Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 14
Congressional Baseball Game Draws 32,000 and $3.2 Million as Duplicate Numbers Snarl FS1 Broadcast
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 14

Congressional Baseball Game Draws 32,000 and $3.2 Million as Duplicate Numbers Snarl FS1 Broadcast

1 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 14

Summary

  • Duplicate jersey numbers across both teams turned the annual Congressional Baseball Game into a live identification puzzle for FS1 broadcaster Chad Pergram, who said even prepared scorecards could not reliably distinguish lawmakers on the field.
  • Republicans alone had repeated 1s, 3s, 4s, 6s, 7s, 9s and 12s — plus 04 and 06 variants — while Democrats also doubled up on several numbers, and freshman Rep. Christian Menefee appeared as a pinch-runner despite not being on Pergram’s roster.
  • 32,000 fans filled Nationals Park and the charity game raised more than $3.2 million for Washington nonprofits, underscoring why the event matters beyond the on-air confusion.
  • Republicans were chasing a sixth straight win in a tradition dating to 1909, and this year’s game also produced a standout moment when Sen. Eric Schmitt made a diving catch and emerged bloodied after crashing into the warning track.

Insights

Does the on-field camaraderie from the game actually lead to more bipartisan laws being passed?
What secret techniques do broadcasters use to identify players who share the same jersey number?