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Dave Revsine: 2005–2007 (ESPN Radio College GameDay) Dr. Jack Ramsay: 1992–2005 (NBA on ESPN Radio) Jeff Rickard: 2006–2009 ; John Rooke: 1999–2011 (ESPN Radio College GameDay and GameNight) Jalen Rose: 2015–2022 (Jalen & Jacoby) Ryen Russillo: 2007–2017 (The Baseball Show, ESPN Radio College GameDay and The Scott Van Pelt Show)
Pages in category "Radio personalities from New York City" The following 188 pages are in this category, out of 188 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Roy Firestone: 1980–1994 (Sports Look, Up Close host and Sunday Night Football) [3] [7] Max Kellerman: 2002–2023 (co-host of SportsNation) Paul Lukas: Uni Watch columnist; Katie Nolan: 2017–2021 (Host of the Sports? with Katie Nolan podcast and Always Late with Katie Nolan) Jim Rome: 2003–2011 (Jim Rome Is Burning) now with CBS Sports Radio
Bonnie Bernstein: 1995–1998, 2006–present (SportsCenter correspondent, Wednesday Night Baseball, college football, NFL, substitute host for NFL Live and Jim Rome Is Burning, co-host The Michael Kay Show on 1050 ESPN Radio (New York)) Georgie Bingham 2007–present (co-host of SportsCenter for ESPN non-domestic market and Soccernet SportsCenter)
KIRO (710 kHz "Seattle Sports") is a commercial AM radio station in Seattle, Washington, owned by Salt Lake City–based Bonneville International. The station airs a sports radio format and is an ESPN Radio Network affiliate. The station's studios and offices are located on Eastlake Avenue in Seattle's Eastlake district.
By 1996, ESPN Radio had expanded to weekdays [3] with a show hosted by The Fabulous Sports Babe (Nancy Donnellan). One hour of that show was simulcast on ESPN2 (1-2 p.m. Eastern time ). Two years later, Tony Bruno and Mike Golic were brought together for a new morning show, the Bruno & Golic Morning Show which aired until Bruno left the network ...
Sims began his career as a sportswriter for the New York Daily News. [7] In the early 1980s he was a sports reporter for the short lived "Satellite News Channel".Moving to radio, Sims became the host of WNBC's SportsNight (1986–1988) (replacing Jack Spector), a five-hour nightly sports call-in show that was a precursor to the all-sports talk format of WFAN. [7]
He was a midday radio personality on New York's WNBC-AM (660), shortly after it launched its "Conversation Station," a talk format, in 1964. He was part of a weekday talk-variety lineup that included "Big" Wilson, Robert Alda , Mimi Benzell , Sterling Yates , Bill Mazer , Brad Crandall and Long John Nebel and hosted a competition/quiz show for ...