List of Miami Marlins broadcasters

Media and broadcast information/history for the Miami Marlins:

Flagship broadcast outlets

All names/call letters used are those used by the broadcaster the last time the team was broadcast on that outlet.

Television

  • SportsChannel Florida/Fox Sports Net Florida/FSN Florida/Fox Sports Florida/Bally Sports Florida (1997–present)
  • Sunshine Network/Sun Sports (1993–1997, 2006–2010)
  • WBFS-TV (1993–1998)
  • WAMI-TV (1999–2001)
  • WPXM-TV (2002–2005)
  • Marlins Television Network (1993–2005)

Radio

English

  • WINZ 940 AM (2014–present) – Flagship in Miami
  • WAXY 790 AM (2008–2013) – Flagship in Miami
  • WQAM 560 AM (1993–2007) – Flagship in Miami
  • Marlins Radio Network (1993–present) – Distributes games to radio stations around Florida
  • XM Satellite Radio (2005–present) – Carries games as part of MLB package

WQAM did not renew the contract with the Marlins when it expired after the 2007 season at the request of the Miami Dolphins.[1] WAXY 790 (The Ticket) signed a contract to become the flagship station for the Marlins.

Spanish

  • WAQI 710 AM (present)
  • WQBA 1140 AM (1998–2008)
  • WCMQ 1210 AM (1993–1997)

Broadcasters

Television

  • Joe Angel: TV play-by-play 1997–2000*
  • Gary Carter: TV analyst 1993–1996
  • Tommy Hutton: TV analyst 1997–2015, 2021–present
  • Len Kasper: TV play-by-play 2002–2004
  • Craig Minervini: Reporter 2002–present
  • Dave O'Brien: TV play-by-play 1997–2001*
  • Jay Randolph: TV play-by-play 1993–1996, Pre-game 1997–2000
  • Cookie Rojas: SAP Analyst 2003–present
  • Raul Striker, Jr.: SAP play-by-play 2003–present
  • Preston Wilson: TV analyst 2016
  • Eduardo Pérez: TV analyst 2016
  • Al Leiter: TV analyst 2016
  • Jeff Conine: TV analyst 2016
  • Rich Waltz: TV play-by-play 2005–2017
  • Todd Hollandsworth: TV analyst 2017–2021
  • Paul Severino: TV play-by-play 2018–present

Radio

English

  • Jesse Agler: Radio studio/Marlins extra host 2006–2007
  • Joe Angel: Radio play-by-play 1993–2000*
  • Roxy Bernstein: Radio play-by-play, 2005–2007
  • Glenn Geffner: Radio play-by-play, 2008–2022
  • Dave O'Brien: Radio play-by-play, 1993–2000*
  • Jon Sciambi: Radio play-by-play 1999–2004, Pre-game 1999–2000
  • Dave Van Horne: Radio play-by-play 2001–2021

Spanish

  • Manolo Alvarez: Spanish radio play-by-play 1993–1998
  • Jesus Diaz: Spanish radio play-by-play 1999
  • Luis Quintana: Spanish radio play-by-play 2002–present
  • Felo Ramírez: Spanish radio play-by-play 1993–2017
  • Ángel Rodríguez: Spanish radio play-by-play 2000–2001

See also

Notes

* Angel & O'Brien split innings doing play-by-play between radio and television for four seasons

References

  1. ^ The Marlins Ballpark News: WQAM to dump the Marlins
  • Florida Marlins: History: Marlins All-Time Broadcasters. Accessed 12 April 2006.
  • Florida Marlins: Roster: Broadcasters. Accessed 12 April 2006.
  • Florida Marlins: Team: Broadcasters. Accessed 1 May 2007.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Miami Marlins
  • Established in 1993
  • Formerly the Florida Marlins
  • Based in Miami, Florida
FranchiseBallparksCulture
LoreRivalriesRetired numbers
Key personnel
World Series Championships (2)National League Pennants (2)Division titlesWild card berthsMinor League affiliates
Seasons (32)
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
  • v
  • t
  • e
Related programs
Related articles
National
coverage
Former FSN
regional coverage
Fox/MyTV
O&O Stations
  • New York City: WNYW 5 (Yankees, 1999–2001), WWOR 9 (N.Y. Giants, 1951–1957; Brooklyn Dodgers, 1950–1957; Mets, 1962–1998; Yankees, 2005–2014)
  • Los Angeles: KTTV 11 (Dodgers, 1958–1992), KCOP 13 (Dodgers, 2002–2005; Angels, 2006–2012)
  • Chicago: WFLD 32 (White Sox, 1968–1972, 1982–1989)
  • Philadelphia: WTXF 29 (Phillies, 1983–1989)
  • Dallas–Fort Worth: KDFW 4 & KDFI 27 (Texas Rangers, 2001–2009)
  • San Francisco–Oakland: KTVU 2 (Giants, 1961–2007; Athletics, 1973–1974), KICU 36 (Athletics, 1999–2008)
  • Boston: WFXT 25 (Red Sox, 2000–2002)
  • Washington, D.C.: WTTG 5 (Senators, 1948–1958), WDCA 20 (Nationals, 2005–2008)
  • Houston: KRIV 26 (Astros, 1979–1982), KTXH 20 (Astros, 1983–1997, 2008–2012)
  • Detroit: WJBK 2 (Tigers, 1953–1974; 2007)
  • Minneapolis–Saint Paul: KMSP 9 (Twins, 1979–1988, 1998–2002), WFTC 29 (Twins, 1990–1992, 2005–2010)
TV history by decade
Commentators
Play-by-play
announcers
Former play-by-play
announcers
Color
commentators
Former color
commentators
Guest
commentators
Field reporters
Former field reporters
Studio hosts
Former studio hosts
Studio
analysts
Former studio
analysts
Lore
Regular season
Postseason games
World Series games
World Series
AL Championship Series
NL Championship Series
AL Division Series
NL Division Series
All-Star Game
World Baseball Classic
  • v
  • t
  • e
American League
National League
National TV networks/cable channels
By event