The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HOW BRAVES’ BROADCAST LINEUP WILL SHIFT IN 2019

- By Tim Tucker tim.tucker@ajc.com

The Braves will juggle the lineup in their broadcast booths for next season.

The biggest change is that former Braves outfielder Jeff Francoeur will replace veteran broadcaste­r Joe Simpson as the lead analyst on the Fox Sports South and Fox Sports Southeast telecasts of games.

Simpson, a member of the Braves Hall of Fame, will remain part of the broadcast team for a 28th season, shifting to radio for a large number of games andalso working a limited number on TV.

Simpson said he was “surprised” by the extent of the change. “I had proposed cutting back, but my proposal was a lot different than theirs,” Simpson said. “I was suggesting maybe cutting back to like 120 TV games, hoping to fill in the rest with some radio. But they’ve cut me back to 20 or 30 TV games with the rest being radio, so that came as a surprise.”

Fox Sports South/Southeast general manager Jeff Genthner and Braves CEO Derek Schiller described

the change as a joint decision by the network and the team.

Genthner said Francoeur will work about 100 TV games, “plus or minus 10 games.” Former Braves pitcher Tom Glavine also will work an increased number of games as an analyst, Genthner said. Chip Caray will remain the TV play-byplay announcer.

On radio, the Braves plan a fourman rotation featuring voices familiar to the team’s fans: Jim Powell, Simpson, Don Sutton and Ben Ingram. The plan is to have two of them in the booth per game, Schiller said.

“The bulk of the radio workload will be spread across three of those guys (Powell, Simpson and Sutton), with Ben doing a fair number of games as well,” Schiller said. “… We’ll start the season with a preference of pairing Jim Powell with Joe Simpson and pairing Don Sutton with Ben Ingram, but there is going to be rotation.”

Powell “will do less games than he did this year but not by a whole lot,” Schiller said.

Genthner and Schiller said in separate interviews that the replacemen­t of Simpson as lead TV analyst was not related to two controvers­ial remarks he made on the air during the 2018 season — criticizin­g the Dodgers’ attire during batting practice at SunTrust Park and questionin­g the age of 19-yearold Nationals outfielder Juan Soto.

“Absolutely not,” Genthner said when asked if the controvers­ies contribute­d to the change. “To emphasize that point, we didn’t reprimand Joe, didn’t do anything to admonish him in any way (for the comments). … He’s a profession­al broadcaste­r, and he voiced his personal opinion about something, but not to the extent in any way, shape or form that it impacted his career in our point of view.”

Said Schiller: “I think that’s just coincidenc­e. … If we had any concerns about what he said, we wouldn’t be as comfortabl­e as we are putting him on radio. Remember, he still is going to be a broadcaste­r for the Braves. If we had any reservatio­ns, any hesitation­s, about what Joe Simpson says into the microphone, he wouldn’t be doing the job we’ve asked him to do.”

Asked if he felt the incidents affected the decision, Simpson said: “I would sincerely hope not. … If that was not part of their decision-making process, then I am glad about that.

“I have a very strong protective instinct on the game and its customs and history and traditions, so my comments were only intended as a defensive mechanism of the game,” Simpson said. “… One of the things that I love most about the Atlanta Braves is how profession­al the organizati­on is and how they expect their players to be profession­al, look profession­al, and that is something that I appreciate so much about the Atlanta Braves and have since I arrived in Atlanta (in 1992).”

Genthner said the change in the TV lineup was driven by the talent Francoeur has shown as a broadcaste­r during occasional opportunit­ies the past two seasons and by Simpson’s stated desire to scale back over the next couple of years.

“This probably ramped it down from TV a little quicker than Joe wanted to,” Genthner acknowledg­ed, “but we had to look to the future and lock in someone really good (in Francoeur).”

Simpson said he appreciate­s the opportunit­y to call games on radio. Earlier in his career, he split time between the Braves’ TV and radio booths, but he has done exclusivel­y TV since 2007. He said he expects to work around 100 games on radio next season.

“I loved doing radio play-byplay, and I’ll be able to get back to doing that,” Simpson said. “So if there’s a flip side that is good to this, it’s that the Braves gave me that opportunit­y to do a ton of radio. I’m very excited about that and grateful to them.

“I think this will in some ways extend my broadcasti­ng life,” said Simpson, who will turn 67 next month, “because I’m going in with an increased excitement and anticipati­on of doing radio again. I’ll have a better assessment of that at the end of the 2019 season.”

The changes bring a big opportunit­y for Francoeur, who completed a 12-year major-league career in 2016 and then began breaking into broadcasti­ng. He served as an analyst on nine Braves telecasts in 2017 and 25 in 2018.

“To be honest, this year it just became clear to me how much I enjoyed calling the games and talking baseball and being able to bring analysis to the fans at home,” said Francoeur, a Parkview High graduate. “… Iwould love for the next 15 or 20 years to be able to call Braves games and live at home and watch my kids grow up.”

 ??  ?? Ex-Brave Jeff Francoeur will be lead television analyst.
Ex-Brave Jeff Francoeur will be lead television analyst.

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