Five of the top 10 neighbors are sports journalists, and the scores are tightly compressed — Tim Kurkjian leads at 0.96, followed by Buster Olney at 0.95 and Ken Rosenthal at 0.94, with Jayson Stark and Jon Morosi both at 0.91. No single neighbor dominates; the shape is broad, with all 10 sitting between 0.90 and 0.96 — a narrow band of uniformly high overlap.
The cluster is anchored in baseball journalism and media. Beyond the five journalists, Karl Ravech (0.94, TV Personalities) and Matthew Berry (0.90, Professionals) round out the Celebrities and Influencers contingent. The remaining three neighbors shift the picture: MLB Stats (0.90, Sports Leagues) and Cut 4 (0.90, Sports Teams) are official MLB properties, while MLB Pipeline (0.90, TV Channels) is a baseball development channel. MLB Trade Rumors is itself a Website, and no other Website appears in the top 10 — the nearest audiences are shaped almost entirely by beat reporters, TV personalities, and official league accounts rather than by peer sports sites. Matthew Berry's presence at 0.90 also hints at a fantasy sports thread running through the audience, consistent with the transaction-tracking nature of the site.
The overall picture is a highly coherent baseball-media audience — one that follows the reporters who break the news, the league accounts that publish the data, and the TV personalities who contextualize it.