Vanderbilt baseball writer says what ball-knowers are thinking about Savannah Bananas, Banana Ball, and the MLB
The Savannah Bananas/Banana Ball discourse is bleeding too much into discussions about the MLB, which is a completely different genre of entertainment.
Vanderbilt baseball writer says what ball-knowers are thinking about Savannah Bananas, Banana Ball, and the MLB originally appeared on The Sporting News . Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here . Banana Ball is making waves across the baseball world after the Savannah Bananas and Texas Tailgaters attracted 102,000 fans to Kyle Field in College Station, Texas, home of the A&M Aggies, this past Saturday.
Some are taking it as a sign that the MLB is being passed by. The Tennessean’s Aria Gerson is bringing sensibility to the situation, though. Per the Vanderbilt Commodores beat writer, “The Savannah Bananas are not baseball, and they are not designed to appeal to the same audience as baseball is, and that's fine.
But we don't need thinkpieces of ‘what can baseball learn from the Savannah Bananas’ or ‘why can't baseball fill a 100k football stadium’ because they aren't the same thing, don't have the same audience and they aren't designed to! ” The league that doesn’t penalize balks and has random former MLB players appear in their home markets – that also features lip-synching showtunes TikTok dance numbers from the players mid-game – isn’t a serious competitor with the highest level of pro baseball. Unfortunately, not everyone can consume a lengthy MLB game, creating an opening for a baseball alternative.
Banana Ball games are tailored to the viewing experience with over-the-top whimsy. MLB games rarely have that these days. Worse yet, frequently, MLB games are played deep into the night on a weeknight via extra innings.