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Tuesday, April 7, 2026

MICHAEL KAY'S STILL FIGHTING TO STAY RELEVANT

Michael Kay used to be the comforting metronome of a Yankees broadcast: steady, familiar, the kind of voice that made a long inning feel like theater. Lately, though, he’s been doing something else with that microphone—lecturing us fans. That shift from play‑by‑play to public scold is jarring, and not just because it’s tone‑deaf; it’s because the man doing the scolding is paid by the very franchise whose customers he’s chastising.

Take this recent display everyone’s still talking about: a section of the Stadium broke into a profane chant aimed at Juan Soto, and Kay didn’t treat it as a moment to explain the emotion behind it—he called it “an awful look,” said it made Yankees fans look “small” and “jealous,” and warned that it handed rival fans ammunition. That wasn’t a throwaway line on a hot mic; it was a full‑throated rebuke on his show. But who actually looks small? Kay, stop holding the Yankees water. Do a different act... we all know you get paid by the Yankees. Knock it off.

Look, there’s nothing wrong with asking fans to be better. But context matters. The Yankees are a franchise built on entitlement and expectation; being loud, unreasonable, and occasionally irrational is part of the product. Fans boo, chant, and rage because they care and because they spend THOUSANDS of dollars in that building in the Bronx, but also because accountability is baked into fandom here. When the person with the megaphone is also on the payroll, those admonitions stop sounding like civic-minded commentary and start sounding like corporate damage control.

What makes Kay’s posture especially grating is the tone: moralizing rather than explaining. A broadcaster can add value by translating front‑office logic—why a contract was structured a certain way, why a manager made a lineup choice—without telling ticket‑holders how to feel. Kay’s “shame on you” routine flattens nuance into sermonizing, and in a town that prizes bluntness, that’s a fast way to lose credibility. That's how I feel at least.

There’s also an optics problem that isn’t theoretical. When a paid voice repeatedly defends the franchise and publicly scolds the paying public, listeners are entitled to ask whether they’re hearing independent analysis or a PR echo. I feel like it's PR quite frankly. Fans don’t need a babysitter, Michael, they need someone who will call out the good, the bad, and the ugly—regardless of who signs the checks.

If Kay wants to keep the goodwill he earned as a broadcaster, the fix is simple: call the game, explain the decisions, and stop policing the crowd on your ESPN radio show. It doesn't mask the fact that you are still getting paid by the Yankees. New Yorkers will forgive blunt criticism of the team; they won’t forgive being told how to be fans by someone who’s effectively on the franchise payroll.

Kay can still be the voice we tune in for, but he's losing his footing, no doubt about it.



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