The Detroit Tigers Radio Network is an American radio network composed of 49 radio stations which carry English-language coverage of the Detroit Tigers, a professional baseball team in Major League Baseball (MLB). Detroit's WXYT-FM (97.1 FM) serves as the network's flagship. The network also includes 46 affiliates in the U.S. states of Michigan, Ohio, and Indiana: 25 AM stations, 15 of which supplement their signals with one or more low-power FM translators; 21 full-power FM stations; and one HD Radio digital subchannel which supplements its signal with a low-power FM translator.[1] The radio network airs select spring Grapefruit League games, along with all 162 regular season games and all postseason games. Dan Dickerson does play-by-play for the broadcasts (with Greg Gania filling in for occasional games) while color commentary is provided by Bobby Scales or Andy Dirks. Daniella Bruce serves as the in-game reporter and interviewer and Jeff Riger hosts the pre-game and post-game shows.[2] In addition to traditional over-the-air AM and FM broadcasts, network programming airs on SiriusXM satellite radio; and streams online via SiriusXM Internet Radio, TuneIn Premium, and MLB.com Gameday Audio.[3][4][5]
Station list
Map of network stations in Michigan and surrounding states
Spanish broadcasts
In 2023, Carlos Guillén, Bárbaro Garbey and Mari Montes called 22 games in Spanish on WXYT 1270 AM in Detroit.[6]
History and former broadcasters
- Before merging with WXYT-FM, WXYT/1270 was the sole flagship station from 2001–2007.
- From 1964–2000, Detroit's WJR was the Tigers' exclusive radio flagship. As a maximum-power clear-channel station, Tigers games on WJR could be received from hundreds of miles away on warm, clear nights.
- Other former Tigers flagships include WWJ, WJBK (currently known as WLQV) and WKMH (currently known as WDTW).
- The Tigers' most famous announcer is Ford C. Frick Award winning broadcaster Ernie Harwell, who called Tigers games mostly on the radio from 1960–2002. The press box at Comerica Park is named The Ernie Harwell Media Center in his honor, a statue of him stands near the main gate of the stadium, and his name is on the Tigers Wall of Fame in right field of Comerica Park. Harwell died in May 2010 at the age of 92 and his body was laid in repose at Comerica Park soon after.[7] The Detroit Sports Media Association (DSMA) inaugurated a DSMA Ernie Harwell Lifetime Achievement Award with Harwell as its first recipient.
See also
References
- ^ "Broadcast Affiliates". Detroit Tigers.
- ^ Tigers will have new voice on radio broadcasts MLive.com, March 4, 2023
- ^ "SiriusXM & MLB Extend Agreement". MLB.com. August 19, 2013.
- ^ Kastrenakes, Jacob (August 25, 2015). "Streaming radio app TuneIn adds MLB broadcasts and commercial-free music". The Verge.
- ^ "Gameday Audio | Live Stream Baseball Games". MLB.com.
- ^ How Tigers are growing Spanish broadcasts MLB.com, March 27, 2023
- ^ Thousands walk, roll to park for Ernie Harwell's send-off Detroit Free Press via Archive.org, originally published May 7, 2010, last retrieved April 1, 2022
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| | Franchise |
- History
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- Owner: Christopher Ilitch
- President of baseball operations: Scott Harris
- General Manager: Jeff Greenberg
- Manager: A. J. Hinch
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World Series championships (4) | |
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| American League pennants (11) | |
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| Division titles (7) | |
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| Wild card berths (2) | |
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| Broadcasters |
- TV: Bally Sports Detroit
- Radio:
- History: List of Detroit Tigers broadcasters
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Seasons (123) |
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| 1900s | · 1900 1901 · 1902 · 1903 · 1904 · 1905 · 1906 · 1907 · 1908 · 1909 |
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| 1910s |
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| 1920s |
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| 1930s | |
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| 1950s |
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| 1960s |
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| 1970s |
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| 1980s |
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| 1990s |
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| National |
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| Defunct | |
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Major League Baseball radio networks |
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| AL | | East |
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| Central | |
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| West |
- Houston Astros
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| NL | | East |
- Atlanta Braves
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| Central | |
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| West |
- Arizona Diamondbacks
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| | National Basketball Association radio networks |
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Eastern Conference | |
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Western Conference | | Northwest |
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| Pacific |
- Golden State Warriors
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| Southwest |
- Dallas Mavericks
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- Seattle Sounders Radio Network
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| America East |
- Maine Black Bears
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| C-USA |
- Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders
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| MVC |
- Southern Illinois Salukis
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| Pac-12 | |
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| SEC |
- Alabama Crimson Tide
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| Summit League | |
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| Sun Belt |
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- See also
- American broadcast radio
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Major League Baseball on the radio |
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National networks | |
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International networks | |
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| General media | |
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Local broadcasters | | AL | | East |
- Baltimore Orioles
- Boston Red Sox
- New York Yankees
- Tampa Bay Rays
- Toronto Blue Jays
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| Central | |
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| West |
- Houston Astros
- Los Angeles Angels
- Oakland Athletics
- Seattle Mariners
- Texas Rangers
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| NL | | East |
- Atlanta Braves
- Miami Marlins
- New York Mets
- Philadelphia Phillies
- Washington Nationals
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| Central | |
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| West |
- Arizona Diamondbacks
- Colorado Rockies
- Los Angeles Dodgers
- San Diego Padres
- San Francisco Giants
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News radio series |
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Broadcasters by event |
- World Series
- ALCS
- NLCS
- ALDS
- NLDS
- Wild Card Round
- All-Star Game
- Game of the Week
Miscellaneous broadcasts |
- "The Greatest Baseball Game Never Played" (1982)
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