Major League Baseball on Fox Family | |
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Also known as | Fox Family Baseball Fox Family Baseball Thursday ESPN Division Series |
Genre | Major League Baseball game telecasts |
Directed by | Doug Freeman Dave Hagen Jim Lynch Larry Meyers Jeff Mitchell |
Starring | Kenny Albert (2001) Rod Allen (2001) Chris Berman (2002) Thom Brennaman (2001) Joe Buck (2001) Tony Gwynn (2002) Rex Hudler (2001) Josh Lewin (2001) Tim McCarver [1] (2001) Jon Miller [2] (2002) Joe Morgan [3] (2002) Dave O'Brien (2002) Rick Sutcliffe (2002) |
Theme music composer | NJJ Music |
Opening theme | "MLB on Fox theme music" |
Composer | NJJ Music |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
Production | |
Producers | Jeff Gowan Pete Macheska Jerry Weinstein Jim Zrake Glenn Diamond |
Production locations | Various Major League Baseball stadiums |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 180 minutes or until game ended |
Production companies | Fox Sports ESPN |
Original release | |
Network | Fox Family [4] (2001) ABC Family (2002) |
Release | April 5, 2001[5] – October 6, 2002 |
Related | |
MLB on Fox Thursday Night Baseball MLB on ESPN |
Major League Baseball (MLB) games aired on the predecessor networks for the American pay television channel Freeform. These began in 2000, when the channel was known as Fox Family Channel, co-owned by News Corporation and Haim Saban, as a replacement for Thursday night games that had aired on Fox Sports Net in prior seasons. The package also included some games in the postseason Division Series. After The Walt Disney Company bought the channel in 2001, renaming it to ABC Family, the games were moved to the Disney-owned ESPN channels, although the 2002 Division Series games that had been acquired as part of the purchase remained on ABC Family because of existing contractual obligations. Those games moved to ESPN the following year as well.
In 1997, as part of its contract with Major League Baseball, Fox Sports began to show games on its national network of regional sports networks, Fox Sports Net (FSN), which was given rights to two Thursday night games per week, one for the Eastern and Central time zones and one for the Mountain and Pacific time zones, though these games were often preempted in markets where they conflicted with the FSN affiliate's coverage of a local team.
In 2000, the former FSN coverage passed to Fox Family Channel on an alternating basis with then-sister network FX and was reduced to one game per week. [6] [7]
Starting with the 2001 season, Fox Family also carried games from the Division Series that did not air on the Fox broadcast network. [8] [9] [10] Among the games that aired on Fox Family included one between the San Francisco Giants and the Houston Astros on October 4, 2001, in which Barry Bonds hit his 70th home run of the season, tying the all-time single season record that Mark McGwire had set only three years earlier. [11]
Play-by-play announcers for the FSN/Fox Family coverage included Kenny Albert, [12] Thom Brennaman, Chip Caray, Josh Lewin, [13] and Steve Physioc. Color analysts included Bob Brenly, Kevin Kennedy, Steve Lyons, [14] and Jeff Torborg. [15]
Other commentators included:
After Disney bought Fox Family in 2001 and renamed it ABC Family, [21] the Thursday games were folded into the ESPN Major League Baseball rights package (and subsequently shifted to weekday afternoon "DayGame" broadcasts). However, the Division Series games aired on ABC Family (with ESPN's announcers, graphics, and music) for 2002 because of inherited contractual obligations. [22] [23] [24] The only usage of the ABC Family "bug" was for a ten-second period when returning from a commercial break in the lower right corner of the screen. [25] The following year, the Division Series games also shifted to ESPN.
Game 2 (played on October 2) of the Minnesota–Oakland playoff series in 2002 started on ESPN2 because the San Francisco–Atlanta game (which started at 1 p.m. Eastern Time) ran over the three-hour time window. The game was eventually switched back to ABC Family once the early game ended. [26]