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Yesterday — 19 June 2026Main stream

Michael Kay clears air on John Flaherty’s YES Network exit: ‘We’re still absolute friends’

Michael Kay and John Flaherty
Credit: YES Network

Michael Kay wants to make it very clear that he and former YES Network announcing partner John Flaherty remain on very good terms.

“I had never had friction with John Flaherty in my life, ever,” the Yankees play-by -play announcer said on Wednesday’s edition of The Michael Kay Show. “That was not anything that I wanted nor anything that I was comfortable with.”

Flaherty’s contract wasn’t renewed after the 2025 season following a 20-year stint with YES, and some conspiratorial viewers seemed to think Kay had something to do with it.

“I love John Flaherty,” Kay said. “I thought that John Flaherty was one of the most valuable people that we had at the network.”

The ESPN New York host added that he believes the rumors of his disdain for Flaherty stem from a 2024 YES broadcast of a Yankees-Cubs game, which sounded incredibly awkward to many viewers.

Extremely uncomfortable moment during the Yankees and Cubs broadcast on YES network as @RealMichaelKay and John Flaherty come off like bitter passive aggressive ex lovers…

What the hell was this?

Def looking forward to hearing about this on Kay’s show. pic.twitter.com/uf04G0J0A2

— Frank Pellegrino (@FrankP614) September 6, 2024

“You weren’t very talkative on the bus this morning to the field, but as I was driving here, I was thinking it would be great to get a place that’s close so you could walk back and forth,” Flaherty said to Kay during the 2024 broadcast. “I know you mentioned Don Zimmer living in the apartments out in center field. But I just had a lot of time to think on the team bus today, because it was very quiet.”

“So you’d rather me be chatty? I wasn’t feeling great,” replied Kay.

“I haven’t seen you in a long time, right? You don’t work road trips anymore when I’m on the road,” Flaherty chirped back. “So I thought we would catch up, and it quickly was evident that you weren’t in the mood, so I gathered my thoughts about how it would be nice to live close to Wrigley and walk back and forth to the park.”

“Interesting narrative that you’re putting together, because I’ve been told by executives that you prefer to work with [Ryan] Ruocco,” replied Kay. “That’s why you two guys are matched up all the time. That’s just what I heard, I don’t know if there’s any truth to it.”

“I just put together that the road trips you don’t want to go on are the ones where I end up working with Ryan Ruocco, because you don’t want to work the games on the road,” Flaherty responded.

The incident caused so much consternation that Yankees GM Brian Cashman and manager Aaron Boone both asked about the awkward interaction afterward.

During the next day’s broadcast, Kay and Flaherty pushed back against the narrative that they hated each other, saying they bicker all the time and like each other very much, and eventually hugging it out in the booth.

Michael Kay and John Flaherty address Friday’s exchange on Saturday’s YES Network broadcast at Wrigley Field.

Meredith Marakovits adds, “Guys, you would not believe the chatter in the (Yankees) clubhouse today about the two of you.”

Kay: “Are you serious?” ⚾https://t.co/CoTWMrIgnUpic.twitter.com/FreBqEpxOW

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) September 7, 2024

Even though they made it clear that there were no hard feelings, the presumption that the two have real animosity apparently lingers.

Kay wanted to make it abundantly clear this week that he and Flaherty remain close, even though their working relationship is now over.

“We’re still absolute friends,” Kay said.

The post Michael Kay clears air on John Flaherty’s YES Network exit: ‘We’re still absolute friends’ appeared first on Awful Announcing.

Before yesterdayMain stream

MLB’s local viewership shines as national windows face World Cup competition

World Cup fans are seen cheering at Yankee Stadium on YES Network
Credit: YES Network

While much of the attention in recent weeks has been on the NBA Finals and FIFA World Cup, Major League Baseball is still fighting for viewers’ attention.

In theory, nowhere would this endeavor be harder than New York City. Despite the city’s New York Knicks fever after the team won the 2026 NBA Finals, local viewership for the New York Yankees is currently hitting multi-year highs.

YES Network announced that Yankees games so far this season are averaging 294,000 viewers across YES and the Gotham Sports app. That is the Yankees’ highest average viewership since the 2022 season.

The Yankees are also seeing strong local viewership among key adults 25-54, up 16% year-over-year.

Yankees on YES viewership is on pace for our best year since 2022! pic.twitter.com/sdORz12QAc

— YES Network (@YESNetwork) June 17, 2026

Nationally, however, Major League Baseball seems to be taking more of a hit from competition with FIFA and the NBA.

Nationally last week, Sunday Night Baseball between the Texas Rangers and Boston Red Sox averaged 1.61 million viewers. That does not include additional Peacock viewership tracked by Adobe Analytics. That is the smallest Nielsen-only audience for NBC this season. San Diego Padres-Seattle Mariners on Sunday, May 17, which averaged 1.80 million Nielsen viewers and 2.0 million viewers with Adobe Analytics, was the previous low.

On Sunday afternoon, ABC aired its first regular-season game of the season between the Chicago Cubs and San Francisco Giants. The game averaged 1.41 million viewers. In the small handful of MLB games ABC has aired since 2020, that is the least-watched game.

On Saturday primetime, the Philadelphia Phillies-Milwaukee Brewers game averaged 420,000 viewers on FS1. (The broadcast co-existed with local broadcasts in both home markets.) That window was initially scheduled as a regional Baseball Night in America game on Fox (Houston Astros-Kansas City Royals was the other game) but was later switched to air two more World Cup matches on Fox. A full comparison for FS1 was unavailable, but that is generally on the higher end of MLB regular-season viewership on the network.

While national viewership against the World Cup was mediocre to poor for Major League Baseball, it is facing stiff competition and still keeping viewers tuned in. MLB’s bread and butter has always been local viewership, and it is keeping that strong in one of its most important markets.

The post MLB’s local viewership shines as national windows face World Cup competition appeared first on Awful Announcing.

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