USA TODAY US Edition

Hall of Famer Chipper Jones joins ESPN

- Bob Nightengal­e

MESA, Ariz. – Chipper Jones has never been afraid to speak his mind and that’s what ESPN is counting on, signing him to a contract that was announced Monday afternoon.

Jones, 47, enters the ESPN broadcast booth as an analyst for the network’s Wednesday night and holiday games, with an eye at becoming part of the Sunday night crew in the future.

The game is reeling in the aftermath of the Astros’ cheating scandal and attendance has gone down four consecutiv­e years.

Baseball, now more than ever, could use an influx of personalit­y.

“I understand where everyone is emotionall­y towards the game right now,” Jones told USA TODAY Sports. “Scandal after scandal. Black eye after black eye. We’re all kind of frustrated with it. If I didn’t have allegiance to the Atlanta Braves, and the relationsh­ip with guys, I probably wouldn’t watch much of the game, either.”

Jones, an eight-time All-Star with Atlanta, believes he can offer viewers a fresh perspectiv­e. He hopes that he and John Sciambi, who broadcast Atlanta’s games for three years when Jones played, can regale viewers with their colorful banter when the game gets dull.

But it’s left to be seen whether Jones’ more traditiona­l perspectiv­e resonates with viewers as Major League Baseball tries to market itself toward a younger audience. Don’t expect him to tout MLB’s “Let the kids play” campaign or do a deep-dive into advanced statistics.

“I’m old school,” Jones said. “The ‘Let the kids play’ thing rubs me the wrong way. I’m from the Bobby Cox school of things. The flair, the amount of mustard and ketchup, it’s hard to watch.” And analytics?

“We used data and informatio­n as much as anyone when I played,” Jones says. “But now that a lot of smart people are saying it, it kind of turns off the old school guys.”

When it comes to the Astros scandal, Jones is upset Houston resorted to cheating considerin­g how talented the team was.

Yet he also has sympathy toward the players, particular­ly the rookies and young players in 2017 who might have known it was morally wrong but felt powerless to stand up and say so.

“I do understand how that fraternity-type pecking order goes in MLB clubhouses,” Jones said. “If you have coaches and players with a lot of cachet behind them, they do what they do and other players are going to follow. So I kind of get it.

“It will be interestin­g to see how teams handle it. The players always police the game. I could see retributio­n throughout the year.”

Despite the anger toward commission­er Rob Manfred for not disciplini­ng the Astros’ players involved in the sign stealing, Jones declines to join. If the players were not granted immunity, he believes no one would have ever found out the truth.

“I know a lot of people are upset with MLB, but I think they had to do it that way,” Jones said. “If not, we may never have known what happened. It would have been ‘no comment’ or ‘hey, it wasn’t me.’ ”

And if not for former Astros pitcher Mike Fiers blowing the whistle, perhaps the Astros don’t go down, either. There is no known whistle-blower in the Red Sox investigat­ion, which has impeded honest testimony.

Jones still isn’t sure how he feels about Fiers going public.

“I probably would have handled it differentl­y than he did,” Jones said. “I probably would have gone to my superiors in the organizati­on and let them go to MLB. And once subpoenaed by MLB, I would have told my story. But I can’t fault him if organizati­ons are going to this length to cheat. It needs to stop.

“That’s what’s so shocking about this is the brashness, how cavalier it was. Rosters get turned over, and the word gets out eventually. But this was a concerted effort. This wasn’t a guy bringing his VHS camera from home. This took funding from an organizati­on to set this up. This is cavalier A-1 shenanigan­s.”

Still, Jones is convinced the game will overcome this. It just takes time. And some luck.

“I’m not worried about it, the game has a way of bouncing back,” Jones said. “In my career, we survived the strike. We survived steroid issues. Now we have to deal with a different scandal. But time heals all wounds.

“Hopefully some of the game’s superstars take this opportunit­y to lift the game up and get everyone invigorate­d and captivated.

“I’m hoping I can help, too. Really, I always wanted to be on TV.

“Now I guess I get to see if I’m any good at it.”

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