2019年11月6日水曜日

意味調べるList of Detroit Red Wings broadcasters

新規更新November 06, 2019 at 02:21PM
【外部リンク】

List of Detroit Red Wings broadcasters


BornonJune8: Attribution: content in this section was copied from WJR on November 5, 2019. Please see the history of that page for full attribution


Regular radio broadcasts for the [[Detroit Red Wings]] started in [[1935–36 Detroit Red Wings season|1935-36]], with Al Nagler doing home games through [[1959–60 Detroit Red Wings season|1959-60]]. [[Gene Osborn]] did home games in [[1950–51 Detroit Red Wings season|1960-61]]. In [[1961–62 Detroit Red Wings season|1961-62]], broadcasts moved to [[WJR]] for one year and all games were broadcast with Nagler and [[Budd Lynch]] splitting play-by-play duties. From [[1962–63 Detroit Red Wings season|1962]]-[[1963–64 Detroit Red Wings season|64]], Budd Lynch did play-by-play alone, but he was joined by [[Bruce Martyn]] in [[1964–65 Detroit Red Wings season|1964-65]]. They split play-by-play through [[1972–73 Detroit Red Wings season|1972-73]]. Then, Martyn did all of the play-by-play until he retired after [[1994–95 Detroit Red Wings season|1994-95]] and was replaced by Ken Kal.

[[Paul Woods]]<ref name="redwings.nhl.com">https://ift.tt/33o7v9E> has done radio color since [[1987–88 Detroit Red Wings season|1987-88]]. Paul Chapman did it in [[1986–87 Detroit Red Wings season|1986-87]], succeeding [[Sid Abel]], who had teamed with Martyn since [[1976–77 Detroit Red Wings season|1976-77]]. Prior to that, Len Hardman did home games in [[1972–73 Detroit Red Wings season|1972-73]], [[Al Coates (broadcaster)|Al Coates]] in [[1973–74 Detroit Red Wings season|1973-74]] and [[1975–76 Detroit Red Wings season|1975-76]], and Budd Lynch in [[1974–75 Detroit Red Wings season|1974-75]]. On road games, Martyn either worked alone or found a local sportscaster to join him.

The Red Wings televised Sunday home games from [[1949–50 Detroit Red Wings season|1949-50]] through [[1959–60 Detroit Red Wings season|1959-60]]; the first six years were [[simulcasts]], Budd Lynch did TV only in the remaining years. The Red Wings returned to TV when [[WKBD-TV|channel 50]] went on the air January 10, [[1964–65 Detroit Red Wings season|1965]], doing simulcasts through [[1972–73 Detroit Red Wings season|1972-73]]. Budd Lynch and Larry Adderly did TV the next two years. Simulcasts returned from [[1975–76 Detroit Red Wings season|1975-76]] through [[1984–85 Detroit Red Wings season|1984-85]].

During the late 1970s and early 1980s, the games were either on TV or radio, not both, because the same stations (WJR radio, WKBD-TV) had the [[Detroit Pistons|Pistons']] [[List of Detroit Pistons broadcasters|rights]] as well and that's how conflicts were handled.

By [[1985–86 Detroit Red Wings season|1985]], the Red Wings also were on the [[Pro-Am Sports System]] pay-TV channel, who broadcast about 20 games a year. Budd Lynch was involved with [[Alex Delvecchio]] on color. [[Mike Goldberg]] did play-by-play in [[1996–97 Detroit Red Wings season|1996-97]] while [[Ken Daniels]] started working play-by-play in [[1997–98 Detroit Red Wings season|1997-98]].

In [[2001–02 Detroit Red Wings season|2001]], WJR lost its longtime [[Flagship (broadcasting)|flagship]] radio rights to the [[Detroit Tigers]] and [[Detroit Red Wings]], both of whom moved to [[CBS]]-owned [[WXYT (AM)|WXYT]] and [[WXYT-FM]].

==Current broadcasters==
The Red Wings' [[flagship (radio)|flagship radio stations]] are Detroit sister stations [[WXYT (AM)|WXYT-AM]] 1270 and [[WXYT-FM]] 97.1. Games are carried on both stations unless there is a conflict with [[Detroit Tigers]] baseball. There are several affiliate stations throughout [[Michigan]] and [[Southwestern Ontario]].<ref></ref>

The Red Wings' exclusive local television rights are held by [[Fox Sports Detroit]].<ref></ref> The channel shared professional team coverage rights with some Detroit area [[terrestrial television|broadcast television]] stations until the spring of 2008. In March 2008, the channel signed new long-term contracts with the Pistons, Red Wings and Tigers to broadcast more games than in previous years, becoming the exclusive local home of all three teams for the first time until at least 2018. This leaves only the [[National Football League|NFL]]'s [[Detroit Lions]] as the only local professional sports team in Detroit to have all of its games on broadcast television.

Announcers:

* [[Ken Daniels]]: Television play by play announcer.
* [[Mickey Redmond]]: Television color commentator (home games and select away games).
* [[Chris Osgood]]: Television color commentator (select away games that Redmond does not attend) and studio analyst (when not color commentator during play).
* [[Larry Murphy (ice hockey)|Larry Murphy]]: Studio analyst and television color commentator (select away games that Redmond and Osgood do not attend).
* [[John Keating (sportscaster)|John Keating]]: Television pre-game and post-game show host.
* Ken Kal: Radio play by play announcer.
* [[Paul Woods]]: Radio analyst.
* Trevor Thompson, Mickey York: TV pre-game and post-game show hosts and reporters.
* Jeff Riger: Primary radio intermission and post-game host.


==Honored broadcasters==
Four members of the Red Wings organization have received the [[Foster Hewitt Memorial Award]]:
* [[Budd Lynch]]: TV and radio play by play and color – 1949–1975 (awarded 1985)<ref name=Lynch></ref>
* [[Bruce Martyn]]: Radio play by play – 1964–1995 (awarded 1991)<ref name="Hewitt Award"></ref>
* [[Mickey Redmond]]: TV color commentary – 1979–1981, 1986–present (awarded 2011)<ref name=Redmond></ref>
* [[Dave Strader]]: TV play by play – 1985–1996 (awarded 2017)<ref name=Strader></ref>

Lynch called the first locally televised game at Olympia for the original [[WDIV-TV|WWJ-TV]] in 1949.<ref name=Lynch/> He remained with the organization for 63 years, serving as director of publicity from 1975 to 1982, and was the [[public address]] announcer from 1982 until his death in 2012.<ref name=Lynch/> From 2008 to 2012, a second PA announcer was added to work alongside him, first John Fossen, then Erich Freiny.<ref></ref><ref name=Freiny></ref> Freiny took over as the sole PA announcer following Lynch's death.<ref name=Freiny/>

==See also==
*[[Historical NHL over-the-air television broadcasters]]

==References==


==External links==
*[https://ift.tt/33lPpov Detroit Sports Broadcasters Association]
*[https://ift.tt/2oPDtwg Michigan Sports Hall of Fame]
*[https://ift.tt/2PQL2xT Interview with Ken on Hockey Refs.com]
*[https://ift.tt/34AHkMZ Budd Lynch in the Michigan Sports Hall of Fame]
*[https://ift.tt/34AHkMZ Detroit Free Press: Budd Lynch, 91, remains the voice of Wings' championship history]






[[Category:Detroit Red Wings broadcasters| ]]
[[Category:Lists of National Hockey League broadcasters]]

https://ift.tt/2WSwKOL

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