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Sports on TV: Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Sports on TV: Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Yahoo23-04-2025

BASEBALL
TIME
TV
MLB: Cincinnati at Miami
1:10 p.m.
FDSFL PRIME
MLB: Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets
1:10 p.m.
MLBN
NCAA: Miami at FIU
6 p.m.
ESPN+
MLB: L.A. Dodgers at Chicago Cubs
7 p.m.
MLBN
MLB: Tampa Bay at Arizona (joined in progress)
11 p.m.
MLBN
BASKETBALL
TIME
TV
NBA: Orlando at Boston
7 p.m.
TNT TRUTV MAX
NBA: Miami at Cleveland
7:30 p.m.
FDSUN NBATV PRIME
NBA: Golden State at Houston
9:40 p.m.
TNT TRUTV MAX
HOCKEY
TIME
TV
NHL: Montreal at Washington
7 p.m.
ESPN
IIHF U18: Czechia-USA
8 p.m.
NHLN
NHL: Dallas at Colorado
9:30 p.m.
ESPN
NHL: Edmonton at Los Angeles
10 p.m.
TBS MAX
HORSE RACING
TIME
TV
NYRA: America's Day at the Races
1 p.m.
FS2
SOCCER
TIME
TV
Spain: Bilbao-Las Palmas
12:50 p.m.
ESPND
Premier: Arsenal-Crystal Palace
3 p.m.
USA UNIVRS
Portugal: Benfica-Tirsense
3:15 p.m.
BEIN/E
Spain: Getafe-Real Madrid
3:25 p.m.
ESPN2 ESPND
Libertadores: Olimpia-Penarol
6 p.m.
BEIN/E
Libertadores: del Valle-River Plate
8:30 p.m.
BEIN/E
USL: San Antonio-Colorado Springs
8:30 p.m.
CBSSN
CONCACAF Champions: Tigres-Cruz Azul
10 p.m.
FS1 TUDN UNIMAS
Libertadores: Bucaramanga-Fortaleza
10 p.m.
BEIN/E
TENNIS
TIME
TV
ATP/WTA: Mutua Madrid
5 a.m.
TENNIS
ATP/WTA: Mutua Madrid
1 p.m.
TENNIS
ATP/WTA: Mutua Madrid (Thu.)
5 a.m.
TENNIS
ON THE RADIO
MLB: Cincinnati at Miami, 1:10 p.m., WINZ 940; WAQI 710 (Spanish)
NCAA Baseball: Miami at FIU, 6 p.m., WVUM 90.5 FM
NBA: Miami at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m., WQAM 560; WQBA 1140 (Spanish)

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Will Red Sox get a much-needed spark from walk-off win ahead of Yankees series?
Will Red Sox get a much-needed spark from walk-off win ahead of Yankees series?

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time25 minutes ago

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Will Red Sox get a much-needed spark from walk-off win ahead of Yankees series?

The Red Sox are about 40 percent through the 2025 season, and the team is still looking for answers amid a number of struggles on and off the field. Boston sits at just 30-34 heading into a difficult stretch, but could a turnaround be on the horizon? The Red Sox avoided what would have been an embarrassing home sweep by the L.A. Angels thanks to Ceddanne Rafaela's walk-off homer Wednesday afternoon. While it was just one win against another fourth-place team, the victory has all the ingredients to spark a turnaround, according to 2004 World Series champ Kevin Millar. WBZ-TV's Dan Roche spoke with Millar after Wednesday's dramatic finish at Fenway Park, and the former first baseman said it's not just Rafaela's swing that could get the team going. Players and coaches from the Red Sox and Angels engaged in a heated shouting match ahead of Wednesday's game, before Boston was able to come back on four different occasions in the 11-9 victory. "It starts off with a little bit of banter, and that happens sometimes. I talk about it in 2004, our biggest turnaround was that fight with the Yankees," said Millar, recalling the famous Jason Varitek vs. Alex Rodriguez tussle that cleared the benches in 2004. This season, Millar has seen teams like the Milwaukee Brewers and Minnesota Twins sit well below .500 before they ripped off a lengthy winning streak. The Brewers won eight straight to get back into the NL Wild Card race, while the Twins won 13 straight and are currently the top Wild Card team in the AL. "That's what they need," said Millar. "To come back from a game like this, I think that goes a long way to get back on track. But it starts with the fundamentals of hitting the cutoff man. Not trying to do too much. Running the bases awesome. You're going to have to win games different than just hitting three-run home runs. They have to start with the basic fundamentals and just win baseball games." Alex Cora has taken a lot of heat, but Millar said it's really up to the players to turn this season around. He felt really good about his former team ahead of the season and even picked them to win the AL East, but Boston is now nine games back of the first-place Yankees. Injuries to Alex Bregman and Triston Casas have forced a lot of shuffling by Cora, especially with DH Rafael Devers refusing to play the field at the moment. Outside of ace Garrett Crochet, Boston's starting pitching has been a huge disappointment, and their inability to give the team quality innings each time out is taxing the bullpen. And as Millar pointed out (and fans see on a nightly basis), the Red Sox are really lacking when it comes to the fundamentals of the game. "We all know there is something that is just not right," said Millar. "You felt great [going into the season]. Garrett Crochet is better than you think. [Jarren] Duran has established himself as one of the best leadoff hitters out there. Devers has put up big numbers. Then all of a sudden, things happen. "Now here we are and they're back to the same stuff. They can't win one-run games," said Millar, with the Red Sox 6-17 in one-run affairs. "It's alarming." Millar can see a "player's only" meeting in the team's future, where some tough conversations will likely take place. "It starts internally and the media doesn't have to know anything. You have to check some dudes and ask who's in. This is about a team and a city that is more important than the name on your back," said Millar. "I think sometimes we forget that and forget the dream to play in the big leagues and doing anything for the team. Anything for the team. "I always felt we're an employee of the team. If they say, 'Dan Roche, go play right field,' that's what we do because we get strapped and injuries are a part of it," he continued. "How many times did we see Tim Wakefield go to the bullpen to the [rotation] to the bullpen? Or Derrek Lowe to the bullpen, be a starter, then back to the bullpen? "That's what we do, and you do it for the team. I think it just needs to be handled 1-on-1," added Millar. "There are some dudes we have to tune up and get them thinking the right way. The positive way, instead of all the negative energy that I feel is around them, besides the losses and the errors and being 29th in defense. ... They have holes and they have to figure it out. I think they'll do it internally. Behind the scenes [is where] good teams police themselves." Millar hosting Red Sox World Champions Cruise in Boston While Millar is always down to talk baseball -- especially with Rochie -- he was also promoting his upcoming "2004 Red Sox World Champions Cruise," which promises to be an incredible evening and experience for Boston baseball fans. Millar will host three such cruises this summer, which will take attendees around Boston Harbor while they get to chat with Millar and two of his teammates on the 2004 curse-reversing club. The cruises will include a Q&A session, a gourmet buffet dinner, drinks, and lots of stories from fan favorites. "Just the experience to talk about -- in my opinion and probably yours -- the greatest World Series that Boston has ever seen," said Millar. The first cruise will take place on Sunday, June 15 and Millar will be joined by former Sox pitcher Derek Lowe and shortstop Orlando Cabrera. "A lot of these stories are real and organic. We're going to have D-Lowe and hopefully he'll be a couple cocktails in and you'll get the tell-all D-Lowe. Maybe he'll take his shirt off. And we've got Orlando Cabrera, so maybe he'll bring some cigars for everybody," joked Millar. Both players jumped at the chance to join Millar and spend a night with Red Sox fans. 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Washington Post

time25 minutes ago

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time36 minutes ago

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In the world of TV markets and sports ratings, the expression 'Bigger is better' usually applies. Yet after a pretty thrilling round of playoffs, the NBA Finals — a showdown between teams representing two of the smallest cities in the league — will put that assumption to the test. Tipping off Thursday, the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder both bring young superstars to the party, including recently anointed league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. But they also hail from Indianapolis and Oklahoma City, which rank No. 25 and 47, respectively, out of the more than 200 individually measured designated market areas (or DMAs) in the U.S., placing them among the bottom seven of the NBA's 30 teams. (Top-ranked New York, whose Knicks were just bounced from the playoffs, boasts a pair of franchises, as does No. 2 market Los Angeles.) Historically, major sporting events benefit from having larger-market teams squaring off, cashing in on the rooting interest in the home cities to boost the most recent examples, last year's World Series, pitting the New York Yankees against the L.A. Dodgers, delivered an average 15.8 million viewers, per Nielsen, Major League Baseball's most-watched Fall Classic since 2017, despite running only five games. That marked a 67% increase over 2023, the lowest-rated World Series ever, in which the Texas Rangers (considered part of the No. 4 Dallas-Fort Worth DMA) defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks (a.k.a. Phoenix, No. 12). Last year's NBA Finals, with the Boston Celtics edging the Dallas Mavericks, averaged 11.3 million viewers on ABC/ESPN, the league's worst performance since 2021. After a slow start, though, the NBA rebounded thanks to a slew of midseason trades, finishing just below overall regular-season results for the previous year. So are there any potential rays of hope for this year's matchup? one equalizer for any sports championship determined by a series (in the NBA and MLB's cases, a best-of-seven format) is for the contests to be competitive, with the series coming down to a Game 7 to determine the winner. Heading into the Finals, the playoffs have also put up solid results, up 3% overall, although that comes with a disclaimer: The Eastern Conference finals, featuring the Knicks, were up 10%, while the Western Conference (Oklahoma City vs. Minnesota) declined. Beyond the NBA and its TV partners (a roster that will shift, incidentally, with NBC taking a major package of games next season), several other entertainment players have a vested interest in the series, given that the NBA playoffs provide a platform to reach male viewers, especially, promoting blockbusters like 'Fantastic Four: First Steps' and 'Superman' heading into the summer movie season. Obviously, the interested parties can't make the host cities any bigger, but they can root for the series to be longer — and decided in the closing moments — in a way that might help a size-challenged Finals, to borrow from another sport, punch above its weight. Netflix's campy five-episode series 'Sirens' maintained its spot as Netflix's most-watched English-language show of the week with 18.2 million views during the week of May 26, up 9% from the 16.7 million it logged in its first four days on the platform last week. Meanwhile, buzzy U.K. crime series 'Adolescence,' which first debuted in March, finally surpassed 'Stranger Things 4' on Netflix's all-time most-popular TV English-language list, with 'Adolescence' standing in the No. 2 spot with 141.2 million views to date — behind just 'Wednesday' — while 'Stranger Things 4' ranks third with 140.7 million views. It's worth noting that viewers for 'Stranger Things 4' are likely to surge again ahead of the new season of 'Stranger Things' releasing this fall, as could views for 'Adolescence' given its potential Emmys buzz. The 2025 American Music Awards tacked on a considerable amount of delayed viewers to its original May 26 telecast, growing to reach over 10 million unique viewers across its CBS premiere, as well as encores on MTV, CMT and BET. After bringing in an initial live-plus-same-day viewership of 4.86 million, the Jennifer Lopez-hosted awards scored 5.2 million viewers after seven days of viewing, ranking as the show's biggest audience since 2019 and a 38% uptick from its last live telecast in 2022. Monday's finale of 'La Casa de los Famosos All-Stars' boosted Telemundo to rank as the most-watched primetime broadcast network, regardless of language, in the key demo among adults 18-49 as the network scored 559,000 viewers in that age bracket, according to Nielsen. The news comes as Telemundo celebrates its 14th consecutive week as the No. 1 most-watched Spanish-language broadcast network in weekday primetime among total viewers, as well as its third consecutive week winning the 18-49 demo. The post Can Small-Market NBA Finals Teams Punch Above Their Weight in the Ratings? appeared first on TheWrap.

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