List of National League Championship Series broadcasters

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The following is a list of the national

television and radio networks and announcers that have broadcast National League Championship Series
games over the years. It does not include any announcers who may have appeared on local broadcasts produced by the participating teams.

National television

2020s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator(s)
Field reporter
(s)
Pregame host Pregame analysts Trophy presentation
2023
TBS
Brian Anderson Ron Darling and Jeff Francoeur Matt Winer Lauren Shehadi Jimmy Rollins, Pedro Martínez, Curtis Granderson, and Albert Pujols (Games 1–2) Matt Winer
2022
FS1
(Games 1–3, 5)
Joe Davis John Smoltz Ken Rosenthal and Tom Verducci Kevin Burkhardt (Games 1–4)
Matt Vasgersian (Game 5)
Alex Rodriguez, David Ortiz, and Frank Thomas Tom Verducci
Fox
(Games 2, 4)
2021
TBS
Brian Anderson Ron Darling and Jeff Francoeur Lauren Shehadi Bob Costas Jimmy Rollins, Pedro Martínez, and Curtis Granderson Lauren Shehadi
2020
Fox[1]
(Games 1, 4, 7)
Joe Buck (Games 1–6)
Joe Davis (Game 7)
John Smoltz Ken Rosenthal and Tom Verducci Kevin Burkhardt Alex Rodriguez, David Ortiz, and Frank Thomas Tom Verducci
FS1
(Games 2–7)

Notes

2010s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator(s)
Field reporter
(s)
Pregame hosts Pregame analysts Trophy presentation
2019
TBS
Brian Anderson Ron Darling and Jeff Francoeur Lauren Shehadi Casey Stern Gary Sheffield, Pedro Martínez, Jimmy Rollins, and Curtis Granderson Brian Anderson
2018
FS1
(Games 1, 3–7)
Joe Buck John Smoltz Ken Rosenthal and Tom Verducci Kevin Burkhardt Alex Rodriguez, David Ortiz, and Frank Thomas Tom Verducci
Fox
(Game 2)
2017
TBS
Brian Anderson Ron Darling Sam Ryan Casey Stern Gary Sheffield, Pedro Martínez, Jimmy Rollins, and Ryan Howard (Games 4–5) Brian Anderson
2016
FS1
Joe Buck John Smoltz Ken Rosenthal and Tom Verducci Kevin Burkhardt Alex Rodriguez, Pete Rose, Frank Thomas, and Tom Verducci (in Chicago) Kevin Burkhardt
2015
TBS
Ernie Johnson Ron Darling and Cal Ripken Matt Winer and Sam Ryan Casey Stern Gary Sheffield, Pedro Martínez, and Dusty Baker Ernie Johnson
2014
Fox
(Game 1)
Joe Buck Harold Reynolds and Tom Verducci Ken Rosenthal and Erin Andrews Kevin Burkhardt C. J. Nitkowski, Eric Karros, Gabe Kapler, and Frank Thomas Erin Andrews
FS1
(Games 2–5)
2013
TBS
Ernie Johnson Ron Darling and Cal Ripken Craig Sager Keith Olbermann Tom Verducci, Pedro Martínez, and Gary Sheffield Ernie Johnson
2012
Fox
Joe Buck Tim McCarver Ken Rosenthal
Erin Andrews (Games 1–4, 6–7)
Chris Myers (Game 5)
Matt Vasgersian Harold Reynolds, Eric Karros, and A. J. Pierzynski Erin Andrews
2011
TBS
Brian Anderson Ron Darling and John Smoltz Craig Sager Matt Winer David Wells, Cal Ripken, and Dennis Eckersley Matt Winer
2010
Fox
Joe Buck Tim McCarver Ken Rosenthal Chris Rose
Mitch Williams
Chris Rose

Notes

2000s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator(s)
Field reporter
(s)
Pregame hosts Pregame analysts Trophy presentation
2009
TBS
Chip Caray Ron Darling and Buck Martinez Craig Sager Ernie Johnson David Wells, Cal Ripken, and Dennis Eckersley Ernie Johnson
2008
Fox
Joe Buck Tim McCarver Ken Rosenthal and Chris Myers Jeanne Zelasko Kevin Kennedy, Mark Grace, and Eric Karros Chris Myers
2007
TBS
Chip Caray Tony Gwynn and Bob Brenly Craig Sager Ernie Johnson
Frank Thomas, Cal Ripken, and Ron Darling
Ernie Johnson
2006
Fox
Joe Buck Tim McCarver and Luis González Ken Rosenthal Jeanne Zelasko Kevin Kennedy and A. J. Pierzynski Kenny Albert
2005
Fox
Thom Brennaman Steve Lyons and Bob Brenly Kenny Albert Jeanne Zelasko Kevin Kennedy Steve Lyons
2004
Fox
Thom Brennaman Steve Lyons and Bob Brenly Chris Myers Jeanne Zelasko Kevin Kennedy Steve Lyons
2003
Fox
Thom Brennaman Steve Lyons and Al Leiter Jeanne Zelasko Kevin Kennedy Steve Lyons
2002
Fox
Joe Buck Tim McCarver Jeanne Zelasko Kevin Kennedy Tim McCarver
2001
Fox
Joe Buck (in Arizona)
Thom Brennaman (in Atlanta)
Tim McCarver (in Arizona)
Steve Lyons (in Atlanta)
Jeanne Zelasko Kevin Kennedy Steve Lyons
2000
Fox
Joe Buck Tim McCarver and Bob Brenly Keith Olbermann Kevin Kennedy Keith Olbermann

Notes

1990s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator(s)
Field reporter
(s)
1999 NBC Bob Costas[9][10] Joe Morgan Jim Gray and Craig Sager
1998
Fox
Joe Buck Tim McCarver and Bob Brenly
1997 NBC Bob Costas[11] Joe Morgan[12] and Bob Uecker[13] Jim Gray[14]
1996
Fox
Joe Buck Tim McCarver and Bob Brenly
1995 ABC (in Cincinnati) Al Michaels Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver Lesley Visser
NBC (in Atlanta) Greg Gumbel Joe Morgan Johnny Bench
1993 CBS Sean McDonough[15] Tim McCarver[16][17] Jim Gray
1992 CBS Sean McDonough Tim McCarver Jim Gray
1991 CBS Jack Buck Tim McCarver Andrea Joyce[18]
1990 CBS Jack Buck Tim McCarver James Brown[19]

Notes

  • The 1990 postseason started on a Thursday,[20] while World Series started on a Tuesday due to the brief lockout.
    • In 1990, Major League Baseball and CBS went with some rather unconventional scheduling during the LCS round, with two consecutive scheduled off-days[21] in the NLCS after Game 2.
  • In
    ET. Instead, they opted to show programming such as Rescue 911 at 8 p.m. rather than a baseball pregame show.[22]
  • The 1994 National League Championship Series was planned to air on NBC. However, those plans were scrapped when a strike caused the entire postseason to be cancelled.
  • The rather messy 1995 arrangement was courtesy of "The Baseball Network", which was Major League Baseball's in-house production facility. ABC and NBC (who essentially, distributed the telecasts rather than produce them by themselves like in the past) shared the same on-air graphics and even the microphone “flags” had the "Baseball Network" logo on it with the respective network logo. In addition, the first four games of both of the 1995 League Championship Series were regionally televised.

1980s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator(s)
1989 NBC[23][24] Vin Scully[25] (Games 1, 3–5)
Bob Costas[26] (Game 2)
Tom Seaver
1988 ABC[27] Al Michaels[28] Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver[29]
1987 NBC Vin Scully[30][31] Joe Garagiola
1986 ABC[32] Keith Jackson[33] Tim McCarver[34]
1985 NBC Vin Scully[35] Joe Garagiola
1984 ABC Don Drysdale[36] Earl Weaver and Reggie Jackson[36]
1983 NBC Vin Scully[37] Joe Garagiola
1982 ABC Al Michaels Tommy Lasorda[38]
Howard Cosell (Games 1, 3)[39]
1981 NBC[40] Dick Enberg Tom Seaver
1980 ABC Keith Jackson Don Drysdale and Howard Cosell

Notes

1970s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator(s)
1979 NBC Joe Garagiola Tony Kubek and Don Sutton[66]
1978 ABC Al Michaels Don Drysdale and Johnny Bench[67]
1977 NBC Joe Garagiola (in Los Angeles)
Jim Simpson (Game 3)
Dick Enberg (Game 4)
Tony Kubek (in Los Angeles)
Maury Wills (Game 3)
Don Drysdale (Game 4)
1976 ABC Al Michaels Warner Wolf and Tom Seaver
1975 NBC Joe Garagiola (in Cincinnati)
Curt Gowdy (in Pittsburgh)
Maury Wills (in Cincinnati)
Tony Kubek (in Pittsburgh)
1974 NBC Jim Simpson (Game 1)
Curt Gowdy (in Los Angeles)
Maury Wills (Game 1)
Tony Kubek (in Los Angeles)
1973 NBC Curt Gowdy (in Cincinnati[68])
Jim Simpson (in Queens, New York)
Tony Kubek (in Cincinnati)
Maury Wills (in Queens, New York)
1972 NBC Jim Simpson (Game 1)
Curt Gowdy (in Cincinnati)
Sandy Koufax (Game 1)
Tony Kubek (in Cincinnati)
1971 NBC Curt Gowdy (in San Francisco)
Jim Simpson (in Pittsburgh)
Tony Kubek (in San Francisco)
Sandy Koufax (in Pittsburgh)
1970 NBC Curt Gowdy (in Pittsburgh)
Jim Simpson (in Cincinnati)
Tony Kubek (in Pittsburgh)
Sandy Koufax (in Cincinnati)

Notes

1969

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator
1969 NBC Jim Simpson (Game 1)
Curt Gowdy (Games 2–3)
Sandy Koufax (Game 1)
Tony Kubek (Games 2–3)

Notes

  • In the early years of the League Championship Series,[70] NBC typically televised a doubleheader on the opening Saturday, followed by a single game on Sunday (because of NFL coverage). They then covered the weekday games with a 1.5 hour overlap, joining the second game in progress when the first one ended. NBC usually swapped announcer crews after Game 2.
  • From
    Bob Murphy and Ralph Kiner on WOR-TV
    .

Surviving telecasts

For all of the League Championship Series telecasts spanning from 1969 to 1975, only Game 2 of the 1972 American League Championship Series (Oakland vs. Detroit) is known to exist. However, the copy on the trade circuit of Game 2 of the 1972 ALCS is missing the Bert Campaneris-Lerrin LaGrow brawl. There are some instances where the only brief glimpse of telecast footage of an early LCS game can be seen in a surviving newscast from that night. For instance, the last out of the 1973 National League Championship Series as described by Jim Simpson was played on that night's NBC Nightly News, but other than that, the entire game is gone. On the day the New York Mets and Baltimore Orioles wrapped up their respective League Championship Series in 1969, a feature story on the CBS Evening News showed telecast clips of the ALCS game (there's no original sound, just voiceover narration). This is all that likely remains of anything from that third game of the Orioles-Twins series. While all telecasts of World Series games starting with 1975 are accounted for and exist, the LCS is still a spotty situation through the late 1970s:

Local television

As previously mentioned, from

Major League Baseball television contract
allowed a local TV station in the market of each competing team to also carry the LCS games.

1960s

Year Teams Local TV
Play-by-play#1
Play-by-play#2
Play-by-play#3
Color commentator(s)
1969 New York Mets-Atlanta WOR-TV (New York Mets) Lindsey Nelson
Bob Murphy
Ralph Kiner Bob Uecker
WSB-TV (Atlanta) Ernie Johnson Milo Hamilton

Notes

National radio

From 1969 to 1975, there was no official national radio network coverage of the League Championship Series.

NBC only had the national radio rights to the All-Star Game and World Series during this period. Instead, national coverage was provided by local team radio broadcasts being syndicated nationally over ad hoc
networks.

2020s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator
2023 ESPN Jon Sciambi Doug Glanville
2022 ESPN Jon Sciambi Doug Glanville
2021 ESPN Jon Sciambi Jessica Mendoza
2020 ESPN Jon Sciambi Jessica Mendoza

2010s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator
2019 ESPN Jon Sciambi Jessica Mendoza
2018 ESPN Dan Shulman Chris Singleton
2017 ESPN Dan Shulman Aaron Boone
2016 ESPN Dan Shulman Aaron Boone
2015 ESPN Jon Sciambi Chris Singleton
2014 ESPN Dan Shulman Aaron Boone
2013 ESPN Dan Shulman Orel Hershiser
2012 ESPN Jon Sciambi Chris Singleton
2011 ESPN Jon Sciambi (Games 1–3, 6)
Dave O'Brien (Games 4–5)
Bobby Valentine (Games 1–4, 6)
Buck Martinez (Game 5)
2010 ESPN Dan Shulman Dave Campbell

Notes

2000s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentators
2009 ESPN Dan Shulman Dave Campbell
2008 ESPN Dan Shulman Steve Phillips (in Philadelphia)
Orel Hershiser (in Los Angeles)
2007 ESPN Dan Shulman Dave Campbell
2006 ESPN Dan Shulman Dave Campbell
2005 ESPN Dan Shulman Dave Campbell
2004 ESPN Dan Shulman Dave Campbell
2003 ESPN Dan Shulman Dave Campbell
2002 ESPN Dan Shulman Dave Campbell
2001 ESPN Charley Steiner Dave Campbell
2000 ESPN Charley Steiner Dave Campbell

1990s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator
1999 ESPN Charley Steiner Kevin Kennedy
1998 ESPN Charley Steiner Kevin Kennedy
1997 CBS Gary Cohen Jerry Coleman
1996 CBS Jim Hunter Jerry Coleman
1995 CBS Jim Hunter Jerry Coleman
1993 CBS Jerry Coleman Johnny Bench
1992 CBS John Rooney Jerry Coleman
1991 CBS John Rooney Jerry Coleman
1990 CBS John Rooney Jerry Coleman

See also

1980s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator
1989 CBS John Rooney[72] Jerry Coleman
1988 CBS Brent Musburger Jerry Coleman
1987 CBS Dick Stockton[73] Johnny Bench
1986 CBS Brent Musburger[74] Johnny Bench
1985 CBS Brent Musburger[74] Johnny Bench
1984 CBS Harry Kalas[75]
Ross Porter
1983 CBS Jerry Coleman Duke Snider
1982 CBS Jack Buck Jerry Coleman
1981 CBS Jack Buck Jerry Coleman
1980 CBS Jack Buck Jerry Coleman

1970s

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator
1979 CBS Jack Buck Jerry Coleman[76]
1978 CBS Ralph Kiner Jerry Coleman
1977 CBS Ralph Kiner Jerry Coleman
1976 CBS Ralph Kiner Jerry Coleman
1975 Ad hoc Ralph Kiner Red Schoendienst
1974 Ad hoc Marty Brennaman Bob Gibson
1973 Robert Wold Radio Vin Scully[77] Bob Gibson
1972 WLW Al Michaels Joe Nuxhall
1971 Ad hoc Vin Scully Bob Gibson
1970 Ad hoc Vin Scully Bob Gibson

Notes

1969

Year Network
Play-by-play
Color commentator
1969 Robert Wold Radio Bob Prince Gene Elston

Local radio

From 1969 to present, with the exception of the period between 1969 and 1975, the non-national radio broadcasts of the National League Championship Series were broadcast on the flagship station and the radio network of the teams participating in the National League Championship Series.

2000s

Year Teams Flagship station
Play-by-play#1
Play-by-play#2
Play-by-play#3
Color commentator(s)
2002 San Francisco-St. Louis KMOX Mike Shannon Joel Meyers
KNBR (San Francisco) Duane Kuiper (Games 1–4)
Jon Miller (Game 5)
Joe Angel Duane Kuiper (Game 5) Mike Krukow
2001 Arizona-Atlanta KTAR-AM (Arizona) Greg Schulte Jeff Munn Rod Allen and Jim Traber
WSB-AM (Atlanta) Pete Van Wieren Skip Caray Don Sutton and Joe Simpson

Notes

1980s

Year Teams Flagship station
Play-by-play#1
Play-by-play#2
Color commentator(s)
1989 San Francisco-Chicago Cubs WGN-AM (Chicago Cubs) Harry Caray Dewayne Staats Dave Nelson
KNBR (San Francisco) Hank Greenwald Ron Fairly
1986 New York Mets-Houston WHN (AM) New York

Notes

1960s

Year Teams Flagship station
Play-by-play#1
Play-by-play#2
Play-by-play#3
1969 New York Mets-Atlanta WJRZ-AM/WABC-FM (New York Mets) Lindsey Nelson Bob Murphy Ralph Kiner
WSB-AM (Atlanta) Ernie Johnson Milo Hamilton

Notes

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External links