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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 ...
This was the first World Series for play-by-play announcer Dan Shulman and analysts Orel Hershiser and Bobby Valentine. [176] ESPN Deportes Radio aired the Series for Spanish language listeners, with Ernesto Jerez and Guillermo Celis announcing. Locally, the two teams' flagship stations broadcast the Series with their respective announcing crews.
Dave Randorf: 2002–2014; 2010–2014 (Montreal Canadiens play-by-play announcer) Chris Cuthbert: 2005–2020 (secondary play-by-play announcer; 2014–2020 Toronto Maple Leafs and Ottawa Senators play-by-play announcer) Rod Black: 2003–2004, 2008; Bryan Mudryk: 2018–present (Montreal Canadiens play-by-play announcer)
Earlier this year, the NHL struck a TV deal with ESPN that’ll last through the 2027-28 season. After months of speculation, the Worldwide Leader in Sports finally revealed which announcers will ...
The broadcasts of National Hockey League (NHL) games produced by ESPN have been shown on its various platforms in the United States, including ESPN itself, ABC, ESPN+, ESPN2, ESPNEWS, ESPNU, Hulu, and Disney+. Since 2021, games have been broadcast under the ESPN Hockey Night branding, while those on ESPN+ have used the ESPN+ Hockey Night branding.
American commentator Vin Scully is widely considered to be one of the greatest broadcasters in baseball history. In sports broadcasting, a sports commentator (also known as a sports announcer or sportscaster) provides a real-time live commentary of a game or event, traditionally delivered in the present tense. Radio was the first medium for ...
ESPN/ABC did not have fixed broadcast teams during the 1985–86 season. Sam Rosen, Ken Wilson, Jim Hughson, Dan Kelly, Mike Lange, Jiggs McDonald, Jim Kelly, Mike Emrick, and Mike Patrick handled the play-by-play, and Mickey Redmond, Bill Clement, John Davidson, Gary Dornhoefer, Phil Esposito, and Brad Park provided color commentary.
In 1963–64, CBS offered to broadcast an NHL Game of the Week on Saturdays during the National Football League season. By the winter, CBS would move the Game of the Week to Sundays in the same time slot. Ultimately, the NHL rejected the idea, saying it would cause too many scheduling and travel problems.