
When a celebrity attends a sporting event, most of the time the television cameras can't get enough of them. When
Mark Cuban attends a Cubs game, though, the television cameras pretend he's not there. From the
Chicago Tribune (via
SPORTSbyBROOKS):
Mark Cuban's wild night in the right-field bleachers Monday wasn't mentioned during the Comcast SportsNet broadcast of the game, and there was a reason for that.
According to sources, the Cubs told CSN not to show Cuban or even to talk about his presence at the park during the telecast.
...
Cuban came to the game wearing a Cubs jersey and, according to some who sat in the section, the fans sitting around him treated him like royalty.
You know why they treated him like royalty? Because instead of acting like a stuck-up billionaire, he
wore a jersey, waved a sign and cheered for the team. In other words, he acted like a true fan. The sources didn't explain
why the team was adamant about keeping Cuban off the telecast, but we can probably safely assume it was related to his interest in buying the team -- and perhaps even the MLB's establishment's reluctance to let him own it. As Derek Lee said after the game:
"Is he really a possible owner?" Derrek Lee asked. "From what I'm hearing, they're not going to give him a shot."
If it comes to that, that's a damn shame. Cuban may be outspoken but his presence has done nothing but help the Mavericks, and by extension, the NBA. Major League Baseball should be so lucky to have such an enthusiastic owner in their club.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-20-2007 @ 2:40PM
bobdunk said...
Remember, Selig and Reinsdorf are "butt buddys" and more. Amazing how the White Sox owner is going to dictate who owns the rival Cubs.
Selig should be investigated for how he and Reisnsdorf set up the strike of 1994, how Selig still owned the Brewers while acting commissioner (don't give me that his daughter Wendy ran things, go ask inside Brewers officials), and it goes deep into his ignorance of the steriods issue, which came on his guard--and he happily pushed forward because the 1998 HR duel between Mac and Sammy was "in the best interests of baseball."
Selig is everything that is bad about major league baseball. And remember this: he made his money as a used car salesman. You trust them?
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