work and some will deride it as awful. The analysis of the analysis never ends.
This week, The Athletic is looking more closely at the state of the industry, starting with yesterday’s piece assessing what is demanded of pundits in the United Kingdom in 2024 and how people consume their work.
Today, we broaden the discussion to see how UK coverage stacks up against the rest of the world, including the proudest of all football nations Germany, Brazil and Spain, together with those pesky upstarts in the U.S..
In Europe, the landscape of punditry can be wildly different. Travel to Italy, Spain or Turkey, switch on a television and scan through the channels and you’ll almost certainly be able to find some football coverage, be it via a football talk show, replays of matches, or on the news.
This is the case in the UK, too, via Sky Sports’ network of channels, but we’re talking free-to-air here in countries where people are arguably far more obsessed with football than your average UK football diehard.
It borders on fanaticism in a place like Turkey and the at-times frantic coverage reflects that. One grim incident recently showcased how seriously football is taken, when pundit Serhat Akin was shot in the foot when leaving a TV studio.
The former Fenerbahce player had been covering the club’s match against Belgian side Union Saint-Gilloise from an Istanbul studio, after which he was approached and shot by a masked man.
Akin posted a picture of his bloodied foot on Instagram with the caption: “They shot my foot, our last word is Fenerbahce.”
Over in Germany things are a bit calmer.
In many ways the coverage is very similar to in the UK, only probably a bit better. Standard Bundesliga behaviour.
Why? Well, depending on your disposition, they don’t quite have as much forced melodrama that you tend to find with the Premier League.
The punditry industry is not quite as accessible for ex-players, so the notion of former pros that you’d get on, say, a certain national radio station in the UK where certain people will make certain comments to attract attention doesn’t really exist.
Presenters, again, unlike in the UK with Gary Lineker, Alex Scott, or, until recently, Jermaine Jenas, are media professionals rather than players. Pundits include Per Mertesacker and Christoph Kramer, the 2014 World Cup winner who has been an analyst for many years already despite being only 33 years old and still not officially retired (he left Borussia Mönchengladbach in the summer).
They have a tactics corner on Sky via Dutchman Erik Meijer, the one-time Liverpool striker who spent much of his career in Germany. In a recent interview with The Athletic, Meijer described his reaction to being asked to appear on German television: “The first question I had was, ‘There are 80 million Germans in this country so why do they need to employ a Dutchman? But they wanted a different voice — someone who would say that Bayern Munich were c**p when they were.”
Julia Simic, who used to play for the women’s national team, is also a regular, while pundits who cover the Premier League include former goalkeeper Rene Adler and ex-Croatia international and Fulham and West Ham striker Mladen Petric.
While Germans do like other sports, such as basketball, handball and tennis, football is the main draw and the coverage can be dense and fanatical, although it tends to be quite considered and mindful of weighty issues. The rise of vloggers and influencers we have seen in the UK hasn’t yet caught on.
Probably the most high profile figure is Wolff Fuss, inflection king extraordinaire. Search for him on TikTok and you’ll find 20 million matches. Fuss has the stage to himself because, in another difference to the UK, co-commentators are quite uncommon in Germany.
If Fuss is the main man, then Lothar Matthaus is the loudest. Not necessarily in volume, but in the decibel level of his opinions (and his outfits… Matthaus caught the eye at this summer’s European Championship with some striking gilets).
Matthaus could probably be compared to Gary Neville or Jamie Carragher in that he gives forthright views on “his” club, which in this case would be Bayern Munich. Neville and Carragher constantly attract the attention of Manchester United and Liverpool managers with their views but Matthaus — and his partner-in-crime, Dietmar Hamann — tend to take it a bit further.
In the past year alone, Matthaus has called for Thomas Tuchel to be sacked, questioned the signing of Eric Dier, claimed Jadon Sancho’s influence at Borussia Dortmund had been exaggerated by the media and said he “felt sorry” for Cristiano Ronaldo whose “ego trips” had “damaged the team and himself”.
Last November, Tuchel referenced Matthaus and Hamann in a press conference after a 4-0 victory over Borussia Dortmund, saying: “Can I quote Lothar and Didi? For a team with no further development and a bad relationship between coach and players, that was alright today, I’d say. I’m sure the experts will tell you the rest themselves.” Nice.
Matthaus is probably still tame compared to Rafael van der Vaart, who, since retiring, has very much earned a reputation for making unfiltered and inflammatory comments in his role as a pundit in the Netherlands.
You may recall Van der Vaart had a pop at England’s Declan Rice after the Euro 2024 final on the coverage of Dutch broadcaster NOS, saying: “£100million for Declan Rice, what does he do? He comes to collect a ball only to pass it back to John Stones. He is useless. If you are truly worth £100m then you should be able to play a ball forward.”
This was very much in character for Van der Vaart, whose appreciation for the England team seems to be somewhat lacking given he also decried the whole side as “s***”, also on NOS, after they defeated the Netherlands 2-1 in the semi-finals.
Over in Spain, you may be most familiar with Spanish football TV punditry from clips of El Chiringuito de Jugones, a late-night debate show in which a cast of big personalities voice their opinions — usually quite loudly and with little sense of impartiality.
🔥 “RAMOS, TE QUIERO. ERES MI CAPITÁN” 🔥
⚪️‼️”¡¡FIRMA y QUÉDATE en el REAL MADRID!!”‼️⚪️
🤍💜 El discurso de @As_TomasRoncero que convencerá a @SergioRamos. #ElChiringuitoDeMega pic.twitter.com/SVdRd0HPcS
— El Chiringuito TV (@elchiringuitotv) May 9, 2021
In recent years the programme has gained notoriety for interviewing Real Madrid president Florentino Perez after the attempted launch of the European Super League, using the phrase “tic tac” to announce incoming transfer news (imitating the ticking of a clock) and showing three minutes of former Madrid midfielder Guti looking sad after his old side’s 4-0 Champions League defeat by Manchester City last year.
You will find a more sophisticated level of discussion on TV channel Movistar Plus and streaming platform DAZN. The former features former Madrid and Argentina player turned pundit Jorge Valdano while presenter Miguel Quintana and former Equatorial Guinea international Alberto Edjogo-Owono, who spent his career in the Spanish lower leagues, are two respected voices on DAZN.
But the way fandom works in Spain — in particular with the big two clubs, Barcelona and Madrid — means those pundits are often labelled the enemy of one or other team, despite trying to be impartial.
In Spain, there is also a deeper layer of scrutiny towards refereeing and why decisions do or do not happen (possibly linked to the above). There is no equivalent of Match of the Day, perhaps because there is not much interest in analysing games like Osasuna versus Getafe from a tactical perspective. And the tactical insight mainly comes from social media rather than mass media.
As for other prominent pundits, Guti has made a name for himself on DAZN, while Gaizka Mendieta and Juanfran Torres are also regulars on television.
Often more in-depth analysis can be found on late-night radio shows such as El Larguero on Cadena SER or Cadena COPE’s El Partidazo — both of which go on until the early hours and continue to attract huge audiences, as The Athletic’s Laia Cervello Herrero explored earlier this year. Even then, debates can get heated given the nature of football in Spain.
You might think the tone would be fairly outrageous in a football-mad country like Brazil, but while passions undoubtedly run extremely high and some coverage can be melodramatic, there is also room for reasoned debate.
The biggest difference in Brazil is the volume of the commentators, who are the stars of the show.
“The commentator really goes for it,” Natalie Gedra, a football reporter for Sky Sports in the UK who previously worked for ESPN and Globo in Brazil, tells The Athletic. “Brazilians cannot understand countries who don’t scream ‘GOOOOOOAAAAAAL!’ There’s also a tune that comes with it, either the club’s anthem or a song that’s related to the national team.
“Visually it’s different too — for example, you will have a gigantic ball going back and forth on the screen between transitions of replays. I remember watching World Cups growing up and they had a little mascot who would show up on the screen and dance around.”
Having ex-referees as pundits, for example, has been a well-established practice in Brazil for at least a decade, formerly in the commentary box but now more as studio analysts. Oh, and the studios are always at TV HQ, not on site at stadiums.
Talking of the commentary box, it’s typically filled with three people – a commentator, i.e. the star, a journalist and a former player.
“They have more ex-players now, but a lot of journalists are co-commentators or pundits on both pre and post-match shows,” Gedra adds. “Everyone knows the commentator; they’re massive stars.”
Reflecting how their best players tend to head to Europe, Brazil’s most famous ex-players aren’t really part of the TV coverage over there, other than for World Cups. Ronaldo worked on the 2014 World Cup and, most famously, Pele was a commentator for the 1994 World Cup.
“There are some ex-players, like, for example (Walter) Casagrande, who played for Corinthians. He was the most prominent for many years,” Gedra says. “He was a bit of a pioneer, he had a big profile and didn’t back down from making big statements, but he was also very articulate.
“The main Brazilian football names don’t become pundits in Brazil, but Pele in 1994 is by far the most famous example. There is a picture of him celebrating in the commentary booth with commentator Galvao Bueno which is one of the most iconic images in the history of Brazilian television.
Meu amigo Édson se foi!!
Que tristeza! Mas Pelé, não!!
Pelé é eterno!! Rei Pelé!!
Primeiro e único!! pic.twitter.com/AA56oWRdlZ— Galvão Bueno (@galvaobueno) December 29, 2022
“Galvao Bueno is probably the biggest name in the history of Brazilian TV, he’s absolutely huge and the voice of many of the biggest sporting moments, like all the World Cups. Yes, people love or hate him but everybody knows who he is.”
Commentators in the UK don’t have anywhere near as big a profile. No wonder Guy Mowbray has started doing Gladiators.
Another difference is in the make-up of the post-match chat. Gedra has observed that Brazil’s coverage is less data-orientated than in the UK, although the tone depends on the channel. Globo, the free-to-air channel, have largely monopolised coverage but they are now under threat from newer players such as Sport TV, ESPN and TNT Sports. YouTube channels are also growing.
“I worked for ESPN and I think they got the tone just right, very analytical and not too spectacular or passionate,” Gedra says.
Unspectacular is definitely not a word you would use to describe the stylings of Alexi Lalas, one of the most prominent broadcasters in the U.S., whose brash persona brings a love-it-or-hate-it quality.
He works as an analyst for Fox Sports, has a podcast called Alexi Lalas’ State of the Union and doesn’t care if people like him or not. But his bold, direct and outspoken opinions have made him an influential figure in the U.S. and beyond.
Lalas is another who doesn’t seem to especially like English players, saying during the Euros that Gareth Southgate’s team were “insufferable as they are talented”.
“But I’m in the entertainment business,” Lalas told The Athletic earlier this year. “I am a performer. When you say that, sometimes people cringe. By no means am I saying that I can’t be authentic and genuine. But I recognise the way I say something is as important as what I say.
“When I go on TV, I put on a costume and when that red light goes on, I don’t want people changing the channel.”
Lalas’ audacious approach is a bit of a leap from the English-style NBC coverage that rose to prominence a few years ago. A number of ex-Premier League players headed Stateside and made names for themselves, such as Robbie Earle and Robbie Mustoe — while having decent careers in England, neither was a household name when playing for Wimbledon and Middlesbrough respectively.
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Access all areas at NBC: Three Premier League games, a Winnebago and tactical sushi
The pair, who have their own podcast called The 2 Robbies, gave NBC’s coverage a familiar feel alongside commentator Arlo White and pundit Lee Dixon, while former Stoke City defender Danny Higginbotham is another face of the channel having moved Stateside. “What we’ve tried to do from the start is talk in a normal way about football,” Earle told The Guardian in 2017. An underrated concept.
Fox Sports also employ recognisable names from UK TV coverage including commentator (sorry, ‘play-by-play announcer’) Ian Darke, former Newcastle defender Warren Barton and ex-Sky Sports reporter Geoff Shreeves. Fox also use Mark Clattenburg as a refereeing analyst.
Undoubtedly the most renowned U.S. soccer coverage, though, is on CBS Sports via its hugely popular Golazo Champions League show, complete with the instantly recognisable line-up of Kate Abdo, Thierry Henry, Micah Richards and Jamie Carragher, whose on-screen chemistry make them a social media staple on every matchday.
Pete Radovich, the coordinating producer of the UEFA Champions League coverage on CBS Sports, told The Athletic in September on how he came to realise that the network’s Champions League Today studio now owns the global conversation on major nights of European football.
“Thierry Henry, in no uncertain terms, says he gets asked more about CBS now than Arsenal,” he said. “That to me is wild.”
The show’s razor-sharp use of social media and its mix of humour, analysis and engaging post-match interviews with managers and players is a winning formula, while most importantly the quartet’s camaraderie feels natural, warm and unforced.
Americans showing the world how to make excellent football soccer coverage? It’s a brave new world.
(Top photos: Getty Images; design: Dan Goldfarb)
Sports
Former NCAA swimmer Riley Gaines calls out ‘deranged’ co-hosts of ‘The View’ over Capitol Hill bathroom ban
Former University of Kentucky swimmer Riley Gaines blasted the co-hosts of “The View” on Wednesday, calling them “deranged” and “out of touch” after they spoke out in defense of Delaware Rep.-elect Sarah McBride over a resolution that would ban transgender women from using women’s restrooms at the U.S. Capitol.
Gaines, a 12-time NCAA All-American swimmer who has publicly spoken out against trans inclusion in women’s and girls sports and advocated for protecting women’s spaces, posted a message on X calling out the group for speaking out on an issue that does not directly impact them.
“I wonder if the deranged, out-of-touch women on The View would be comfortable letting Mr. McBride change in a locker room inches away from their own daughters,” she wrote in a post on X which accompanied a clip of the show.
“It never matters until it affects you personally.”
Gaines competed against former UPenn swimmer Lia Thomas, a transgender athlete, at the NCAA championships in 2022, where she said the NCAA had opted to give Thomas the fifth-place trophy for the “photo op” despite them tying in the women’s 200 freestyle.
Thomas would go on to win a national title in the women’s 500 freestyle.
Gaines was responding to a segment of Tuesday’s episode of “The View” where the co-hosts reacted to a resolution by Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., to ban transgender women from using women’s restrooms at the U.S. Capitol in response to McBride, the first openly transgender federal lawmaker set to join Congress in January.
RILEY GAINES REPEATEDLY TEARS INTO AOC FOR TAKING PRONOUNS OUT OF X BIO AFTER ADVOCATING FOR TRANS ATHLETES
“I don’t understand how this is [Mace’s] welcome to someone who is coming to make a difference in the country,” Whoopi Goldberg said.
“It’s not a welcome, it’s flipping her the middle finger. Because she is the one person in the House that this will affect,” Sara Haines responded, adding, “And this woman that came and sat at our table is one of the most decent, amazing politicians I’ve ever seen. Her messaging resounded across the boards.”
Alyssa Farah Griffin chimed in, calling the attempt to ban McBride “gross.”
“It is a new member of Congress, who ran as a centrist democrat, talked about issues – pocketbook issues. She said at our table ‘I am not a spokesperson for my community. I’m running to deliver for Delaware.’ And Nancy Mace is trying to goad her into a fight she did not sign up to be part of. She’s trying to pigeonhole her into ‘You have to be this culture warrior, who makes this your whole identity’ purely because Nancy Mace doesn’t like how she chooses to exist.”
Gaines said in a separate post on X Wednesday that she would be “happy” to join “The View” for a conversation after disagreeing with Goldberg’s numbers regarding trans athletes competing in public schools.
Fox News’ Liz Elkind contributed to this report.
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Sports
Freddie Freeman grand slam ball to be auctioned. Could bring 'life-changing money' for Venice family
The past few weeks have been a whirlwind for Zachary Ruderman.
He’s the 10-year-old Dodgers fan who ended up with one of the most significant baseballs in team history — the one his favorite player, first baseman Freddie Freeman, hit for a walk-off grand slam during the 10th inning in Game 1 of the 2024 World Series against the New York Yankees.
Since then, Zachary has seemingly become one of the most famous people living in Venice.
“It’s a lot more attention than my son has ever had,” his father, Nico Ruderman, said. “He’s spoken to so many media outlets, so many interviews. People recognize him. I mean, literally everywhere we go people stop him and want to take pictures with him. He’s really actually been loving it. It’s been a fun experience for him.”
That experience is entering a new phase. On Wednesday, SCP Auctions announced the ball will be up for bid from Dec. 4-14. Coming just weeks after the Dodgers won their eighth World Series championship — with Freeman hitting four home runs and winning MVP honors, all on a badly sprained ankle — SCP founder and president David Kohler said his company thinks “the sky’s the limit” for what the auction could bring.
“We think this is gonna bring seven figures,” Kohler said. “We think it’s one of the most historic baseballs ever, with the moment of this World Series, the first walk-off grand slam, the whole story of Freddie Freeman, the Dodgers, Game 1, extra innings. Just everything about it. I mean, it’s one of the most historic moments in sports and we feel that people are going to appreciate that.”
Last month, Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani’s 50th home run ball was sold by Goldin Auctions for a record $4.4 million. Could the Freeman ball be worth even more than that?
“It could be. You never know,” Kohler said. “We’re gonna find out. Certainly the Ohtani ball was very, very significant and Ohtani is beloved, but this is more of the history of the game of baseball and just the moment — seeing that happen was just incredible.”
Zachary, along with his father and mother Anne, were part of that moment. After Freeman blasted his game-winning shot into the right-field pavilion, the ball rolled next to Zachary’s feet. The fifth-grader batted it over to his father, who pounced on it, stood up and handed it back to his son.
“They’re just amazing memories,” Zachary said Thursday, looking back on that night. “Like after we got it, no one was mad. No one was trying to take it from us. Everyone was just super happy.”
His father added: “We just feel so lucky and honored to be a small part of such a huge moment in Dodger history.”
The experience was so special that at first the family had no intention of parting with the ball.
“That night when we caught it we were like, ‘We’re gonna keep this forever,’” Ruderman said. “The problem is, if we keep it, we’re not gonna keep it in our house. I don’t want to pay for the insurance for it, so it would just be locked up in some safety deposit box. Nobody would ever see it.
“Maybe [the auction] brings life-changing money and pays for education for our son, and also allows somebody with the resources to actually display it and show it to the world. We’re really hoping that whoever buys it agrees to display it at Dodger Stadium for some time so everybody can see it. That’s really our wish.”
Even with all the incredible experiences he’s had because of the ball — including his favorite, speaking in front of Los Angeles City Council at City Hall and receiving a certificate of congratulations from Councilmember Traci Park earlier this month — Zachary said he’s “really excited” about the auction.
“It’s probably going to be a pretty fun experience,” Zachary said.
“We’ve had our fun with the ball,” his father added. “At this point he cares more about the memories, the pictures. He loves reading all the articles and watching all the news stories about it. That’s what’s fun for him, not the item itself.”
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