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The Chicago Cubs Radio Network (known since 2024 as the Southwest Airlines Cubs Radio Network for sponsorship reasons) is the network of radio stations that broadcast Cubs games on 30 stations in six states. [1] Veteran broadcaster Pat Hughes has been the play-by-play announcer since 1996. From 1996 to 2010, Hughes was partnered with Ron Santo.
"Holy cow!" "Cubs win!" [1] In 1987, Caray suffered a stroke during the offseason leading to his absence from the broadcast booth for most of the first two months of the season. To fill the void, a series of celebrity guest announcers appeared on the WGN telecasts in his place. [3] Steve Stone (1983–2000; 2003–2004)
Chicago Cubs: Inning 5; innings 3–4, 7 (for spring training games broadcast on MLB.com) Formerly innings 4-6 for select spring training games; Cincinnati: Innings 3–4, 7 and even extra innings; Colorado: Innings 2–3, 6–7, and even extra innings; Miami: None; Formerly Innings 3–4, 7–8, and even extra innings (through the 2020 season)
On Nov. 2, after the final out of Game 7 of the World Series, Hughes would become the first and only Chicago broadcaster to make the call — “the Chicago Cubs win the World Series!” Radio, of ...
In November 1995, Hughes was selected by Chicago's WGN Radio to be the new "Voice of the Cubs". Hughes partnered with color commentator Ron Santo, former Hall of Fame third baseman for the Cubs, from 1996 until Santo's death in 2010. Their on-air chemistry came to be known as the "Pat and Ron Show".
Joe Buck will be calling a baseball game for the first time in three years when the St. Louis Cardinals host the Chicago Cubs ... games on KMOX Radio from 1954-59 and 1961-69 while the franchise ...
Ronald Bryan Coomer (born November 18, 1966), nicknamed "Coom Dawg", is an American former first baseman and third baseman in Major League Baseball and the current color analyst and play-by-play broadcaster for the Chicago Cubs radio on WSCR 670 AM.
Nevertheless, each team was allowed to reach its own policy by 1932, [5] and the Chicago Cubs broadcast all of their games on WMAQ in 1935. [ 3 ] [ 18 ] [ 19 ] The last holdouts were the New York teams—the Giants , Dodgers , and Yankees combined to block radio broadcasts of their games until 1938 .