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The Maple Leafs appeared on television on Wednesdays starting in 1960, with Bill Hewitt on play-by-play. CFTO aired midweek Maple Leafs games, either independently or as part of CTV's Wednesday night Hockey Night in Canada broadcasts, starting from the station's inception in 1960 all the way to 1976–77. Then CHCH in Hamilton broadcast them ...
The following is a list of current (entering 2024–25 NHL season) National Hockey League broadcasters.With 25 teams in the U.S. and 7 in Canada, the NHL is the only one of the four major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada that maintains separate national broadcasters in each country, each producing separate telecasts of a slate of regular season games, playoff games ...
CJCL is the flagship station for the following teams' radio broadcasts: Toronto Blue Jays (MLB baseball) Toronto Raptors (NBA basketball)♠; Toronto Maple Leafs (NHL hockey)♠; ♠-In case of conflicts with other sports broadcasts, one of the games will air on another station in the Toronto area.
Radio: WXYT-FM (97.1). ∎ BOX SCORE. ... Game notes: The Red Wings get another big test against a playoff team in the Maple Leafs. The Wings won in Toronto on Jan. 14, 4-2.
Since 2021–22, Chris Cuthbert, Craig Simpson, and Kyle Bukauskas serve as the lead broadcast team, primarily calling the CBC Toronto Maple Leafs broadcast. Other Eastern Canada games aired on Citytv are called by the secondary team of John Bartlett, Garry Galley, and Shawn Mackenzie. When three or more early games involve Canadian teams ...
Although a 67% improvement over the entertainment programs formerly broadcast by City on Sunday nights, ratings for the first eight Hometown Hockey games were modest and lower than expected by Rogers, with only two games (its debut game, and an Ottawa Senators/Toronto Maple Leafs game on November 9, 2014, which had been rescheduled from a ...
Network coverage would finally resume in 1981, when Enterprise Radio broadcast the Stanley Cup Finals. [4] However, Enterprise Radio folded up shop shortly thereafter. In 1989, [5] the NHL signed a two-year contract (lasting through the 1990–91 season) with ABC Radio for the broadcast rights to the All-Star Game and Stanley Cup Finals.
Following each Toronto Maple Leafs game, radio host and Leafs PA announcer, Andy Frost discussed the ups and downs of the night's game. Much of the broadcast involves taking phone calls from the show's audience. This show was cancelled on the station, however Frost remained an evening and weekend host on AM640's sister station Q107.