
Imago
Toronto Blue Jays fans look on after the Cleveland Indians defeated the Blue Jays in game five American League Championship Series baseball action in Toronto on Wednesday, October 19, 2016. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Mark Blinch

Imago
Toronto Blue Jays fans look on after the Cleveland Indians defeated the Blue Jays in game five American League Championship Series baseball action in Toronto on Wednesday, October 19, 2016. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Mark Blinch
It seems like Joe Davis couldn’t catch a break with fans this World Series. The FOX announcer already stirred controversy in Game 3 when he commented on a second-inning call involving Bo Bichette and Freddie Freeman, saying, “Home plate umpire Mark Wegner not making any Blue Jays fans happy with him.” This upset many Dodgers fans who thought it was too lovely to Toronto. However, now in Game 5, he has upset the Blue Jays fans for downplaying the rookie’s historic performance.
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The moment came in the fifth inning as Trey Yesavage was locking almost every Dodger bat. With Los Angeles already trailing 3-1, the Blue Jays pitcher reached 10 strikeouts. It was a historic moment as he also became the youngest pitcher to reach double-digit strikeouts in the World Series. A moment worth celebrating.
When MLB posted the clip of Yesavage’s celebratory moment on X with the caption, “NO. 1⃣0⃣ FOR TREY.” The Blue Jays fans noticed something unusual, and it was Joe Davis’ commentary. He made the announcement, which sounded flat. Davis said, “And Trey Yesavage has 10 strikeouts.” It was clear that the rookie was breaking a record for his team on the stage of the World Series, but the national voice sounded like he was reading lunchtime news.
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NO. 1⃣0⃣ FOR TREY pic.twitter.com/f3Dln92C4H
— MLB (@MLB) October 30, 2025
The context matters here: Davis serves as the Dodgers’ play-by-play announcer, creating an inherent conflict when calling games involving his home team. With the Dodgers trailing and their bats going silent, some fans questioned whether he was being biased.
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Meanwhile, the Boys in Blue couldn’t crack Yesavage’s pitching. He threw seven innings, surrendering only 1 run and 3 hits, while striking out 12.
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By the ninth inning, the scoreboard read 6-1 in favor of the Blue Jays, giving them a commanding 3-2 series lead. Blue Jays manager John Schneider praised his young pitcher’s performance afterward, telling reporters, “Just to throw a guy in where we did and to have bigger and bigger games every time he pitches has been pretty wild. And he’s responded to the challenge every time.”
That highlight-reel performance deserved a broadcast moment to match. Instead, many felt Davis delivered something far less compelling, and they didn’t hold back.
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Fan Reactions: Fans Call Out Bias and Lack of Excitement
The reactions reveal frustration with what some perceived as unprofessional broadcasting during baseball’s biggest stage.
One user pointed out the lack of excitement in Davis’s delivery: “And Joe Davis is announcing it like a spring training game.” Spring training games are low-stakes, unlike the high-pressure atmosphere of the World Series. With history already made through two back-to-back homers in three pitches, fans felt Davis’s calm tone didn’t match the moment’s energy.
Another fan took a harsher stance: “@MLBONFOX Get @joe_davis some media training if you’re going to put him on national games in which his regular-season team is playing, especially the #WorldSeries. His bias is astounding and beyond unprofessional.” Many agreed, saying national announcers should remain neutral, and Davis’s tone didn’t reflect that professionalism.
Some fans believed his bias was too obvious. “Joe Davis doesn’t give a f— anymore 😭😭😭 at least make it a little less obvious brother.” The comment implied that his lack of enthusiasm wasn’t accidental but a deliberate or careless dismissal of the Blue Jays’ big moment.
Comparisons quickly surfaced: “I like Joe Davis, but he doesn’t create the same big-game/big-moment feel Joe Buck did in baseball.” Fans reminisced about Joe Buck, who called 23 World Series and 21 All-Star Games for Fox between 1996 and 2021, bringing more intensity to similar moments.
Finally, one fan questioned his very presence on the call: “Why is Joe Davis on the call, man?” With other capable voices like John Smoltz, Ken Rosenthal, and Tom Verducci available, some believed the broadcast deserved a more charged tone to match the stakes.
Whether Davis actually showed bias or had an off night remains debatable, but perception matters in broadcasting. When a fan starts questioning your neutrality, it’s worth examining whether the criticism has merit.
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