The absolute worst take I’ve seen on MLB in a minute.

Japan isn’t a country you want to frustrate when it comes to viewership. They have a huge fan base and to disrespect anyone like this will affect their #’s for sure.
 
Seems like Ohtani gives MLB tons of international viewership, and doesn’t affect American viewership in a negative way. Americans love new, next big things. And that’s Ohtani. Plus, his homeland is where baseball is most popular. Him being the face and such a star is the best possible outcome for MLB.
 
Seems like Ohtani gives MLB tons of international viewership, and doesn’t affect American viewership in a negative way. Americans love new, next big things. And that’s Ohtani. Plus, his homeland is where baseball is most popular. Him being the face and such a star is the best possible outcome for MLB.

This is the same guy who said women deserve to be hit sometimes. It's truly amazing he still has a job.
 
I'm not a fan of Smith and haven't watched ESPN in years, but his original comments were obviously correct.

Anyone who has spent any amount of time speaking to someone through an interpreter knows the sensation that you're conversing with the interpreter and not the other person. Anyone who has spent time in a group or a country where you don't speak the language knows it's easier to connect with the few people who do speak your language.

This is obvious stuff, and the fact that his remarks were controversial says something bad about our hypersensitive society, not his remarks.
 
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I hate people who apologize and then throw poor me BS to use victim status. Saying as a black man who has this happen to him all the time is a weak apology.
 
**** stephen smith. dude is a hack who has made a living on yelling hot takes. he and skip bayless are one in the same. i stopped watching espn mainly because of those two.
 
I'm not a fan of Smith and haven't watched ESPN in years, but his original comments were obviously correct.

Anyone who has spent any amount of time speaking to someone through an interpreter knows the sensation that you're conversing with the interpreter and not the other person. Anyone who has spent time in a group or a country where you don't speak the language knows it's easier to connect with the few people who do speak your language.

This is obvious stuff, and the fact that his remarks were controversial says something bad about our hypersensitive society, not his remarks.


Except that is isn't obvious. As stated, the popularity of baseball exists far outside the reaches of the US. Seems like having a Japanese superstar only stands increase the popularity of the MLB.


And isn't like language barriers haven't existed among some of baseball other elite talents in the past (and now). Acuna is one of the most popular players in the game and speaks through an interpreter.
 
I'm not a fan of Smith and haven't watched ESPN in years, but his original comments were obviously correct.

Anyone who has spent any amount of time speaking to someone through an interpreter knows the sensation that you're conversing with the interpreter and not the other person. Anyone who has spent time in a group or a country where you don't speak the language knows it's easier to connect with the few people who do speak your language.

This is obvious stuff, and the fact that his remarks were controversial says something bad about our hypersensitive society, not his remarks.


Except that is isn't obvious. As stated, the popularity of baseball exists far outside the reaches of the US. Seems like having a Japanese superstar only stands increase the popularity of the MLB.


And isn't like language barriers haven't existed among some of baseball other elite talents in the past (and now). Acuna is one of the most popular players in the game and speaks through an interpreter.

His remarks were not only off-base, but they are insulting.
 
I'm not a fan of Smith and haven't watched ESPN in years, but his original comments were obviously correct.

Anyone who has spent any amount of time speaking to someone through an interpreter knows the sensation that you're conversing with the interpreter and not the other person. Anyone who has spent time in a group or a country where you don't speak the language knows it's easier to connect with the few people who do speak your language.

This is obvious stuff, and the fact that his remarks were controversial says something bad about our hypersensitive society, not his remarks.

I just think it’s funny that woke ass ESPN can be racist against Asians and nobody gives a F.

Espn is trash.
 
Except that is isn't obvious. As stated, the popularity of baseball exists far outside the reaches of the US. Seems like having a Japanese superstar only stands increase the popularity of the MLB.


And isn't like language barriers haven't existed among some of baseball other elite talents in the past (and now). Acuna is one of the most popular players in the game and speaks through an interpreter.

His remarks were not only off-base, but they are insulting.

"When you talk about an audience gravitating to the tube or to the ballpark to actually watch you, I don’t think it helps that the No. 1 face is a dude that needs an interpreter so you can understand what the hell he is saying — in this country. And that’s what I’m trying to say.”

“In other sports like basketball, you notice, Dirk Nowitzki was German and Manu Ginobili and others were from other places, and guess what Max? They spoke fluent English. You understood what they were saying when somebody was interviewing them. They didn’t need an interpreter. It goes a long way. For some reason with Major League Baseball, you’ve got these guys that need those interpreters and I think that compromises the ability for them to ingratiate themselves with the American public, which is what we’re really talking about.”


He was clearly speaking to the domestic popularity of MLB.

Later, he tried to make it more clear:

“A lot of them need translators. You know, Spanish, it can be Mandarin, Japanese, the list goes on and on and on. If you are trying to ingratiate yourself with the American public the way Major League Baseball is because of the problems that you’re having to deal with in terms of approving the attractiveness of the sport, it helps you spoke the English language.
...
But in the United States, all I was saying is that when you’re a superstar, if you can speak the English language, then guess what, that’s gonna make it that much easier and less challenging to promote the sport.
 
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Just to throw a little gas on the discussion...

Acuna needs an interpreter - baseball and the Braves should stop marketing him too. Unamerican hacks.
 
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