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It was for HNIC that he broadcast the Canucks' first NHL game, a 3–1 home loss to the Los Angeles Kings on October 9, 1970. His reputation as one of the top broadcasters in the business earned him assignments to cover the Stanley Cup Finals in 1975, 1980, 1982 (in which the Canucks faced the New York Islanders), and 1983. [5] [6]
The other 12 games air only on the radio network, including all games broadcast on the league's national outlets. In New York City and the surrounding areas, Sabres games against the New York Rangers , New York Islanders or New Jersey Devils (other hockey teams to which MSG owns TV rights) have usually carried the Sabres Hockey Network feed on ...
The following is a list of current (entering 2024–25 NHL season) National Hockey League broadcasters.With 25 teams in the U.S. and 7 in Canada, the NHL is the only one of the four major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada that maintains separate national broadcasters in each country, each producing separate telecasts of a slate of regular season games, playoff games ...
The concept of Showdown involved 20 of the NHL's greatest players (16 shooters and four goaltenders) going head-to-head in a taped penalty shot competition with Brian McFarlane hosting. After the NHL left NBC in 1975, [6] [29] [30] Showdown continued to be seen on Hockey Night in Canada and local television broadcasts of U.S.-based NHL teams.
Bally Sports West or Bally Sports SoCal or KCAL-TV: Nick Nickson: Jim Fox Daryl Evans: Carrlyn Bathe: Patrick O'Neal: Jarret Stoll Derek Armstrong: 2022–23: Bally Sports West or Bally Sports SoCal or KCOP-TV: Alex Faust: Jim Fox: Carrlyn Bathe: Patrick O'Neal: Jarret Stoll Derek Armstrong: 2021–22: Bally Sports West or Bally Sports SoCal ...
The Ducks announced on Tuesday that 65 games next season will be on an over-the-air channel in Los Angeles. Anaheim's contract with Diamond Sports Group expired at the end of the 2023-24 season.
This was the last time that a National Hockey League game was broadcast on American network television for 10 years (until the 1990 NHL All-Star Game aired on NBC [333] [334] [330]), and the Stanley Cup Finals game on broadcast-network television until 1995.
During the 1930s, thanks to the powerful 50,000-watt transmitters of CBC Radio, the CBC's Hockey Night In Canada radio broadcasts became quite popular in much of the northern United States, especially in Boston, Chicago, Detroit, and New York City, the four U.S. cities that had NHL teams after 1924, but also in cities with minor-league or major collegiate hockey teams.