David Maril of the Brockton (MA) Enterprise says he likes
to see local announcers on the World Series TV broadcasts just like in the old days.
Personally, as much as I would like to have local announcers on the national TV broadcasts of the World Series just like in the old days, unfortunately we have to come to the realization that times change. Particularly, they change when more money is at stake to go along with all of the technological advances. Wanting local announcers to cover the World Series to me, creates a slippery slope. Would you also want local announcers to call the national television broadcast of the Super Bowl also? Besides, if you don't want to listen to the national TV broadcasts, then there's always the local radio broadcasts.
I grew up in the '80s and '90s (long after the local announcer policy ended). The baseball announcers (at least on a national level) that I would say that I revere and idolize the most are Vin Scully, Bob Costas and Al Michaels. I would say that the main problem today concerning baseball broadcasts, is the quality of the announcers (not the fact that local announcers are no longer allowed to call the World Series).
And while I agree with David Maril that Joe Buck (my main problem with him is that he sounds too emotionally detached in his baseball play-by-play) will never be a good as his father (my first real exposure/memories of Jack Buck was when he was calling baseball games with Tim McCarver on CBS TV back in the early '90s), it's unfiair to chastise Joe for not exactly sounding like Jack. I mean, if I smoked packets of Camels like Buck Sr. did in his lifetime, I would be sounding like him too.