John Sterling, the radio voice of the New York Yankees who has called 420 regular-season games, has retired, effective immediately, the club announced Monday in a statement that included a comment from the 85-year-old: "I leave very,
The radio voice of the Yankees is retiring and it is a sad day for fans. John Sterling announced on Monday that he is stepping aside effective immediately. He has called Yankees games since 1989. Some posted memories of growing up listening to Sterling call a game or their favorite call by the legendary broadcaster.
John Sterling, the hyperexcitable New York Yankees broadcaster known for decades of indelible, personalized home run calls, announced his immediate retirement Monday at age 85. Sterling made the unexpected decision a few weeks into his 34th season as the Yankees’ radio play-by-play voice.
New York Yankees icon Derek Jeter has paid his respect to legendary radio broadcaster John Sterling. In a post on X, Jeter called Sterling a "major part"
Yankees broadcaster John Sterling is stepping away from the radio booth for good. The Yankees announced Monday afternoon that Sterling, the long-time radio voice of the club, is r
Legendary New York Yankees radio broadcaster John Sterling is retiring from the broadcast booth effective immediately, the club announced on Monday. Sterling, 85, will be honored in an April 20 pregame ceremony before the team's game against the Rays at Yankee Stadium.
Yankees radio broadcaster John Sterling, who first started calling games for the Bronx Bombers in 1989, is retiring effective immediately, the team announced Monday. Sterling has called 5,420 regular season games and 211 postseason games,
Legendary New York Yankees radio broadcaster John Sterling may soon announce his retirement from the broadcast booth. Sterling, 85, will hold a press conference on Friday, and Andrew Marchand of The Athletic reports that he is expected to detail his future plans at that time.
New York Yankees radio play-by-play voice John Sterling, 85, is retiring effective immediately, the team and broadcaster both confirmed Monday. Sterling has been active this spring but had previously encountered some medical issues and had not traveled with the team on road trips during recent seasons.
Before John Sterling became the voice of the Yankees, the legendary broadcaster had a front-row seat to an epic Larry Bird performance, writes John Tomase.
Summer won’t sound the same without John Sterling, the legendary radio voice of the Yankees, whose distinctive and booming baritone provided the background for more than three decades of winning baseball in the Bronx.
A popular parlor game among Yankees fans for years has been trying to predict John Sterling’s home run calls for new players. But Aaron Judge said it wasn’t just fans. “The home run calls he comes up with .
The career of New York Yankees radio play-by-play announcer John Sterling’s is over after the team announced his immediate retirement Monday. Sterling, 85, is leaving the booth after 36 years because of undisclosed health concerns,
New York Yankees radio play-by-play voice John Sterling, 85, is retiring effective immediately, the team and broadcaster both confirmed Monday. Sterling has been active this spring but had previously encountered some medical issues and had not traveled with the team on road trips during recent seasons.
Earlier this week, longtime Yankees play-by-play announcer John Sterling announced his retirement. Sterling had a 36-year run as the voice of the Yankees, calling 5,420 regular season games and 211 postseason games.
Standing outside the Yankees’ clubhouse on Monday afternoon, Suzyn Waldman politely declined to comment when approached by a few writers. Reports of John Sterling’s retirement, linked to health concerns,
John Sterling, the legendary radio voice of the Yankees for over three decades, has announced his retirement and will be honored by the team on Saturday.
Legendary Yankees play-by-play announcer John Sterling announced his retirement on Monday after a decades-long career in the booth. Sterling served as the voice of the Yankees since 1989, and from 1995-2014,
The tributes kept pouring in after Yankees’ famed broadcaster John Sterling announced his retirement Monday. From the Islanders to the governor’s office, everyone wanted to show some love to Sterling,
The voice synonymous with the New York Yankees is calling it quits. Longtime radio play-by-play announcer John Sterling is retiring, effective immediately. The Yankees announced his retirement Monday alongside a statement from Sterling.
Michael Kay immediately picked up the phone when he saw John Sterling’s name on the caller ID. The Yankees’ radio voice had been under the weather lately, so Kay was hoping to hear that his long-time friend was finally feeling better.
Derek Jeter showed some Re2pect to John Sterling. The Yankees legend and baseball Hall of Famer congratulated Sterling on his broadcast career that came to an end on Monday. Sterling announced his retirement officially after serving as the voice of the Yankees since 1989.
Long-time radio voice of the New York Yankees, John Sterling, has retired effective immediately, the team announced Monday. Sterling has been a mainstay over the airwaves for more than 35 years, joining the booth in 1989 where he called 5,
Suzyn Waldman has known that John Sterling — her broadcast partner in the Yankees’ radio booth for the last two decades — was preparing to retire for a while now. That didn’t stop Monday’s official announcement from making the Yankees’ color commentator emotional.
Whenever the Yankees would acquire a new player or call one up from the minors, the conversation on the team bus would often turn to one question. What will John Sterling’s new home run call be? “What’s John going to come up with this time?
The New York Yankees and legendary announcer John Sterling go hand in hand. Sterling has been calling games for the Yankees since 1989 and even strung together an impressive streak of 5,000 consecutive games called.
After decades of entertaining generations of Yankees fans, legendary play-by-play announcer John Sterling’s memorable career is coming to an end. Sterling, 85, who has called 5,420 regular season Yankees games and 211 postseason Yankees games,
The decision to step away from the microphone seemed to be a long time coming for John Sterling. The Yankees made the news official Monday afternoon after it surfaced that Sterling would be retiring after serving as the voice of the franchise since 1989.
John Sterling, who’s been the voice of the New York Yankees since 1989, will hold a press conference Friday with the “expectation” being that he will retire, The Athletic’s Andrew Marchand reported Monday.
Sterling – who called more than 5,000 consecutive games from 1989-2019 – had cut back on road games in recent years and was not traveling with the club this year, but had done
John Sterling will step away from the microphone effective immediately after serving as the voice of the Yankees since 1989, but fellow broadcaster Michael Kay wondered why the legendary voice won’t call one final game before hanging up his headphones.
John Sterling, the hyperexcitable New York Yankees broadcaster known for decades of indelible, personalized home run calls, announced his immediate retirement Monday at age 85. Sterling made the unexpected decision a few weeks into his 36th season as the Yankees’ radio play-by-play voice.
The New York Yankees today announced that legendary Yankees play-by-play radio voice John Sterling, who has called 5,420 regular season Yankees games and 211 postseason Yankees games, is retiring effective immediately.
John Sterling has reached the end of his illustrious Yankees play-by-play career. The longtime Yankees radio voice is retiring effective immediately, the team announced Monday afternoon, and he will be honored with a ceremony on Saturday at Yankee Stadium.
The legendary radio voice of the New York Yankees, John Sterling, is expected to announce his retirement later this week, according to published reports. He has scheduled a news conference for Friday where he is expected to announce plans.