User:BornonJune8/sandbox/Archive22
The following is a list of national American and Canadian television and radio networks and announcers that have broadcast Stanley Cup Finals games over the years. It does include any announcers who may have appeared on local television and radio broadcasts produced by the participating teams.
Television
[edit]American television
[edit]The first broadcast in the United States was in 1962, covered by local Chicago station WGN, while network broadcasts started in 1966 on NBC. However, national coverage on American television, like the rest of the NHL season, remained in a state of flux for decades. From 1966 to 1975, NBC and CBS held the rights at various times, but they each only covered selected games of the series. It was then carried on syndication from 1976 to 1979 through the 1970s NHL Network. In 1980, the Hughes broadcast network simulcast CBC's feed before the series was moved to cable. During its time on cable from 1980 to 1993, rights to the series was held at various times by USA, SportsChannel America and ESPN, but there was no exclusive coverage of games and thus local broadcasters could also still televise them regionally as well. In 1995, Fox signed on to be the exclusive national broadcast network of selected games of the final round, splitting it with ESPN. This splitting of exclusive national coverage on cable/broadcast networks remains, first being passed to ABC and ESPN in 2000, and then NBC and Versus (now NBCSN) in 2006.
2020s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Games | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | NBCSN NBC |
Games 2–3 Games 1, 4–6 |
Mike Emrick[1][2] | Eddie Olczyk, Pierre McGuire, and Brian Boucher |
2010s
[edit]2000s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Games | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | Versus[34] NBC[35] |
Games 3–4 Games 1–2, 5–7 |
Mike Emrick | Eddie Olczyk |
2008 | Versus NBC |
Games 1–2[36][37][38] Games 3–6[39] |
Mike Emrick | Eddie Olczyk |
2007 | Versus[40] NBC[41] |
Games 1–2 Games 3–5[42] |
Mike Emrick | Eddie Olczyk |
2006 | OLN[43] NBC |
Games 1–2[44] Games 3–7[31] |
Mike Emrick | John Davidson |
2004 | ESPN[45] ABC[46] |
Games 1–2 Games 3–7[47][48] |
Gary Thorne | Bill Clement and John Davidson |
2003[49] | ESPN ABC[50][51] |
Games 1–2 Games 3–7[52] |
Gary Thorne[53] | Bill Clement and John Davidson |
2002[54] | ESPN ABC[55] |
Games 1–2 Games 3–5 |
Gary Thorne | Bill Clement |
2001 | ESPN ABC[56][57] |
Games 1–2 Games 3–7[58][59] |
Gary Thorne | Bill Clement |
2000[60] | ESPN ABC[61][62][63] |
Games 1–2 Game 3–6[64] |
Gary Thorne | Bill Clement |
1990s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Games | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | Fox[65][66] ESPN[67] |
Games 1-2[68], 5 Games 3-4, 6[69][70] |
Mike Emrick[71] Gary Thorne |
John Davidson Bill Clement |
1998 | Fox ESPN[72] |
Game 1 Games 2-4 |
Mike Emrick Gary Thorne |
John Davidson Bill Clement[73] |
1997 | Fox ESPN[74] |
Game 1[75][76] Games 2-4 |
Mike Emrick Gary Thorne |
John Davidson Bill Clement |
1996 | Fox ESPN |
Games 1[77][78], 3 Games 2, 4 |
Mike Emrick Gary Thorne |
John Davidson Bill Clement |
1995 | Fox[79][80] ESPN |
Games 1, 4[31][81] Games 2-3 |
Mike Emrick Gary Thorne |
John Davidson Bill Clement |
1994 | ESPN[82][83][84] | Games 1-7[31] | Gary Thorne | Bill Clement |
1993 | ESPN[85][86] | Games 1-5 | Gary Thorne | Bill Clement |
1992 | SportsChannel America[87] | Games 1–4 | Jiggs McDonald[88][89] | Bill Clement[90] |
1991 | SportsChannel America[91][92][93] | Games 1–6 | Jiggs McDonald[94] | Bill Clement |
1990 | SportsChannel America[95][96] | Games 1–5 | Jiggs McDonald | Bill Clement |
1980s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Games | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | SportsChannel America | Games 1–6 | Jiggs McDonald[97] | Bill Clement |
1988 | ESPN | Games 1–4 | Mike Emrick[98] | Bill Clement |
1987 | ESPN | Games 1–7 | Mike Emrick[99] | Bill Clement |
1986 | ESPN | Games 1–5 | Sam Rosen[100] (Games 1–2) and Ken Wilson[101] (Games 3–5) | Mickey Redmond (Games 1, 2, 5) and Bill Clement (Games 3–4) |
1985 | USA[102] | Games 1–5 | Dan Kelly[103] (in Philadelphia) Al Albert[104] (in Edmonton) |
Gary Green and Mike Liut |
1984 | USA | Games 1–5 | Dan Kelly[105] | Gary Green |
1983 | USA | Games 1–4 | Dan Kelly | Gary Green |
1982 | USA | Games 1–4 | Dan Kelly | Gary Green |
1981 | USA | Games 1–5 (CBC's feed) | Bob Cole | Mickey Redmond and Gary Dornhoefer |
1980 | Hughes[106] CBS[107][108][109] |
Games 1–5 Game 6[110][111][112][113][114] |
Bob Cole (Games 1–2, first half) Jim Robson (Games 3–5, first half) Dan Kelly (second half of Games 1–5 plus overtime in Game 1) Dan Kelly (1st and 3rd periods and OT) and Tim Ryan (2nd period) |
Gary Dornhoefer and Dick Irvin Jr. Lou Nanne |
1970s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Games | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|---|
1979 | NHL[115] ABC[116][117][118][119][*] |
Games 1–5 (CBC feed) Game 7[*] |
Dan Kelly Danny Gallivan (Game 2) |
Dick Irvin Jr. Gary Dornhoefer (Games 1, 5) Gerry Pinder (Game 2) Bobby Orr (in New York) |
1978 | NHL | Games 1–6 (CBC feed) | Danny Gallivan (in Montréal) Dan Kelly (in Boston) |
Chico Resch and Dick Irvin Jr. |
1977 | NHL | Games 1–4 | Marv Albert and Tim Ryan | Stan Mikita (Game 1) Garry Unger (Game 2) Chico Resch (Game 3) Don Awrey (Game 4) |
1976 | NHL[120][121] | Games 1-4 | Marv Albert | Stan Mikita (Game 1) Garry Unger (Game 2) Chico Resch (Game 3) Curt Bennett (Game 4) |
1975[122] | NBC[123][124][125] | Games 2, 5 | Tim Ryan | Ted Lindsay |
1974[126][127] | NBC | Games 3, 6 | Tim Ryan[128] | Ted Lindsay |
1973 | NBC[129] | Games 1, 4-6[130] | Tim Ryan[131] | Ted Lindsay |
1972 | CBS | Games 1, 4, 6 | Dan Kelly[132] | Jim Gordon and Harry Howell |
1971 | CBS | Games 3, 6–7 | Dan Kelly[133] | Jim Gordon and Phil Esposito |
1970 | CBS[134] | Games 1, 4 | Dan Kelly[135][136][137][138][139] | Bill Mazer and Gordie Howe[140] |
- ^ *: ABC was contracted to televise Game 7. Since the 1979 Finals ended in five games, the contract was void.
1960s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Games | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|---|
1969 | CBS | Games 1, 4 | Dan Kelly[141][142] | Bill Mazer |
1968 | CBS | Games 1, 4 | Stu Nahan | Jim Gordon |
1967 | CBS | Games 2, 5 | Stu Nahan[143] | Jim Gordon |
1966[144][145][146][147] | NBC[148][149][150][151] RKO General[152] |
Games 1, 4[153] Game 6 |
Win Elliot[154] Bob Wolff |
Bill Mazer[155] Emile Francis |
Canadian television
[edit]The first television broadcast was in 1953. English-language coverage was aired by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), with the play-by-play called by Danny Gallivan and colour commentary by Keith Dancy, hosted by Wes McKnight. The Hockey Night in Canada team of Gallivan and Dancy would cover the next eight Finals. Gallivan would call his last championship series in 1978. Hockey Night in Canada on CBC remains the exclusive English-language broadcaster across Canada despite 1972 when a lengthy NABET strike forced coverage to be instead aired on CTV, from 1985 to 1988 when the series was split between CBC and either CTV or Global TV, and since 2015 when it became a Rogers Media-produced broadcast under a sub-license agreement.
For Games 1 and 2 of the 1986 Finals, CBC only had the rights to air them locally in Montreal and Calgary, while CTV broadcast it to the rest of the country. CBC would then have the exclusive rights to televise Games 3, 4, and 5 nationally. Had the series gone to a seventh game, then both CBC and CTV would have simultaneously televised it while using their own production facilities and crews. CBC televised Games 1 and 2 of the 1985 Finals nationally while Games 3–5 were televised in Edmonton only. CTV televised Games 3–5 nationally while games were blacked out in Edmonton. Had the series gone to a Game 7, then both CBC and CTV would have simultaneously televised it while using their own production facilities and crews.
French-language broadcasts in Canada also began in 1953, with play-by-play commentator René Lecavalier and colour commentator Jean-Maurice Bailly on CBC's Télévision de Radio-Canada (SRC) division. SRC would continue to be the exclusive French-language broadcaster until 2003 when Réseau des sports (RDS) took over. Since 2015, under a sub-license agreement with Rogers, TVA[156][157][158][159][160][161][162][163][164] has been the exclusive home of French-language broadcasts in Canada.
2020s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|
2020 | Sportsnet CBC |
Jim Hughson[165] | Craig Simpson |
2010s
[edit]2000s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | CBC | Jim Hughson[179] | Craig Simpson[180] |
2008 | CBC | Bob Cole[181][182][183] | Greg Millen[184] |
2007 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale[185] and Greg Millen[186] |
2006 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale |
2004 | CBC[187] | Bob Cole | Harry Neale |
2003 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale |
2002 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale |
2001 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale |
2000 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale |
1990s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|
1999 | CBC | Bob Cole[188] | Harry Neale[189] |
1998 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale |
1997 | CBC | Bob Cole[190] | Harry Neale |
1996 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale |
1995 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale[191] |
1994 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale and Dick Irvin Jr. |
1993 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale and Dick Irvin Jr. |
1992 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale and Dick Irvin Jr. |
1991 | CBC | Bob Cole[192][193][194] | Harry Neale and Dick Irvin Jr. |
1990 | CBC | Bob Cole | Harry Neale and Dick Irvin Jr. |
1980s
[edit]1970s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|
1979 | CBC | Dan Kelly and Danny Gallivan (first half of Game 2) | Dick Irvin Jr., Gary Dornhoefer (Games 1, 5), Gerry Pinder (Game 2), and Bobby Orr (in New York) |
1978 | CBC | Danny Gallivan[213] (in Montréal) and Dan Kelly (in Boston) | Chico Resch, Bill Clement, and Dick Irvin Jr. |
1977 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Dick Irvin Jr., Don Marshall (Game 1), and Red Storey (Game 2) |
1976 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Dick Irvin Jr. |
1975 | CBC | Jim Robson[214] (in Philadelphia) and Danny Gallivan (in Buffalo) | Dick Irvin Jr. |
1974 | CBC | Danny Gallivan (in Boston) and Bill Hewitt (in Philadelphia) | Brian McFarlane (in Boston) and Dick Irvin Jr. (in Philadelphia) |
1973 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Dick Irvin Jr. |
1972 | CTV[215] | Bill Hewitt | Brian McFarlane |
1971 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Dick Irvin Jr.[216] |
1970 | CBC | Bill Hewitt (in St. Louis) and Danny Gallivan (in Boston) | Brian McFarlane (in St. Louis) and Dick Irvin Jr. (in Boston) |
1960s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Dick Irvin Jr. |
1968 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Dick Irvin Jr. |
1967 | CBC | Danny Gallivan (in Montréal) and Bill Hewitt[217] (in Toronto) | Keith Dancy (in Montréal) and Brian McFarlane[218] (in Toronto) |
1966 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy |
1965 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy |
1964 | CBC | Bill Hewitt | Bob Goldham |
1963 | CBC | Bill Hewitt | Bob Goldham |
1962 | CBC | Bill Hewitt | Bob Goldham |
1961 | CBC | Bill Hewitt | Bob Goldham |
1960 | CBC | Danny Gallivan (in Montréal) and Bill Hewitt (in Toronto) | Keith Dancy (in Montréal) and Foster Hewitt (in Toronto) |
1950s
[edit]Year | Network(s) | Play-by-play | Color commentary |
---|---|---|---|
1959 | CBC | Danny Gallivan (in Montréal) and Keith Dancy (in Montréal) | Foster Hewitt (in Toronto) and Bill Hewitt[219] (in Toronto) |
1958 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy |
1957 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy |
1956 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy |
1955 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy |
1954 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy |
1953 | CBC | Danny Gallivan | Keith Dancy |
American radio
[edit]References
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{{cite book}}
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{{cite book}}
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{{cite news}}
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- ^ Jan 10, 1993 - Bob Costas will host the 90minute Larry Bird tribute on Ch25 Feb 4 from the Garden. The Rhode Island based Global Sports Network acquired US radio rights for the NHL AllStar Game and Stanley Cup Finals. ESPN's next two NHL telecasts Sharks Red Wings at 730 Friday and Rangers Kings at 8 ...
- ^ Jun 3, 1993 - Claiming to have found a loophole in NHL radio policies, KMPC Wednesday made a deal with Rhode Island-based packager Global Radio Sports to carry the league's national broadcasts of the Stanley Cup finals. Howard Freedman, XTRA program director, said KMPC is wrong. ...
- ^ Jun 2, 1993 - If the judge asks, WEEI gives NBA playoffs precedence over NHL finals when conflicting. Bruins Move: The Bruins found a new radio home ... Ted Sarandis is studio host for Global Radio's Stanley Cup finals coverage heard on WEEI - with Howie Rose and new Rangers coach Mike Keenan ...
- ^ Jun 2, 1993 - If the judge asks, WEEI gives NBA playoffs precedence over NHL finals when conflicting. Bruins Move: The Bruins found a new radio home ... Ted Sarandis is studio host for Global Radio's Stanley Cup finals coverage heard on WEEI - with Howie Rose and new Rangers coach Mike Keenan ...
- ^ Dec 4, 1991 - Two-year deal struck: The NHL and Star Communications of Boston have announced a two-year agreement to provide network radio broadcasts in the United States of the Stanley Cup final, the all- star game and other special league events. The first year Star Communications will provide ...
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