Houston Astros broadcaster Alan Ashby has apologized for his comments after Yu Darvish lost his perfect game on Tuesday with two outs in the ninth inning.
"I'd like to apologize if my comments last night were misinterpreted or construed as insensitive. I have the highest respect for Yu Darvish; he's a great player and his performance last night was outstanding. He showed a great deal of poise in the face of a difficult moment last night, which speaks to the strength of his character."
The comment Ashby made about Darvish was "That’ll force a guy to learn some of the language here in America," as he cursed in the dugout following his removal from the game. I think the whole situation got a little overblown, as it didn't seem like Ashby was inferring that Darvish was somehow a worse person because he prefers not to speak English, but instead that the profanity spilling out of his mouth after he lost the perfect game is something that any foreign player would pick up in a situation like this.
[MLB.com]

Comments are closed.
About Joe Lucia
I hate your favorite team. I also sort of hate most of my favorite teams.
Recent Posts
Don Garber responds to Landon Donovan’s criticism that MLS ‘not mature enough’ to abandon linear TV
"Shame on us if we didn't go and take the risk of being the first global property to ever go and stream their games."
Fox Sports
Fox earns a yellow card on World Cup opening day
French Open men’s final hits 20-year viewership low absent major stars
Alexander Zverev's win averaged just 1.3 million viewers across TNT and truTV.
Zlatan Ibrahimović vows to wake up American audiences in Fox World Cup studio role
"...I feel when the other ones are doing their [analysis], American people is going to fall asleep."
TV and streaming viewing picks for June 12, 2026: How to watch USMNT World Cup debut
Both Canada and the United States debut in the FIFA World Cup today in Toronto and Inglewood, CA respectively on FS1, Fox and Telemundo.
Congress to introduce legislation on NFL’s migration to streaming, per report
The news comes days after a Congressional hearing addressing the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961.