The Hamilton Spectator

Jays road games will be called remotely

Wagner announcing contests on radio from Toronto studio

- GREGORY STRONG

Toronto Blue Jays radio broadcaste­r Ben Wagner has been on-site at the team’s player developmen­t complex for spring training to conduct interviews, gather informatio­n and prepare for the upcoming campaign.

The pre-season will be the only time he’s on the road this year.

Sportsnet, the team’s radio rightshold­er, will not resume on-site radio broadcasts for road games this season and will instead provide remote coverage from its downtown Toronto studio.

“I’m very disappoint­ed in the network for making that decision,” said longtime Blue Jays radio voice Jerry Howarth, who retired in 2018.

TV crews will cover all 162 regularsea­son games in person while Wagner will only be on-site for the 81 home games at Rogers Centre.

Requests to speak with Wagner and network executives Rob Corte and Greg Sansone were declined by Sportsnet’s senior manager of communicat­ions.

COVID-19 concerns and travel restrictio­ns meant remote broadcasti­ng was the reality for many TV and radio crews when sports returned in the pandemic’s early days.

Almost all big-league baseball radio crews have resumed regular travel. Toronto is one of the few Major League Baseball markets that has not.

Wagner, who is sometimes joined by Sportsnet analysts and insiders for his radio calls, started last season by calling road games remotely. He resumed regular travel around the midway point of the campaign.

Announcers are encouraged to travel but a small number of clubs do not send crews on the road for a variety of reasons, a baseball source said.

The subject was raised during MLB commission­er Rob Manfred’s media availabili­ty at the Blue Jays’ complex late Thursday afternoon.

“Honestly, I listen to baseball on the radio a fair amount actually,” Manfred said. “I can’t tell you that I really have discerned a significan­t difference in part because I’m not sure which clubs are doing what.

“So I’m just not qualified to give you a good answer on that one.”

Howarth, who called home and away games over three-plus decades in the Blue Jays’ radio booth, said it’s simply “essential” to be on site when a team is on the road.

“You’re at the batting cage and you’re visiting with players. You’re getting a glimpse of what happened the day before and what might happen in this game,” Howarth said in a recent interview from Toronto. “Then you go to the umpires’ quarters and have a visit with them or maybe (discuss) a call that happened the day before.

“You’re always gathering informatio­n and stories and things that you share with people on the radio.”

Broadcaste­rs who aren’t on-site can miss opportunit­ies that only in-person staffing can provide.

It’s also much more difficult to provide a natural call of the game when your eyes are bouncing between screens in a studio rather than staring out at the diamond.

“When you’re going to describe to someone who’s not there what’s going on, you need background and stories … you’ll never get that if you’re sitting in (front of a) monitor,” longtime sports broadcaste­r Mark Hebscher said from Toronto.

Wagner has been calling Blue Jays games since 2018. He will be on-site at Grapefruit League games when the Blue Jays’ schedule starts Feb. 25 against Pittsburgh. The regularsea­son opener is March 30 at St. Louis.

 ?? ?? Jerry Howarth
Jerry Howarth
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Ben Wagner

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