The radio-style broadcast that NBC Sports tried Sunday wasn’t the only thing that was different about its telecast of the I Love New York 355 at The Glen. But it was the only thing fans mostly were in favor of.
Leigh Diffey, who does play-by-play on NBC’s Formula One coverage, filled in for Rick Allen for the race at Watkins Glen International, and many fans took issue with the network putting him in the booth for a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series broadcast.
Why? Apparently, their displeasure didn’t stem from anything he said, but with his accent.
Although some people on Twitter noted that they enjoyed Diffey’s commentating, many said they didn’t like having a “British” announcer call a stock car race. Some even implied that, because Diffey has an accent, he couldn’t possibly have the necessary expertise to provide play-by-play.
https://twitter.com/nmscha/status/894285467235078144
https://twitter.com/PitlaneWB/status/894535964625850370
@NBCSN get rid of phony British Indy/F1 announcer on NASCAR. Really? @NASCAR this is why Fox is better. @NASCARONFOX
What do you think? Leave a comment.— Skye Devarney (@skyebeth1923) August 5, 2017
https://twitter.com/Rstang46/status/894493519246655488
@NBCSports I can't believe you have a British guy announcing a NASCAR race. Dumbest thing I've ever heard. Save him for indy
— Nick Koperczak (@coppersack) August 5, 2017
https://twitter.com/LLChanana/status/894232180251140096
It likely was “messing with their heads” because the 46-year-old analyst isn’t British. Diffey actually is Australian, but people mistook his Aussie pronunciation for everything from an Irish brogue to a New England accent — although, as NBC Sports’ F1 reporter Will Buxton pointed out, the latter isn’t entirely false.
Who is this guy calling the Nascar race he has an accent that doesn't go with Nascar either British or Scottish maybe Irish
— Jon P (@BamaGrad00) August 6, 2017
Aussie mate https://t.co/ADQoDAe2LW
— Leigh Diffey (@leighdiffey) August 6, 2017
https://twitter.com/thebuxtonblog/status/894274074456838145
After the conclusion of Sunday’s Cup race, members of the NASCAR community tweeted either to correct people, to make fun of the mistake or to simply point out that it really shouldn’t matter where he hails from.
Public service announcement: @leighdiffey, the lead commentator today, is Australian, not British. And he's doing a fine job. #nascar @WGI
— Team Blaney (@teamblaney) August 6, 2017
For just this weekend let's call them "The British Hills Of Michigan" in honor of Leigh Diffey's birthplace. #NASCAR
— nascarcasm (@nascarcasm) August 7, 2017
I'm perplexed folks diss broadcaster b/c he's British. @leighdiffey probably more perplexed wondering when Australia became part of Britain. https://t.co/JlHA1f1p1d
— Bob Pockrass (@bobpockrass) August 7, 2017
Wasn't there a British guy that used to call @NASCAR races in the 80's? I'm British. We do watch NASCAR you know.
— waggie (@louis_wagner) August 7, 2017
https://twitter.com/juschlln/status/894530062908743680
It’s worth noting that Aussies are more conscious of NASCAR than many fans realize. F1 driver Daniel Ricciardo, for instance, chose No. 3 as his race number because he was a big fan of Dale Earnhardt Sr. What’s more, Australian driver Marcos Ambrose won a Cup race in 2012 at Watkins Glen, and as Diffey mentioned prior to Sunday’s race, Erik Jones’ crew chief, James Small, also is from down under.
A couple of Aussies at @WGI 👍 A huge honor for both James Small (Crew Chief on the 77) & me to call Cup for the first time! @NASCARonNBC pic.twitter.com/vtyHtopeta
— Leigh Diffey (@leighdiffey) August 6, 2017
Given how negatively some viewers reacted to hearing Diffey, you’d assume he was bad as the actual Brits, who recently parodied British commentators calling a NASCAR race.
Thumbnail photo via Twitter/@leighdiffey