Hot mics and hidden angles from the NLCS, a breakdown
What Happened
In the heated National League Championship Series, the tension is palpable as the Brewers and Dodgers battle for a chance to advance to the World Series. Brewers fans are initially euphoric, fist-pumping and clapping exuberantly, but their excitement is short-lived as the tide quickly turns against them. The camera captures the emotional rollercoaster, showcasing Brewers fans transitioning from elation to utter shock, disbelief, and eventually, acceptance of their team's struggles. Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy vehemently disagrees with a close call, arguing with the umpire, who reviews the play from his unique angle. All-Star first baseman Freddy Freeman of the Dodgers then steps up to the plate and crushes a towering fly ball. Outfielder Mookie Betts tracks the ball, his reaction shifting from cautious optimism to celebratory excitement as the ball clears the fence for a home run. Meanwhile, Dodgers third base coach Dino Ebel reacts with unbridled enthusiasm, pumping his fist and jumping for joy. The umpires are also featured, with a close check-swing call sparking debate. Dodgers pitcher Blake Snell shares a heartfelt moment with teammate Juan Yamamoto, the two exchanging a hug and a bow in a display of mutual respect. As the game reaches its climax, the camera captures the raw emotions of the players and fans. Brewers slugger Kike Hernandez argues a called third strike, while a Dodgers fan in the stands revels in his team's dominance. The behind-the-scenes footage provides a unique perspective, revealing the intensity and drama unfolding beyond the broadcast. The summary concludes with a highlight reel of the best umpire-cam and base-cam moments, showcasing the unique vantage points and the sounds of the game. From the crack of the bat to the impact of the ball, these intimate glimpses offer a captivating insider's view of the high-stakes NLCS action.
Full Transcript
Click timestamps to jump to that momentBelieve it or not, there was a time in
the National League Championship Series
where Brewers fans felt like this. Fist
pumps galore, CLAPPING THEIR BUTTS. OH
YEAH,
it was short-lived.
Very shortlived. But there was a time.
I've been pretty busy in the off season
just getting the rest of the company
going and setting things up. But in my
spare time in the cracks, I have just
been reviewing all this extra footage we
got from Major League Baseball. crowd
shots, extended shots, and piecing them
together to show you guys everything
that the broadcast didn't show you
because they don't have time to go
through all of this. So, this is the
National League Championship Series
extra bonus content as put together by
myself. It's brought to you by
DraftKings Fingerpoints. Let's go,
bro.
It cut off. Like I said, that was pretty
short-lived. Those fans went from that
to this feeling very quick. And then, as
you guys remember, they got just stuck
in this feeling. Actually, maybe not. It
got worse because this feeling had a lot
of hope and pain in the eyes. And
eventually, it probably just went to
acceptance and numb. Just punching
himself in the face. Utter shock. Beard
scratches. Beard scratches. Glasses
fixes. Beard scratches. Beard scratches.
Looking up at the gods. Oh. Oh, no. just
head inand sadness. I mean, it's a tough
it's a tough montage. Usually, I like
putting together montages of everyone
when they're happy and then when they're
like extra happy or they're nervous. And
the montage of of this feeling lasted a
while. Uh oh, and then a Dodger fan
sleeping cuz that's how easy it was for
them. All right, let's see what else I
put together.
HA. OH, HE DOESN'T LIKE IT. He's like,
"No, it was down." South Freelick
AGREES. HE SAYS, "NO, IT'S DOWN."
Manager Pat Murphy didn't like it. It's
[ __ ] John. It's [ __ ] [ __ ]
Here's the ump cam. Look at it. And what
do you got?
Here we go. This is as slow as it gets.
The umpire does not get this frame. To
me, that looks like a strike from the
way he's angling his head. But we're
just getting his point of view here.
Watch it again. And again, this is
slow-mo.
I think that was in there. I think I
agree with the call after seeing all of
the footage. And then the ball boy hit
some new balls and some ear tickles.
Yeah, that's my ear. Yeah, I can feel
it. No. Yeah, I have feeling on my ear.
Yeah, for sure. Freddy Freeman got a
hold of this ball. Bam. Smokes it high.
Does it have enough? Does it have
enough? Is it going to be caught? It is
off the awning and then into the picnic
table. The reason I show you the home
run is so you can see the reactions that
we have. Here's Mookie's reaction. Okay.
Eyes are going. Eyes are Oh, okay. Still
now. Now he's hopeful. Now he's trying
to find a view through butts, through
legs, behind backs. Celebrates. That's
Mooki's reaction. We And then he's out
on the front step. Left hand number one
up. Now we have Show's reaction to the
same pitch and hit and he had more
excitement right away, more hope right
away. He is
Oh yeah. Okay. So he did no blockage of
his view. Two hands are up and now he's
fist whatever that is. I don't know what
you call it. Now he's Okay, here we go.
Same time.
Tracking. Tracking. Oh,
Muki silent. Show kind of pushing on.
Trying to push it on. And then
let's see. Show reacted first, but
Muki's view was blocked. So, I don't
know if it's it was a clean race. I'm
not sure about that. Check swings and
great camera work. We've got this guy on
the third base side. The cameraman is
wide showing the whole field. It's a
beautiful shot. He realizes what's going
to happen. Bam. punches in for the punch
out. Great camera work, but was it great
umping? Let's see. Here's the side view.
Oh, that was close. Oh, Kiki doesn't
like it. That dude loves it, though.
Look at that fist bump. Oh, come on.
Come on, Kik. Sit down that way. Let's
watch it again here and see what we
think. You guys think he went frame by
frame?
Eh,
as of now, that gets called a lot. went
to his knee. It's parallel enough. I
think he he gets called. This fan liked
it a lot. Like I said, fist pump and
then come hither sign. Oh yeah, come
this way. Oh yeah, come this way. And
sit and again different camera shot on
the pitcher knows what's happening.
Zooms in. Yes. Punch out again.
The camera crew all over. That's why
they're doing the biggest game. Now
that's a swing. I don't need to show
slow-mo for that. That one great call. I
thought this was a cute interaction in
the dugout. Blake Snell gets a hug from
Yamamoto and then just, you know,
crossing cultures, respecting each
other. He gives him the little bow. You
know, thanks for the hug. I'll give you
the bow and then we'll do another
handshake and a two-handed handshake.
Very, very gentle. Yes. Thank you. Thank
you very much. And then uh what's he
signaling here? Like one big. What's
that mean? I or big thank you. So just
charades happening. You forget you
forget that like you know THERE'S BIG
DIVIDES. OH FREDDY PROBABLY THE last
time the Brewers in this season got
pumped up for a walk. It was a big
moment. He holds ball for Yeah. Look at
the guy behind him. Oh yeah. Take your
pace, baby. Let's go.
THAT WAS about the end of their
excitement, I think, in Milwaukee. But
just a fired up slow-mo shot of ball
four. You don't get that in the regular
season. The best of ump cam miked up
moments. These are either cool pitches,
the umpires miked up, you hear stuff,
cool view. It's the best of the National
League Championship Series Cam in my
opinion.
>> Oh, he go swing.
Huh?
Here we go.
Pause.
Hey.
Oh, that's beautiful.
Ow.
>> Almost hit the ump.
>> Shadows.
Jeez.
Fight.
Fight.
Fight.
Fight.
Hair.
>> Oh no. Did he go
pair?
Hurry.
Hurry.
Hurry.
Hurry.
No.
Oh, Donnie just clobbering him. What a
view to have of that. We had a great
catch in the crowd right behind the
dugout. It's fouled up. It's up. We've
got first baseman running. The dugout is
there. It's behind Guy in the jacket.
Makes a great two-handed. Very safe
grab. He dropped his rally to tal towel.
Watch. He drops his rally towel right
here. Has it in his right hand. Realizes
I need both. I'm going to catch this
thing. Doesn't let it bounce. Doesn't
let it touch the ground. Doesn't want it
to go to review. Wants everyone know I
caught this. Gets the respect he
deserves. We're going to get a high
five. Lefty. We're going to get a
handshake. Pats on the back. Good job.
And this guy wants a high five. Doesn't
get it right away. And you gotta, you
know, a guy that's wearing a Hawaiian
shirt in Wisconsin
in November,
he's gonna stay strong and demand his
high five. Hey, tap tap. Give me my high
five. Now it's about me. And he gets it.
And then he pulls him in for a shake.
Never do that to me again. Overhead view
of a ball hit right up the middle. Play
is made. Thrown to first. Looks pretty
routine from that angle. And you can see
him look at his teammates can be like,
"Uh, yeah, it hit. Yeah, it bounced."
And I love when we get base ball. This
ball takes a funky hop off the mound and
ramps itself up onto the ball. Watch it
in slow motion. Just a lot going on. A
lot of obstacles in the way here. And he
hangs tough. We've got it hits the top
of the mound, which is going to speed
ramp it up right there. Boop. And that
goes straight from mound to base of the
bag, which is going to turbo boost it
again for like a nice high hop off of
that. It didn't skid off of it. But two
obstacles stayed with it, hung tough,
got the out. Listen to the audio of it
hitting the bass. It's a very fun sound.
It's a satisfying sound.
Close your eyes and listen to all the
noises of this again. Beautiful.
It's the little things. Crowd on their
feet. Contraras up. Knee to hero. Line
drive. Oh, right into Mookie's glove.
[ __ ]
Hit it. Well, no result. Brutal sport.
It's everybody's favorite. The best of
base cam. What does it look like from
the bases point of view? Everyone's
always wondered. Well, that's nice.
Okay, what do we got here?
Oh,
we were at second base and we have a
pickoff play. Now you can watch again
knowing what you're looking at.
Woo!
Second base again. And the ball errant
throw rolls right past us.
Okay, first base.
Pitcher covering.
First base taking the lead. It's hit to
Freddy. Grabs it. Throws to first.
Yamamoto covering. Makes the scoop.
Dirt right in our faces. We're the base.
That is not that graceful of a slide.
But I appreciate the uplose look at the
the cleat. You don't see that a lot.
Right into the camera. That's cute. This
one was a close play. Head first slide.
Left hand is there. Glove comes down and
gets him right there. He does not have
the base. Base camag
>> bunt play on. First base is going to run
in and crash. Grab it. Spin. Fire. Easy
play. Nicely done. What do we got here?
A double play ball to second to first.
They turn two. Let's watch it from
second base. Here we go. It's hit to
third base. He grabs it. Throws it to
second. He turns it. Fires it. We
already saw that double play from the
bases. You've always wanted to see that.
Admit it.
Uh-oh. He caught it. He's got to get
back. Don't get doubled off. Ah,
where were you going?
Slide. Stealing third. Bam. In there.
Stealing second. In there. And then I
spent a lot of time editing this. I
already posted on social just making
these edits. I need to make myself laugh
sometimes. And I thought, hey, what
would this look like if I edited it like
this? And then this is what it looked
like.
That was an hour of editing, key framing
every single frame on my couch just for
funsies. Did you know Roki almost got
his head taken off by a ground rule
double? I didn't know that until I
watched this camera shot of this ground
rule double. We got it smoked. It's in
the gap. It's going to land on dirt.
Bounce up. Oh, he ducked just in the
nick of time. Everyone is there. First,
let's do our dance. Okay. And then let's
all point out that almost hit you in the
face, dude. You ducked. He's like,
"Yeah, I ducked that way." They're like,
"Yeah, that ball was coming. It went
right over your head. That was close."
And then they throw it to someone in the
crowd because they've been nice. Watch
it again.
And there's his face. And whoa.
I like how they did the dance first.
They point out his head. They're like,
"Dude, that almost hit you. Hold up.
Acknowledge the batter. Okay, we're
dancing." Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. No. But
for real, that almost hit you, dude.
Boom. This is what Otani's home run
sounds and looks like if you are a bird
flying over the stadium.
And this is what an Otani home run looks
like if you are the bases fastened to
the ground.
And this is what the bullpen looks like
after Otani hits his third homer of the
day. And everything is just roses.
Yes.
High fives galore. Everyone's going to
get together. High five there. High five
there. But then we just got a hand.
Wild. Just a wild hand dancing. He's
like, "You know what?" Boom. Boom. Boom.
I'll give you high fives. Great. And I
don't even notice. I'm doing my own
thing. You can high five me if you want.
I'm dancing. I'm dancing. I'm riding.
I'm having fun. I'm still going. I
paused. Now I'm going to scream. Ah,
they had a lot of fun.
Otani says hi to every opposing manager
besides Schilt. That was the only
manager that he stopped saying hi to. So
here he is saying hi to Pat Murphy
before the game. A little salute. Pat
Murphy points back at him says, "Okay,
thank you. Here we go." Just a nice
respectful thing Otani does. Except uh
Shil, who's not managing anymore, but
that was reported, I believe, that he
was the only manager. He stopped doing
that. And yeah, what a nice little hero
shot of him walking in getting ready.
Super slow-mo. Cool stuff. And then
there's a lot of shots of Otani just
making faces. He's very expressive. Here
he is in the batters box contemplating
the pitch. Like, okay, that was a little
nasty. That's fine. Here we go. And then
we got another one of him just in
thought. Just cute. Just a cute guy in
thought thinking about stuff.
Yes. Yes. Yes. Okay. He confirms his
thought over there. Whoa. What do we got
going on over here? We've got quizzical.
Very quizzical,
huh?
Oh, nice bat. Look at this bat. Then
we've got a cute whistle while you work.
Just getting some music in your head.
Get a rhythm. You know, you got to have
music in your head to do stuff
successfully. Said someone somewhere.
Time out. Uh, time out, please. Time
out. Now he's on the mound. And I
believe he's trying to get the attention
of the manager again. He's like, uh,
yes. Uh, nope. Can you get him? Can you
get Murf for me? Uh, Murf, where are
you? Hello. Where are you?
Uh, yes. Hi. Hi. Good game to you. This
one cracked me up. On the mound, gets
the pitch call. He says, "Okay, I'll
throw it." Wait, what the [ __ ] that
pit? Wait, what? I have that pitch.
Well, here it goes.
Okay. All right. Not bad. What? What was
that? Huh? You want me to throw what?
This one? Huh? I have that. Of course I
do. Ball four. Oh,
it was out. Okay, I agree. You're right.
I agree. I agree.
So, just tons of faces by Otani. Closeup
of Yamamoto's foot and his cleat. Got
the nice red laces, the blue Nike, and
then the toe, the special toe protector
cuz he drags his foot so much. That's
cool. Are they going to start making
cleats with that as a design? Maybe that
already happens. I'm not in that world,
but that is just they decided on the
broadcast we need to get a beautiful
closeup of the the cleat and the tow
drag.
And we got it. And I wasn't going to let
that go to waste. That's beautiful
camera work. This umpire drills the
footooth hole with the ball when he
throws it back at the end of the inning.
Watch this. He throws it. It's up on the
mound and lands beautifully there. Some
people when they go to a stadium, if you
don't know this, some people at the end
of every inning, they play a game where
you have to guess if the umpire is going
to throw the ball and if it's going to
go on the mound or off the mound. The
way that we played growing up was you
had a dollar and if you every time a
base got touched, the dollar passed. So
a home run was hit, that's four bases.
You pass the dollar four times down your
group. And if the dollar was on you and
there was two outs, you had to declare
before the third out happened on or off
the mound. And then if you got it
correctly, you kept the money. If you
didn't, you added another dollar or $5
to the pot and kept going. This umpire
some when you play this game, you learn
some umpires don't care at all. They
just go like this. other umpires know
this is a game because one guy at one
time an umpire didn't turn to uh our
section and like looked at us because he
heard us cheering or not cheering. So
this umpire he's aiming for the mound
and I don't know I forget who it is. I
could look it up. Maybe I don't need to.
And just want to commend him on a nice
shot. That's just a nice roll right into
the foothold. Stuck it beautifully.
Here's a Freddy Freeman double. And if
you're not interested in watching a
Freddy Freeman double, you might be
interested in watching Freddy Freeman
swang his hips around because they get a
nice slow-mo shot of this that just
makes it the butt. So,
you know, if you want it, I thought some
people might want that. I thought
Dodgers fans might want it. Dodgers
putting the Brewers to bed right here.
Another hit. Beautiful camera work. They
pick up Kik rounding second. He's going
to round third. He's going to score on
the hit. And then this camera operator,
he knows exactly where he's going next.
He's going to the crowd cuz he's got a
kid. CUZ LET'S GO.
Good night.
Good night.
Bye.
Something I always love finding when I
get this footage is all the different
pitch grips and release because we have
the high frame rate cameras, we have the
super slow-mo. So, here's Blake Snell.
This is going to be a fourseam fast
ball. You can see his fingers uh along
the four seams and he's just going to
rip that, pull it backwards, get that
spin, and hit his spot. From that angle,
it looks low, but we already showed you
that video earlier. This is his change
up. Now, you can see it's the the power
finger, the pointer finger is off. It's
the other two fingers, and that middle
finger is really what pulls it. And he
doesn't have it across the seams. He's
got it on the uh railroad of the
horseshoe, if that makes sense. And uh
pulls it with his middle finger there to
get that last second spin. And the power
fingers are off, so he's not going to be
able to get as much spin, get as much
VLOO on it, and it just falls off and
away. That's beautiful. And then we have
the curveball where he's going to wrap
it around. The thumb is behind it and
he's going to pull down on the pointer
finger to get top spin.
And that is going to turn over and over
and over and on its way falls off. I
love looking at this stuff. So, here's
the three put together in slow-mo.
And you can see all the different ways
he's holding it. Power fingers on, power
fingers off, behind the ball, on the
side of the ball. Three different things
causing three different speeds and three
different movements with the same
delivery. Pitching's fun. Now, let's do
the same thing with Yamamoto. We've got
this one and that is his four seam grip.
You can see across the four seams, he's
going to pull down, get that tight
backspin, lot of revolutions that rides
and stays up and is a on top of the bat.
And then we've got the split finger here
where he's got the railroad of the
laces. That's straightaway where the
logo is and his fingers are on the
outside of it. So a splitter grip and
that's going to fall off to the right.
His right finger there is going to be
the last to touch it right there. So
it's going to be spinning uh off of that
finger and that makes it go towards his
right side. That's why they call it arm
side run. That's his arm. It's going to
run that way and come into the batter
and drop off a lot. So, those are three
different pitch grips there. Very fun to
look at. Here are two of them freezed
up. There's the splitter and the four
seam side by side and the spin that
comes off of them. You can see one is
tight and spinning a lot and one does
not have a lot of uh spin. Not a lot of
reolutions.
Revolutions per minute. Revolutions.
Why' I Why' I doubt myself? That's just
sounded weird when I said it. And here
is an overlay where I tried my best to
sync them up even though their cameras
are moving. So, you can see how they
look side by side and the difference.
One just shoots out and the other falls
down. But for a little bit from the
batter's point of view, he can't tell
which one is which. So, that is some fun
editing to showcase how the pitchers are
doing what they're doing. Here's one of
Glass. Now, I just found this fun to
watch. You get to see his delivery, his
grip, and how the baseball moves. And I
will try to pause it and show you. That
is a two seam grip. So, he has his
fingers on the railway of the ball, not
across the four seams, which is going to
make it go to the right a lot. So, it's
a sinker or a two seam. They're kind of
interchangeable terms, but it's how you
grip the ball. And you can see that just
run away from Yelli's bat, where if it
was a force, he would stay. Now we got
Roki out of the bullpen and he's
throwing a splitter, but this is much
different than the splitter I showed you
from Yamamoto earlier. This is more of a
fork ball in my opinion. That is at the
webbing of his fingers, not at his
fingertips. That there's pressure deep
in his fingers, which is going to take a
ton of spin off this pitch. And it acts
more of as a closer to a knuckle ball uh
than a split fast ball or a split change
because it's really just doing its own
dance. No spin and just drops like
crazy.
That I think that's more of a I think we
have so many splitters in baseball now
because we have uh a lot of guys are
throwing what I what used to be called
fork balls, but they're calling them
splitters. Like that to me is not the
same pitch that um Gossman throws. He
actually throws a circle change grip
that is like a split change up. That's
not the same pitch that
uh Kirby is throwing or even Yamamoto.
That's more Fernando Cruz is throwing
this pitch or Raldis Chapman throws this
pitch every now and then, but they just
stopped calling them fork balls. So like
if you look at how many splitters are
being thrown in the league, the number
is going like crazy. But I think where
breaking balls are getting segmented
into sweeper, slerve, curve, slider,
and you're getting so you're getting
like less because you're
microcategorizing them. The splitter is
is is picking up other pitches. Split
change, split fast ball, uh fork ball,
they're all just splitters. So I feel
like it's an identification thing. And
more people are throwing splitters. Oh
yeah, make some noise.
Yeah.
Okay. Dodgers fans, different vibe than
Brewers fans. They started their home
games happy and they stayed happy the
entire time. And what is happiness if
you feel no pain.
Maybe that's just numbness as well. No,
they look pretty they look pretty happy.
Uh they're pretty into it. Waving flags
on the dugout, going crazy. Beautiful
sunny day. Shadows in Glassnau's favor.
Mascots are chilling and hanging out,
having tons of fun. Didn't know they had
two mascots. Not in the mascot game.
Binoculars are out. Seeing all those
cute Otani faces I was telling you about
earlier. Focusing in. Look at the active
focus there. Wow. Very nice. This slider
from Mezerowski had my hitting himself
in the head. Just undoing himself. That
cut in like crazy at such a high speed.
It's there and it just drops. So he
misses but he swings so hard because
it's so fast that he hits himself in the
helmet. It falls down. He's like, "Whoa,
I hit myself. You good? I'm good." Yeah.
Damn. It's a big swing. How about a
little picture and picture on a sweet
Mookie Bets play? It started on Roberts
and then Glass Now is going to Hey,
Glass Now is an awesome dugout guy. Just
an awesome dugout guy. He's always top
step. He's always streaming. Love
streaming Mookie's name. I found that
out by watching these. That's it. That's
everything I found from the National
League Championship Series. There's four
games. I still am going to do the World
Series, I think. But they're kind of
become a back burner between the between
the cracks of my day task. So, it'll
come. But if something bigger happens,
I'm going to make that video. Also, we
got holidays coming up. I got a vacation
coming up. It's the off season. trying
to relax and unwind so I don't burn
myself out and then not have fun during
the season, if that makes sense. So, I
appreciate you guys hanging with me and
everyone that understands that part of
the equation. Thank you very much. This
breakdown brought to you by DraftKings.
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