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In 1995, he became the play-by-play voice on TSN for their broadcasts of Toronto Blue Jays baseball games alongside former Blue Jays catcher Buck Martinez. [6] Shulman remained with the network for seven years, during which time he also worked as the network's secondary play-by-play voice for NHL hockey and secondary announcer for NBA basketball.
Here is a full schedule of which top 25 teams are in action, including times, TV schedule, scores and more: College basketball games today: Time, TV, streaming for Saturday's top 25 matchups Skip ...
Toronto Planets - Roller Hockey International (1993) Toronto Rebellion - Rugby Canada National Junior Championship (2009) Toronto Rifles - Continental Football League (1965–67) Toronto Titans (International Swimming League) (2020–21) Toronto Tornados - Continental Basketball Association (1983–85) Toronto Torpedoes - Major League Roller ...
Sportsnet, as its parent company Rogers Communications is the owner of its sole Canadian franchise, the Toronto Blue Jays, holds national rights to Major League Baseball in Canada, including assorted games from U.S. regional sports networks, the MLB All-Star Game, and the postseason (although coverage of the latter two are relegated to MLB's U.S. broadcast partners, and MLB International).
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Toronto Blue Jays: A crowd of 52,268 attended game five of the 1992 World Series, which Toronto lost 7–2 to the Atlanta Braves. The smallest crowd for a Jays game occurred in April 2010, when 10,314 watched Toronto win 8–1 against the Kansas City Royals .
Toronto Blue Jays: Baseball: Major League Baseball: Rogers Centre: 1977 2 World Series (last in 1993) Toronto Raptors: Basketball: National Basketball Association: Scotiabank Arena: 1995 1 NBA Title (last in 2019) Toronto Rock: Box lacrosse: National Lacrosse League: Paramount Fine Foods Centre [c] 1998 (1999) [d] 6 NLL Cups (last in 2011 ...
The Blue Jays' former radio play-by-play announcer, Tom Cheek, called every Toronto Blue Jays game from the team's inaugural contest on April 7, 1977, until June 3, 2004, when he took two games off following the death of his father—a streak of 4,306 consecutive regular-season games and 41 postseason games. Cheek later died on October 9, 2005 ...