Welcome to The Pregame Lineup, postseason edition! We'll keep you up to speed on everything you need to know every weekday throughout the 2025 MLB playoffs. Thanks for being here.
Let’s face it, rats have always gotten a bad rap.
They’re routinely associated with trash, filth, disease – the worst parts of our society. People are constantly trying to get rid of them. Stamp them out. Eliminate them from Planet Earth.
But what if I told you that 50 years ago, a rat – yes, a curious rat – changed how we watch baseball on TV for the rest of our lives?
On Oct. 21, 1975, Carlton Fisk hit his famous walk-off home run in Game 6 of the World Series for the Red Sox. The most memorable part: Cameras catching his iconic pleading, urging, waving of the ball fair as it sailed toward the left-field foul pole.
The shot of Fisk was something new for viewers around the world. For decades, TV directors and producers gave audiences the game, and pretty much only the game. Pitchers pitching, hitters hitting and fielders fielding. Emotions, reaction shots of your favorite stars, were rarely captured. The Fisk wave was so popular, so refreshing, that it became standard to keep a camera on players moving forward – getting that Kirk Gibson fist pump, the Tom Lawless bat flip or even the recent Vlad Jr. grand slam toss.
But why did the camera inside the Green Monster remain on Fisk in that moment back in 1975? Was it on purpose? Was it a mid-game, genius maneuver to change how baseball was filmed on TV?
No, it was a rat. A rat did it.
"There are rodents in that wall," said legendary sports TV executive and producer John Filippelli, who was part of NBC’s crew for that fateful game. "And this one was a particularly big one. It was disconcerting to [camera operator Lou Gerard], distracting to him. When the ball got hit, it was really playing around with his foot, and he just decided he was gonna stay there. … It changed sports television history.”
So, how are you feeling about those rats now? Remarkable creatures. Read the full story on the entire night right here.
-- Matt Monagan