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Sports season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 2023 Major League Baseball season (MLB) began on March 30.[1] The 93rd All-Star Game was played on July 11, hosted by the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park in Seattle, Washington, with the National League winning, 3–2.[2] The regular season ended on October 1, and the postseason began on October 3, and ended with Game 5 of the World Series on November 1. This season saw the introduction of several rule changes: in an effort to create a quicker pace of play, a pitch clock was introduced along with other minor changes, while limits on defensive shifts and larger bases were also introduced.
2023 MLB season | |
---|---|
League | Major League Baseball |
Sport | Baseball |
Duration | March 30 – November 1, 2023 |
Number of games | 162 |
Number of teams | 30 |
TV partner(s) | Fox/FS1 TBS ESPN/ABC MLB Network |
Streaming partner(s) | MLB.tv Apple TV+ Peacock Max (Postseason only) |
Draft | |
Top draft pick | Paul Skenes |
Picked by | Pittsburgh Pirates |
Regular season | |
Season MVP | NL: Ronald Acuña Jr. (ATL) AL: Shohei Ohtani (LAA) |
Postseason | |
AL champions | Texas Rangers |
AL runners-up | Houston Astros |
NL champions | Arizona Diamondbacks |
NL runners-up | Philadelphia Phillies |
World Series | |
Champions | Texas Rangers |
Runners-up | Arizona Diamondbacks |
World Series MVP | Corey Seager (TEX) |
On August 24, 2022, Major League Baseball released its 2023 schedule. There were 162 games scheduled for all teams. This season was the first MLB season of a new balanced schedule in which every team played each other at least once, similar to the NBA and NHL. The new balanced schedule included 13 games against their division rivals, totaling 52 games. Each team played six games against six opponents and seven games against four opponents in the same league for a total of 64 games. Each team also played 46 interleague games, including a four-game home-and-home series against their designated interleague rival.[3]
As part of the "MLB World Tour", the San Francisco Giants and the San Diego Padres played a two-game series at Alfredo Harp Helú Stadium in Mexico City on April 29–30, while the St. Louis Cardinals and the Chicago Cubs played a two-game series at London Stadium in London on June 24–25. The 93rd All-Star Game was played on July 11, hosted by the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park in Seattle.[3] The MLB Little League Classic featured the Philadelphia Phillies against the Washington Nationals on August 20. The Nationals won the game 4–3.[4]
Opening Day, March 30, featured all thirty teams, the first time since 1968 that every team has started their season on the same day.
The MLB at Field of Dreams game was not held in 2023 due to the construction of a new youth baseball and softball complex at the Field of Dreams site near Dyersville, Iowa.[5]
On September 8, 2022, MLB announced a set of rules changes that would take effect in 2023.[6]
Further changes were announced on February 13:[7]
Spring training for the 2023 season began in late February and lasted through March. Teams began workouts and practice for spring training beginning in late February. Pitchers and catchers reported first, followed by position players a few days later.[8]
Prior to the start of the regular season, each team played between 27 and 33 spring training games, beginning on February 24. There were several times during spring training where a team had two different squads playing different teams simultaneously. In addition to spring training games, teams occasionally played exhibition games with non-MLB teams, such as Minor League Baseball teams, independent teams, or college teams. These exhibition games were not counted in spring training standings. Spring training ended on March 28, two days before the Opening Day.
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(1) Baltimore Orioles | 101 | 61 | .623 | — | 49–32 | 52–29 |
(4) Tampa Bay Rays | 99 | 63 | .611 | 2 | 53–28 | 46–35 |
(6) Toronto Blue Jays | 89 | 73 | .549 | 12 | 43–38 | 46–35 |
New York Yankees | 82 | 80 | .506 | 19 | 42–39 | 40–41 |
Boston Red Sox | 78 | 84 | .481 | 23 | 39–42 | 39–42 |
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(3) Minnesota Twins | 87 | 75 | .537 | — | 47–34 | 40–41 |
Detroit Tigers | 78 | 84 | .481 | 9 | 37–44 | 41–40 |
Cleveland Guardians | 76 | 86 | .469 | 11 | 42–39 | 34–47 |
Chicago White Sox | 61 | 101 | .377 | 26 | 31–50 | 30–51 |
Kansas City Royals | 56 | 106 | .346 | 31 | 33–48 | 23–58 |
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(2) Houston Astros | 90 | 72 | .556 | — | 39–42 | 51–30 |
(5) Texas Rangers | 90 | 72 | .556 | — | 50–31 | 40–41 |
Seattle Mariners | 88 | 74 | .543 | 2 | 45–36 | 43–38 |
Los Angeles Angels | 73 | 89 | .451 | 17 | 38–43 | 35–46 |
Oakland Athletics | 50 | 112 | .309 | 40 | 26–55 | 24–57 |
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(1) Atlanta Braves | 104 | 58 | .642 | — | 52–29 | 52–29 |
(4) Philadelphia Phillies | 90 | 72 | .556 | 14 | 49–32 | 41–40 |
(5) Miami Marlins | 84 | 78 | .519 | 20 | 46–35 | 38–43 |
New York Mets | 75 | 87 | .463 | 29 | 43–38 | 32–49 |
Washington Nationals | 71 | 91 | .438 | 33 | 34–47 | 37–44 |
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(3) Milwaukee Brewers | 92 | 70 | .568 | — | 49–32 | 43–38 |
Chicago Cubs | 83 | 79 | .512 | 9 | 45–36 | 38–43 |
Cincinnati Reds | 82 | 80 | .506 | 10 | 38–43 | 44–37 |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 76 | 86 | .469 | 16 | 39–42 | 37–44 |
St. Louis Cardinals | 71 | 91 | .438 | 21 | 35–46 | 36–45 |
Team | W | L | Pct. | GB | Home | Road |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(2) Los Angeles Dodgers | 100 | 62 | .617 | — | 53–28 | 47–34 |
(6) Arizona Diamondbacks | 84 | 78 | .519 | 16 | 43–38 | 41–40 |
San Diego Padres | 82 | 80 | .506 | 18 | 44–37 | 38–43 |
San Francisco Giants | 79 | 83 | .488 | 21 | 45–36 | 34–47 |
Colorado Rockies | 59 | 103 | .364 | 41 | 37–44 | 22–59 |
The Postseason began on October 3 and ended with Game 5 on November 1.[9]
Wild Card Series (ALWCS, NLWCS) | Division Series (ALDS, NLDS) | Championship Series (ALCS, NLCS) | World Series | ||||||||||||||||
1 | Baltimore | 0 | |||||||||||||||||
4 | Tampa Bay | 0 | 5 | Texas | 3 | ||||||||||||||
5 | Texas | 2 | American League | 5 | Texas | 4 | |||||||||||||
2 | Houston | 3 | |||||||||||||||||
2 | Houston | 3 | |||||||||||||||||
3 | Minnesota | 2 | 3 | Minnesota | 1 | ||||||||||||||
6 | Toronto | 0 | AL5 | Texas | 4 | ||||||||||||||
NL6 | Arizona | 1 | |||||||||||||||||
1 | Atlanta | 1 | |||||||||||||||||
4 | Philadelphia | 2 | 4 | Philadelphia | 3 | ||||||||||||||
5 | Miami | 0 | National League | 4 | Philadelphia | 3 | |||||||||||||
6 | Arizona | 4 | |||||||||||||||||
2 | LA Dodgers | 0 | |||||||||||||||||
3 | Milwaukee | 0 | 6 | Arizona | 3 | ||||||||||||||
6 | Arizona | 2 |
Team | Former GM | Reason For Leaving | New GM | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Detroit Tigers | Al Avila | Fired | Jeff Greenberg | On August 10, 2022, Avila was fired after a seven-year tenure as the general manager of the team. Sam Menzin was named interim general manager. On September 21, 2023, Greenberg was named the new GM of the Tigers.[10] |
San Francisco Giants | Scott Harris | Hired by the Detroit Tigers | Pete Putila | Harris left the Giants for the president of baseball operations role in the Tigers organization. On October 10, 2022, Houston Astros assistant general manager Pete Putila was named the new general manager of the Giants.[11] |
Seattle Mariners | Jerry Dipoto | Promoted to director of operations and front office | Justin Hollander | Dipoto resigned from his general manager role and was promoted to the director of operations and the front office. On October 2, 2022, assistant general manager Justin Hollander was named the new general manager of the team.[12] |
Houston Astros | James Click | Contract expired | Dana Brown | On November 11, 2022, the team announced that Click will not be retained. On January 26, 2023, Dana Brown was named the new general manager of the Astros.[13] |
Team | Former GM | Reason For Leaving | New GM | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chicago White Sox | Rick Hahn | Fired | Chris Getz | On August 22, Hahn and executive vice president Kenny Williams were fired. Hahn and Williams had held their respective titles since 2012.[14] On August 31, White Sox assistant general manager Chris Getz was promoted to general manager and senior vice president.[15] |
Team | Former Manager | Interim Manager | Reason For Leaving | New Manager | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Philadelphia Phillies | Joe Girardi | Rob Thomson | Fired | Rob Thomson | On June 3, 2022, the Phillies fired Girardi. In two-plus seasons as manager of the Phillies, he compiled a record of 132–141 (.484) with no playoff appearances. Thomson, the bench coach, was named interim manager on June 3. This is his first managerial position.[16]
On October 10, the team announced that they had signed Thomson as manager through the 2024 season after he guided the team to the 2022 World Series in the team's first postseason appearance since 2011.[17] |
Los Angeles Angels | Joe Maddon | Phil Nevin | Phil Nevin | On June 7, 2022, the Angels fired Maddon. In two-plus seasons with the Angels, he compiled a record of 130–148 (.468) with no playoff appearances. Nevin, the third-base coach, was named the interim manager on June 7.[18] This is his first managerial position.
On October 5, the Angels announced Nevin would be retained as manager for the 2023 season.[19] | |
Toronto Blue Jays | Charlie Montoyo | John Schneider | John Schneider | On July 13, 2022, after losing 10 of their last 13 games, the Blue Jays fired Montoyo. In four-plus seasons with the Blue Jays, he compiled a record of 236–236 (.500) with one wild card playoff appearance in 2020, losing in the Wild Card Series.
Schneider, the bench coach, was named the interim manager on July 13. This is his first managerial position.[20] On October 21, Schneider got the permanent job, and he was signed to a three-year deal.[21] | |
Texas Rangers | Chris Woodward | Tony Beasley | Bruce Bochy | On August 15, 2022, the Rangers fired Woodward. In three-plus seasons with the Rangers, he compiled a record of 211–287 (.424) with no playoff appearances and no winning records. Beasley, the third-base coach, was appointed the interim manager on the same day. This is his first managerial position.[22]
On October 21, the Rangers announced Bruce Bochy as the 20th manager in franchise history, signing a three-year deal. In 25 seasons as the manager of the San Diego Padres (1995–2006), and San Francisco Giants (2007–2019), Bochy compiled a 2003–2029 (.497) record with six division titles, eight playoff appearances, and a playoff record of 44–33 (.571), winning three World Series championships with the Giants.[23] | |
Miami Marlins | Don Mattingly | None | Contract expired | Skip Schumaker | On September 25, 2022, the Marlins announced that Mattingly will not return to manage the team in 2023 after seven seasons with the team and only one playoff appearance in 2020.[24]
On October 25, St. Louis Cardinals bench coach and former Major League Baseball player Skip Schumaker was named the new manager of the team.[25] This is his first managerial position. |
Chicago White Sox | Tony La Russa | Miguel Cairo | Retired | Pedro Grifol | On October 2, 2022, the White Sox announced that La Russa would retire because of health issues. He guided them to the 2021 AL Central Division title, making his only postseason appearance with the team in his second stint.[26]
Grifol was hired on November 1. Previously an assistant coach for the Kansas City Royals, this is his first managerial position.[27] |
Kansas City Royals | Mike Matheny | None | Fired | Matt Quatraro | On October 5, 2022, hours after the season ended, the Royals announced that Matheny would not return to the team for a fourth season after three years with the team and no playoff appearances.[28] Matheny ended his three-year tenure with a record of 165–219 (.430).
On October 30, Tampa Bay Rays bench coach Matt Quatraro was named the new manager of the team.[29] This is his first managerial position. |
Team | Former manager | Interim manager | Reason for leaving | New manager | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
San Francisco Giants | Gabe Kapler | Kai Correa | Fired | Bob Melvin | On September 29, the Giants fired Kapler. In four seasons as manager of the Giants, he compiled a record of 295–248 (.543) with one playoff appearance in 2021.
Correa, the bench coach, was named interim manager on September 29 for the remainder of the season. This is his first managerial position.[30] Melvin was hired on October 25. This will be his fifth managerial position, previously managing in Seattle, Arizona, Oakland, and San Diego, compiling a lifetime managerial record of 1,517–1,425 (.516).[31] |
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Players are selected through fan votes (50%) and votes from a panel of experts (50%). The winners is selected based on merit, with no set number of nominees per position and no distinction between leagues.
All-MLB Team[134] | ||
---|---|---|
Position | First Team | Second Team |
Starting pitcher | Gerrit Cole (NYY) | Kyle Bradish (BAL) |
Zac Gallen (ARI) | Nathan Eovaldi (TEX) | |
Shohei Ohtani (LAA) | Sonny Gray (MIN) | |
Blake Snell (SD) | Kevin Gausman (TOR) | |
Spencer Strider (ATL) | Jordan Montgomery (TEX) | |
Relief pitcher | Félix Bautista (BAL) | Emmanuel Clase (CLE) |
Josh Hader (SD) | Devin Williams (MIL) | |
Designated hitter | Shohei Ohtani (LAA) | Yordan Álvarez (HOU) |
Catcher | Adley Rutschman (BAL) | Jonah Heim (TEX) |
1st Base | Freddie Freeman (LAD) | Matt Olson (ATL) |
2nd Base | Marcus Semien (TEX) | Ozzie Albies (ATL) |
3rd Base | Austin Riley (ATL) | José Ramírez (CLE) |
Shortstop | Corey Seager (TEX) | Francisco Lindor (NYM) |
Outfield | Ronald Acuña Jr. (ATL) | Adolis García (TEX) |
Mookie Betts (LAD) | Aaron Judge (NYY) | |
Corbin Carroll (ARI) | Kyle Tucker (HOU) |
Fielding Bible Awards[141] | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Position | Player | |||||||
Pitcher | Zack Greinke (KC) | |||||||
Catcher | Gabriel Moreno (ARI) | |||||||
1st Base | Christian Walker (ARI) | |||||||
2nd Base | Andrés Giménez (CLE) | |||||||
3rd Base | Ke'Bryan Hayes (PIT) | |||||||
Shortstop | Dansby Swanson (CHC) | |||||||
Left Field | Steven Kwan (CLE) | |||||||
Center Field | Kevin Kiermaier (TOR) | |||||||
Right Field | Fernando Tatís Jr. (SD) | |||||||
Multi-position | Mookie Betts (LAD) |
Player of the Month
|
Rookie of the Month
|
Pitcher of the Month
|
Reliever of the Month
|
Team name | Wins | %± | Home attendance | %± | Per game | Est. payroll | %± |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Los Angeles Dodgers[142] | 100 | -9.9% | 3,837,079 | -0.6% | 47,371 | $227,091,667 | -13.1% |
San Diego Padres[143] | 82 | -7.9% | 3,271,554 | 9.5% | 40,390 | $236,200,139 | 36.1% |
New York Yankees[144] | 82 | -17.2% | 3,269,016 | 4.2% | 40,358 | $259,417,008 | 8.6% |
St. Louis Cardinals[145] | 71 | -23.7% | 3,241,091 | -2.4% | 40,013 | $174,086,450 | 11.0% |
Atlanta Braves[146] | 104 | 3.0% | 3,191,505 | 2.0% | 39,401 | $194,197,500 | 7.2% |
Philadelphia Phillies[147] | 90 | 3.4% | 3,052,605 | 34.1% | 37,686 | $241,362,606 | 15.2% |
Houston Astros[148] | 90 | -15.1% | 3,052,347 | 13.5% | 37,683 | $240,388,766 | 45.9% |
Toronto Blue Jays[149] | 89 | -3.3% | 3,021,904 | 13.9% | 37,307 | $211,190,269 | 22.3% |
Chicago Cubs[150] | 83 | 12.2% | 2,775,149 | 6.1% | 34,261 | $162,918,250 | 24.3% |
Seattle Mariners[151] | 88 | -2.2% | 2,690,418 | 17.6% | 33,215 | $128,155,663 | 63.7% |
Boston Red Sox[152] | 78 | 0.0% | 2,672,130 | 1.8% | 32,989 | $181,282,500 | -3.8% |
Los Angeles Angels[153] | 73 | 0.0% | 2,640,575 | 7.5% | 32,600 | $218,537,055 | 30.8% |
Colorado Rockies[154] | 59 | -13.2% | 2,607,935 | 0.4% | 32,197 | $155,645,682 | 38.2% |
New York Mets[155] | 75 | -25.7% | 2,573,555 | 0.3% | 31,772 | $208,427,344 | -13.3% |
Milwaukee Brewers[156] | 92 | 7.0% | 2,551,347 | 5.3% | 31,498 | $138,288,760 | 7.7% |
Texas Rangers[157] | 90 | 32.4% | 2,533,044 | 25.9% | 31,272 | $248,537,867 | 106.8% |
San Francisco Giants[158] | 79 | -2.5% | 2,500,153 | 0.7% | 30,866 | $177,920,416 | 20.3% |
Cincinnati Reds[159] | 82 | 32.3% | 2,038,302 | 46.0% | 25,164 | $77,877,833 | -30.4% |
Minnesota Twins[160] | 87 | 11.5% | 1,974,124 | 9.6% | 24,372 | $137,798,640 | 24.4% |
Arizona Diamondbacks[161] | 84 | 13.5% | 1,961,182 | 22.2% | 24,212 | $115,247,571 | 46.1% |
Baltimore Orioles[162] | 101 | 21.7% | 1,936,798 | 41.5% | 23,911 | $82,758,114 | 72.4% |
Washington Nationals[163] | 71 | 29.1% | 1,865,832 | -7.9% | 23,035 | $99,211,578 | -20.7% |
Cleveland Guardians[164] | 76 | -17.4% | 1,834,068 | 41.5% | 22,643 | $70,114,729 | 6.3% |
Chicago White Sox[165] | 61 | -24.7% | 1,669,628 | -16.9% | 20,613 | $140,725,951 | -16.0% |
Pittsburgh Pirates[166] | 76 | 22.6% | 1,630,624 | 29.7% | 20,131 | $72,407,500 | 90.9% |
Detroit Tigers[167] | 78 | 18.2% | 1,612,876 | 2.4% | 19,912 | $119,236,836 | 1.3% |
Tampa Bay Rays[168] | 99 | 15.1% | 1,440,301 | 27.7% | 17,781 | $75,441,212 | 3.3% |
Kansas City Royals[169] | 56 | -13.8% | 1,307,052 | 2.3% | 16,136 | $88,186,975 | 0.9% |
Miami Marlins[170] | 84 | 21.7% | 1,162,819 | 28.1% | 14,356 | $114,351,500 | 67.7% |
Oakland Athletics[171] | 50 | -16.7% | 832,352 | 5.6% | 10,276 | $51,230,000 | 2.0% |
Six additional teams unveiled new City Connect uniforms during the season.[182]
Starting with this season, teams may add advertisement patches to their uniforms.[189] The following teams have announced their uniform advertisements:
Team | Special occasion |
---|---|
All Teams | Jackie Robinson Day (April 15)[206] |
Pink Ribbons for breast cancer awareness (May 14, Mother's Day)[207] | |
Patch for Armed Forces Day (May 20) and Camouflage Caps for Armed Forces Day Weekend (May 19–21)[208] | |
Poppy for Memorial Day (May 29)[209] | |
"4–ALS" patch for Lou Gehrig Day (June 2)[210] | |
"Play Ball" patch in partnership with USA Baseball and USA Softball (June 9–11)[211] | |
Blue Ribbons for prostate cancer (June 18, Father's Day) | |
Gold Ribbons for childhood cancer (September 3) | |
#21 patch for Roberto Clemente day (September 15) | |
"MLB Debut" patch for players who play their first Major League game[212] | |
Arizona Diamondbacks | 25th Anniversary season[213] |
Baltimore Orioles | 40th Anniversary of 1983 World Series championship |
#5 patch in memory of Brooks Robinson (since September 27) | |
Boston Red Sox | 120th Anniversary of 1903 World Series championship |
105th Anniversary of 1918 World Series championship | |
10th Anniversary of 2013 World Series championship | |
5th Anniversary of 2018 World Series Championship | |
Cincinnati Reds | 20th Anniversary of Great American Ball Park |
Cleveland Guardians | Memorial Patch of Longtime fan John Adams (April 7, August 24)[214] |
Colorado Rockies | 30th Anniversary season |
Detroit Tigers | Final season of slugger Miguel Cabrera |
Houston Astros | 2022 World Series championship (March 30) |
Los Angeles Dodgers | 35th Anniversary of 1988 World Series championship |
Miami Marlins | 20th Anniversary of 2003 World Series championship |
30th Anniversary season | |
New York Yankees | 25th Anniversary of 1998 World Series championship |
45th Anniversary of 1978 World Series championship | |
100th Anniversary of the opening of original Yankee Stadium | |
Oakland Athletics | 50th Anniversary of 1973 World Series championship |
"SAL" patch in memory of Sal Bando (white jersey only) (since May 15)[215] | |
"VIDA" patch in memory of Vida Blue (white jersey only) (since May 15)[215] | |
Philadelphia Phillies | 15th Anniversary of 2008 World Series championship |
St. Louis Cardinals | #42 patch in memory of Bruce Sutter[216] |
San Francisco Giants | #36 patch in memory of Gaylord Perry[217] |
#14 patch in memory of Vida Blue (since May 15)[218] | |
Seattle Mariners | 2023 MLB All-Star Game |
Tampa Bay Rays | 25th Anniversary season |
Toronto Blue Jays | 30th Anniversary of 1993 World Series championship |
Washington Nationals | "TNL" patch in memory of owner Ted Lerner[219] |
The Padres wore 1948 Pacific Coast League throwbacks on April 17 in honor of Johnny Ritchey, who integrated the PCL.[220]
The Pirates wore Homestead Grays throwbacks August 13 in the second game of a doubleheader.[citation needed]
The Giants wore San Francisco Sea Lions throwbacks on August 26.[221]
The Astros and the Royals wore Negro Leagues throwbacks September 16. The Astros wore uniforms of the 1950 Houston Eagles, and the Royals wore Kansas City Monarchs uniforms.[citation needed]
All teams and umpires wore #42 on April 15, the 76th anniversary of Jackie Robinson's debut in the majors. For the second consecutive year, all teams wore the #42 in Dodger Blue font. Players who normally wear their number on the front did not have them.[222]
This was the second year of the existing seven-year deals with ESPN, Fox, TBS, Apple TV+, and MLB Network; and the second year of a two-year deal with NBC Sports/Peacock:[223]
During the postseason, the ESPN networks (including ABC) broadcast all four Wild Card Series, with Spanish–language simulcasts on ESPN Deportes.[230] TBS broadcast the National League Division Series and the National League Championship Series;[229] TBS' postseason games were also made available on the streaming service Max's new Bleacher Report Sports Add-on tier which launched on October 5,[238] and Spanish-language coverage was simulcast on MLB Network. Fox Sports broadcast the American League Division Series, the American League Championship Series, and the World Series, with games shown on Fox and FS1, with Spanish-language simulcasts on Fox Deportes.[224]
On February 24, 2023, the AT&T SportsNet regional sports networks sent a letter to the Rockies, Astros, and Pirates saying they had until March 31, to reach an agreement to take their local television rights back. Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD), the owner of the networks, intends to leave the regional sports networks business. If a deal is not reached the networks will file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Root Sports Northwest is not affected because the Mariners already own majority control of that network.[250][251] Warner Bros. Discovery and Major League Baseball quietly negotiated a deal to keep the remaining RSNs operational through the end of the season.[252]
In August 2023, Boston Red Sox owner Fenway Sports Group announced its acquisition of AT&T SportsNet Pittsburgh from WBD via the co-owned Pittsburgh Penguins of the NHL, which subsequently re-launched as the NESN-operated SportsNet Pittsburgh in October. During the offseason, the Pittsburgh Pirates announced they would jointly own the network beginning on January 1, 2024.[253][254][255] In September 2023, the Houston Astros and Houston Rockets jointly acquired WBD's stake in AT&T SportsNet Southwest.[256] Both of those networks rebranded themselves to SportsNet Pittsburgh and the Space City Home Network, respectively, near the end of the regular season. However, with AT&T SportsNet Rocky Mountain failing to find new owners (either with the Colorado Rockies or some other professional sports team(s) in the area), SportsNet Rocky Mountain shut down services by October 21, 2023.
On February 15, 2023, Diamond Sports Group, owners of the Bally Sports regional sports networks, failed to make a $140 million interest payment and entered a 30-day grace period.[257] On March 14, Diamond Sports officially filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy.[258] Diamond had missed payments to the Diamondbacks, Rangers, Guardians, and Twins.[259][260][261] Diamond also entered grace periods for their payments to the Padres and Reds, which they eventually made.[262][263] On April 5, Major League Baseball filed an emergency motion asking the bankruptcy judge to order Diamond to pay the teams they missed payments to or give the media rights back to MLB. Diamond argued that due to the impact of cord-cutting, the contract rate for the media rights of the teams was too high. A hearing on the matter was set for May 31.[264][261][259][265] As an interim, on April 19, the bankruptcy judge ordered Diamond Sports to pay 50% of what the Diamondbacks, Guardians, Twins, and Rangers are owed.[266] On June 1, after a two-day long hearing, the bankruptcy judge ordered Diamond to pay the teams fully within five days.[267]
On May 31, Diamond officially missed a second payment to the Padres, and the Padres' television rights were returned to Major League Baseball. Because Bally Sports San Diego, which aired Padres games, is a joint venture between the Padres and Diamond it is technically not in bankruptcy. Therefore, this missed payment did not have the same bankruptcy protections that Diamond's other missed payments had.[268][269]
MLB Local Media—a new department led by former Fox Sports Networks executive Billy Chambers[270]—took over production and distribution of Padres telecasts the same day; Padres games would be available locally via ad-hoc channels on participating television providers in the San Diego area, and via an over-the-top subscription service hosted by MLB.tv.[271][269] The department had already worked with MLB Network staff to prepare for the possibility that it would have to take over a team's regional broadcasts on short notice, including preparing team-specific graphics packages and other elements in advance. Chambers' team was on standby in Miami for the Padres' series against the Marlins, focusing in particular on contingencies for the May 31 game based on the deadline, and having only 24 hours' notice of the missed payment on May 30.[272] The MLB-produced telecasts inherited the Padres' existing broadcast team and other team-contracted staff. Once the team returned to San Diego, MLB Local Media inherited the mobile production units and freelance employees that had been used by Bally.[273]
On June 22, Diamond Sports Group announced its intention to reject its contract with the Diamondbacks on June 30.[274] Diamond and the Arizona Diamondbacks later released a joint statement pushing back the hearing to July 17 and agreeing to continue Bally Sports Arizona's broadcasts of Diamondbacks' games.[275] On July 18, Diamond Sports officially rejected its contract with the Diamondbacks; MLB Local Media subsequently took over production of the team's telecasts in a similar arrangement to the Padres.[276][277][278] After losing the rights earlier in the year to the Phoenix Suns and later in the year to the Arizona Coyotes to Gray Television and Scripps Sports respectively, Bally Sports Arizona began to wind down operations in October 2023, shutting down for good on October 21 that same year.[279]
Team | Payment(s) missed | Status |
---|---|---|
Cincinnati Reds | April 2023 | Paid through 2023[280] |
Cleveland Guardians | April 2023 | Paid through July[281] |
Arizona Diamondbacks | March 2023, July 2023 | TV rights returned to MLB[275] |
Texas Rangers | April 2023 | Paid through 2023[282] |
San Diego Padres | March 2023, May 2023 | TV rights returned to MLB[268] |
Minnesota Twins | April 2023 | Paid through 2023[283] |
The following players and coaches retired during the 2023 season and before the start of the 2024 campaign:
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