Was it on one of your local stations instead? That is usually the reason.
I'm assuming you are talking about the game on 5/2. According to their schedule http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/schedule/index.jsp?c_id=phi
It was on CSN and ESPN. So it looks like CSN had the local rights for your area.
Yep, the Pirates claim you zipcode, and the Phillies don't. Sounds like a Dish Network screwup to me.CSN is Comcast. I have Dish and Comcast doesn't even service this area. Philly is over 300 miles from where I live.
CSN is Comcast. I have Dish and Comcast doesn't even service this area. Philly is over 300 miles from where I live.
Now is the time to right a wrong. Though sometimes I wonder if that is asking too much of Major League Baseball.
For the amount of hand-wringing it took to settle the Extra Innings-DirecTV brouhaha, I cringe to think how baseball will try to remedy a problem that affects millions of fans instead of thousands: The frustrating – and unnecessary – television blackouts.
MLB president Bob DuPuy plans to officially address the blackout troubles in front of the sport's powerful executive council two weeks from today at the quarterly owners meetings in New York. How seriously the eight-man council treats the concerns will go a long way toward proving whether baseball is serious about rewriting its archaic rules or simply raising the issue to muzzle all of the fans who are not allowed to buy the product baseball is selling.
Sound familiar? Throughout spring training, when it seemed as though the Extra Innings package would be offered only on DirecTV, commissioner Bud Selig showed a haughty disregard for the fans, mocking the thousands of cable customers orphaned by the league's proposed money-grabbing exclusive deal. In the end, MLB got its promise from cable companies that they would launch the Baseball Channel in 2009, and the majority of fans now have access to every game, every night. ........................................................
Limited time offer