List of Chicago Cubs broadcasters
The following is a list of Chicago Cubs broadcasters:
Names in bold are recipients of the Ford C. Frick Award, presented annually by the National Baseball Hall of Fame to a broadcaster for major contributions to baseball.[1]
1920s-1940s
- Hal Totten (1924–44)[1]
- Bob Elson (1928–41)[1]
- Pat Flanagan (1929–43)[1]
- Ronald Reagan (1933–36)
- Russ Hodges (1935–38)
- Jimmy Dudley (1938–41)
- Jack Drees (1938)
- Charlie Grimm (1939–42; 1960)
- Jack Brickhouse (1941–44; 1947–81) "Hey-hey!" "Weeeeee!"[1]
- Bert Wilson (1944–55) "I don't care who wins, as long as it's the Cubs!"
- Wayne Osborne (1945)
- Joe Wilson (1946–52)[2]
- Bill Brundige (1949)
- Rogers Hornsby (1949)
1950s-1970s
- Bud Campbell (1950–53)[1]
- Harry Creighton (1951–56)[1]
- Gene Elston (1954)
- Vince Lloyd (1954–86) "Holy mackerel!"
- Milo Hamilton (1955–57; 1980–84) "Holy Toledo!!"[1]
- Jack Quinlan (1956–64)
- Lou Boudreau (1958–59; 1961–87) "Kiss it goodbye!"
- Lloyd Pettit (1963; 1965–1966; 1969–1970)
- Jim West (1971-1976)[1]
1980s-1990s
- Harry Caray (1982–97) "It might be... it could be... it is!" "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)
- Dan Roan (1984–2019); substitute broadcaster and host of certain specials; WGN only
- Dewayne Staats (1985–89)
- Jim Frey (1987)
- Dave Nelson (1988–89)
- Ron Santo (1990–2010) "Boy, oh boy..."
- Bob Brenly (1990–91 radio; 2005–2012 TV)
- Thom Brennaman (1990–95)
- Pat Hughes (1996–present); radio play-by-play; "This ball's got a chaaaance...GONE!" "Get out the tape measure, LONG gone!"
- Josh Lewin (1997)
- Chip Caray (1998–2004) "Swung on and belted!" "Fisted!"
- Andy Masur (1999–2006); secondary play-by-play and pre-post game host
2000s-2010s
- Joe Carter (2001–2002) "Like a deer with headlights!"
- Dave Otto (2001–2002) "You gotta be some kind of strong..."
- Len Kasper (2005–2020) "Way back! It's outta here!" "They've gone back-to-back!" "Oh, baby!"
- Dan Plesac (2005–2008); substitute broadcaster; CSN Chicago only
- Cory Provus (2007–2008); secondary play-by-play and pre-post game host
- Judd Sirott (2009–2014); secondary play-by-play and pre-post game host
- Keith Moreland (2011–2013); radio color commentator
- Jim Deshaies (2013–present); color commentator, substitute TV play-by-play
- Ron Coomer (2014–present); radio color commentator
- Doug Glanville (2014–2019; 2021–present); substitute color commentator
- Mark Grote (2015–2017); pre-post game host; substitute radio play-by-play[4] ("Bears")
- Zach Zaidman (2018–present); pre-post game host; substitute radio play-by-play[4]
2020s-2030s
- Ryan Dempster (2020–present); substitute color commentator
- Mark Grace (2020); substitute color commentator
- Sean Marshall (2020); substitute color commentator
- Jon Sciambi (2021–present); play-by-play
- Chris Myers (2021–present); substitute play-by-play
- Beth Mowins (2021–present); substitute play-by-play, first woman to broadcast a Cub game[5]
- Ryne Sandberg (2021–2023); substitute color commentator
- Rick Sutcliffe (2021–present); substitute color commentator
- Matt Spiegel (2021–present); substitute play-by-play and pre-post game host[6]
- Joe Girardi (2022–present); substitute/secondary color commentator[7]
- Elise Menaker (2023–present); substitute/secondary color commentator
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Cubs All-Time Broadcasters". chicago.cubs.mlb.com.
- ^ "Chicago Cubs History and News - Welcome to Just One Bad Century". Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- ^ "Guest announcers for Harry Caray, 1987". Archived from the original on 2011-07-10. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ^ a b Owen, Jordan (January 10, 2018). "Time for a double switch? Grote, Zaidman switching beats at The Score". Chicago Sun-Times.
- ^ Yellon, Al (2021-02-17). "Marquee Sports Network hires Beth Mowins to be the first woman to call Cubs games". Bleed Cubbie Blue. Retrieved 2021-07-31.
- ^ Brandon Contes (2021-04-09). "Matt Spiegel To Fill-In On Cubs Play-by-Play". Barrett Media. Retrieved 2021-07-31.
- ^ "MLB Media Notes: Marquee Sports uses three-man booth for Cubs' opening series". 7 April 2023. Retrieved July 5, 2023.
- v
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Chicago Cubs
- Established in 1874
- Formerly the Chicago White Stockings, Chicago Colts and the Chicago Orphans
- Based in Chicago, Illinois
- Tinker to Evers to Chance
- Bleacher Bums
- Wayne Messmer
- Ronnie Woo Woo
- Jerry Pritikin
- Yosh Kawano
- Life's Greatest Game
- Alibi Ike
- Mike Royko
- Harry Caray
- Holy Cow!
- Grant DePorter
- Wrigley Company
- Wrigley Field ivy
- Hey Hey Holy Mackerel
- Bill Holden
- The Heckler
- The Curse: Cubs Win! Cubs Win! Or Do They?
- We Believe: Chicago and Its Cubs
- Arne Harris
- "Go, Cubs, Go"
- "Sweet Home Chicago"
- "All the Way"
- "Jump"
- Cubs Win Flag
- Eamus Catuli
- Addison Red Line Station
- Sheridan Red Line Station
- Clark Street
- Addison Street
- The Winning Team
- Elmer, the Great
- Ferris Bueller's Day Off
- Rookie of the Year
- This Old Cub
- The Natural
- Taking Care of Business
- A League of Their Own
- The Cubs Fan's Guide To Happiness
- Pat Pieper
- The Cubby Bear
- Harry Caray's Italian Steakhouse
- Bohemian National Cemetery Columbarium
- Clark
- Back to the Future Part II
- Curse of the Billy Goat
- Ex-Cubs Factor
- Babe Ruth's called shot
- Steve Bartman incident
- Homer in the Gloamin'
- 1998 home run chase
- Brock for Broglio
- Merkle's Boner
- College of Coaches
- Ken Hubbs
- Billy Jurges incident
- June 23, 1984 game
- 1998 NL Wild Card tie-breaker game
- 2015 NL Wild Card Game
- 2015 NL Division Series
- 2016 NL Championship Series
- 2016 World Series
- 2018 NL Central tie-breaker game
- 2019 MLB Little League Classic
- MLB at Field of Dreams
- 2023 MLB London Series
- Owner: Joe Ricketts family
- Chairman: Tom Ricketts
- President of Baseball Operations/General Manager: Jed Hoyer
- Manager: Craig Counsell
championships (3)
championships (17)
championships
East (2) | |
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Central (6) | |
Wild Card (3) |
affiliates
- Iowa Cubs (Triple-A)
- Tennessee Smokies (Double-A)
- South Bend Cubs (High-A)
- Myrtle Beach Pelicans (Single-A)
- ACL Cubs (Rookie)
- DSL Cubs Blue (Rookie)
- DSL Cubs Red (Rookie)
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Radio | |||||
Broadcasters |
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Seasons (150) | |
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1870s | |
1880s | |
1890s | |
1900s | |
1910s | |
1920s | |
1930s | |
1940s | |
1950s | |
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1970s | |
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1990s | |
2000s | |
2010s | |
2020s |