Philadelphia Baseball Review Podcast

Philadelphia Baseball Review

The Philadelphia Baseball Review Podcast covers the full baseball landscape in and around Philadelphia, from the Phillies to college and amateur baseball, with original reporting, analysis, and long-form conversations. The show also features Diamonds & Scribes, an interview series documenting influential figures in baseball journalism and the craft behind the coverage of the game.

  1. Diamonds & Scribes Series: Paul White | EP. 04

    Feb 23

    Diamonds & Scribes Series: Paul White | EP. 04

    Paul White — The Birth of Baseball Weekly & Reinventing the Box Score In 1991, baseball fans lost something they had relied on for decades. The Sporting News stopped printing box scores. What happened next would change baseball media forever. In this episode of Diamonds & Scribes, Patrick Gordon sits down with longtime editor Paul White, the founding editor of Baseball Weekly, to revisit how a last-minute idea inside USA Today became a national institution. White shares the chaotic early days of launching a weekly baseball newspaper from scratch — building a 17-person newsroom in weeks, secretly assembling prototypes after deadline, and getting on newsstands by Opening Day. They discuss: Why Baseball Weekly existed to solve one simple problem: box scores How fantasy baseball quietly shaped modern sports statistics The infamous moment when Bryant Gumbel held up USA Today on the Today Show and demanded: “I want my old box score back.” The philosophy behind covering all 30 teams equally — not just big markets The internal battles over Yankees vs. Blue Jays covers What it was like managing a national publication through the 1994 strike The stories they couldn’t print — and why ethical standards mattered How print culture created permanence in a way digital never quite has White reflects candidly on leadership, newsroom chaos, advertiser pressure, Bud Selig phone calls, and the balancing act between serving baseball traditionalists and the rising fantasy audience. At its heart, this conversation explores a simple question: What did baseball fans truly want each week — and how do you give it to them? For writers, editors, and lifelong fans, this is a masterclass in building something that matters. About Diamonds & Scribes Diamonds & Scribes is a Philadelphia Baseball Review podcast series archiving conversations with some of the most influential voices in baseball journalism — preserving the craft, discipline, and storytelling behind the game. www.philadelphiabaseballreview.com

    1h 24m
  2. Diamonds & Scribes Series: Bob Nightengale | EP. 02

    12/30/2025

    Diamonds & Scribes Series: Bob Nightengale | EP. 02

    Diamonds & Scribes — Episode 02 Bob Nightengale: Scoops, Trust, and the Real Cost of Being First Diamonds & Scribes is a limited-series podcast produced by the Philadelphia Baseball Review, exploring the craft of baseball journalism through conversations with the writers who shaped it. Each episode pulls back the curtain on the reporting, storytelling, habits, instincts, and hard-earned wisdom that define great baseball writing. Bob Nightengale has spent more than four decades covering Major League Baseball, building a career rooted in access, trust, and institutional memory. Now a national columnist for USA TODAY, Nightengale came up through the Kansas City Star and the Los Angeles Times, where he learned the value of preparation, restraint, and authoritative reporting. Over time, he became one of the sport’s most reliable national voices — not by chasing attention, but by earning confidence across clubhouses, front offices, and agencies. In this conversation, Nightengale broke down the structural realities of modern baseball reporting, particularly the differences between national writers and beat reporters. He explained how agents drive the vast majority of free-agent information, while collective bargaining rules limit what teams can publicly deny. That imbalance, combined with social media, has compressed the news cycle to seconds, making verification harder and judgment more important than ever. Experience, he noted, remains the only real filter in an environment built for speed. Much of the discussion centered on Baseball Weekly and the reporting culture it enabled. The weekly format allowed for full box scores, long-form storytelling, and unmatched access — the kind that made spending days with players like Ken Griffey Jr., Tony Gwynn, and Larry Walker possible. Nightengale argued that era benefited from something modern media rarely affords: time. Time to know people, build trust, and write stories that carried depth rather than immediacy. Nightengale also reflected on the personal and ethical cost of the job. He spoke about the constant presence of the phone, the impact on family life, and the responsibility that comes with publishing information that can follow someone indefinitely. At this stage of his career, success is defined less by being first and more by respect — by credibility, relationships, and stories that age well. His advice to young writers remains unchanged: be prepared, protect trust, and remember that judgment matters as much as access.

    1h 5m
  3. Diamonds & Scribes Series: Paul Hagen | EP. 01

    12/04/2025

    Diamonds & Scribes Series: Paul Hagen | EP. 01

    Diamonds & Scribes — Episode 01 Paul Hagen: Inside Four Decades of Baseball Writing Diamonds & Scribes is a limited-series podcast produced by the Philadelphia Baseball Review, exploring the craft of baseball journalism through conversations with the writers who shaped it. Each episode pulls back the curtain on the reporting, storytelling, habits, instincts, and hard-earned wisdom that define great baseball writing. Hall of Fame baseball writer Paul Hagen has spent more than four decades living the life so many fans dream about: on the beat, in the press box, and inside clubhouses from Texas to Philadelphia. In this episode, he joins host Patrick Gordon for an unfiltered conversation about the craft behind the bylines — the real work that goes into great baseball journalism. Hagen explains how a snarky high school gamer got him kicked off the football beat, what it felt like to walk into a major-league press box for the first time, and why the best writers do far more than just quote players. He dives into what he’s learned from handling criticism (from readers and players), why Lenny Dykstra was secretly one of the most media-savvy players of his era, and what actually defines “great baseball writing” in a world where everyone has a platform. Along the way, Hagen discusses the fierce competitiveness of the Philadelphia beat, his 20+ years with the Philadelphia Daily News, the evolving dynamics inside MLB clubhouses, his favorite teams and toughest stories, and what it truly meant to receive the BBWAA’s Spink Award in Cooperstown. For aspiring journalists, baseball die-hards, and anyone curious about how stories really get made, this is a masterclass — and proof that, as Hagen says, if you can cover a baseball beat, you can cover anything.

    1h 30m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

The Philadelphia Baseball Review Podcast covers the full baseball landscape in and around Philadelphia, from the Phillies to college and amateur baseball, with original reporting, analysis, and long-form conversations. The show also features Diamonds & Scribes, an interview series documenting influential figures in baseball journalism and the craft behind the coverage of the game.