Nah, they were old white guys. But they were undoubtedly lazy.
Point is, they're at a ballgame to do something baseball-related for their employer. Maybe their employer said "Evaluate Bob" and, when Bob was removed from the game, they left. But I'm pretty sure their employer didn't say "Don't evaluate Larry. We don't want anything from you but a Bob evaluation." So who's providing more value? Scout who only looks at Bob or the scout who takes it upon himself to stick around to see what Larry does? In a dying profession, wouldn't you want to provide more value?