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From 2005-2024, John Sterling (play-by-play) and Suzyn Waldman (color commentary) have been the Yankees Radio Network broadcast team. Waldman is the first and one of the few women to hold a full-time position with a major league team, and had served as a Yankees beat reporter for the YES Network before moving to the broadcast booth.
Today, the team can be heard and/or seen in its gameday broadcasts during the baseball season on: TV: YES Network, or Amazon Prime Video in New York; Radio: WFAN (660 AM) and WFAN-FM (101.9 FM) in New York; New York Yankees Radio Network; WADO (1280 AM) (Spanish) (Cadena Radio Yankees) Longest serving Yankee broadcasters (all-time with 10+ years)
The New York Yankees have a new voice for their radio broadcasts, bringing in a man who's beloved throughout the sport.. Dave Sims has agreed to become the team's new play-by-play broadcaster on ...
Starting on Sept. 24, Sterling will once again join Suzyn Waldman, his long-time radio broadcast partner, who has worked mainly since April with broadcasters Justin Shackil, Emmanuel Berbari and ...
John Sterling returned to the New York Yankees' radio broadcast booth on Tuesday night, five months after announcing his retirement. Sterling had retired in April, a few weeks into his 36th season.
WEPN was expected to bid for the radio rights for either the New York Yankees, at the time on WCBS (AM), or New York Mets, from their longtime home of WFAN. Both teams had contracts that expired at the end of the 2013 season, with the Yankees purposely extending their deal with WCBS to expire at the same time as the Mets, for better leverage.
New York Yankees 2024 (all subject to change) Postseason (all World Series games on Fox, ... Major League Baseball schedules broadcast TV radio internet web. Show comments. Advertisement.
The following is a list of current Major League Baseball broadcasters, as of the 2025 season, for each individual team.Some franchises have a regular color commentator while others (such as the Milwaukee Brewers) use two play-by-play announcers, with the primary often doing more innings than the secondary.