Broadcasters assigned from the Yankees to cover World Series appearances nationally (1947-1976)
1947 - Mel Allen (radio); 1949 - Mel Allen (radio); 1950 - Mel Allen (radio); 1951 - Mel Allen (radio); 1952 - Mel Allen (TV); 1953 - Mel Allen (TV); 1955 - Mel Allen (TV); 1956 - Mel Allen (TV); 1957 - Mel Allen (TV); 1958 - Mel Allen (TV); 1960 - Mel Allen (TV); 1961 - Mel Allen (TV); 1962 - Mel Allen (TV); 1963 - Mel Allen (TV); 1964 - Phil Rizzuto (TV, radio); 1976 - Phil Rizzuto (TV), Bill White (radio)
Mel Allen β, 1939–1940, 1942, 1946–1964 (WPIX), 1979-1986 (SportsChannel)
Russ Hodges β, 1946–1948 (WPIX)
Curt Gowdy β, 1949–1950 (WPIX)
Jim Woods, 1953–1956 (WPIX)
Red Barber β, 1954–1966 (WPIX)
Phil Rizzuto, 1957-1996 (WPIX)
Jerry Coleman β, 1963–1969 (WPIX)
Joe Garagiola β, 1965–1967 (WPIX)
Frank Messer, 1968-1984 (WPIX)
Bob Gamere, 1970 (WPIX)
Bill White, 1971-1988 (WPIX)
Bobby Murcer, 1983–1984, 1991-1998 (WPIX), 1988 (SportsChannel), 1989 (MSG), 1999-2001 (FOX5), 2002-2008 (YES)
Spencer Ross, 1985 (WPIX), 1987 (SportsChannel)
George Grande, 1989–1990 (WPIX)
Greg Gumbel, 1989 (MSG)
Tommy Hutton, 1989 (MSG)
Dewayne Staats, 1990-1994 (MSG)
Al Trautwig, 1990-2001 (MSG)
Paul Olden, 1994-1995 (WPIX)
Dave Cohen, 1995-1996 (MSG)
Ken Singleton, 1997-2001 (MSG), 2002–present (YES)
Michael Kay, 2002–present (YES)
Bob Lorenz, 2010–Present (YES)
Ryan Ruocco, 2015–Present (YES)
Dizzy Dean, 1950-1951 (WPIX)
Joe DiMaggio, 1952 (WPIX)
Joe Garagiola β, 1965–1967 (WPIX)
Jerry Coleman β, 1963–1969 (WPIX)
Whitey Ford, 1969-1971 (WPIX)
Fran Healy, 1979-1983 (SportsChannel)
Billy Martin, 1986-1987 (WPIX)
Ken Harrelson, 1987–1988 (SportsChannel)
Mickey Mantle, 1985-1988 (SportsChannel)
Bill White, 1971-1988 (WPIX)
Tom Seaver, 1989-1993 (WPIX)
Tony Kubek β, 1990-1994 (MSG)
Phil Rizzuto, 1957-1996 (WPIX)
Rick Cerone, 1996-1997 (WPIX)
Tommy John, 1998 (WPIX)
Tim McCarver β, 1999-2001 (WNYW)
Jim Kaat, 1986 (WPIX), 1995-2001 (MSG), 2002-2006 (YES)
Joe Girardi, 2004, 2007 (YES)
David Justice, 2005-2007 (YES)
Bobby Murcer, 1983–1984, 1991-1998 (WPIX), 1997-2001 (MSG), 2002-2008 (YES)
Tino Martinez, 2010 (YES)
Lou Piniella, 1989 (MSG), 2012-2013 (YES)
David Cone, 2002, 2008–2009, 2011–present (YES)
John Flaherty, 2006–present (YES)
Al Leiter, 2006–present (YES)
Paul O'Neill, 2002–present (YES)
Ken Singleton, 1997-2001 (MSG), 2002–present (YES)
β - indicates Ford C. Frick Award winner
Longest serving Yankee radio broadcasters (all-time with 10+ years)
Phil Rizzuto (30 yrs), John Sterling (28 yrs), Mel Allen (22 yrs), Frank Messer (18 yrs), Beto Villa (16 yrs), Bill White (16 yrs), Red Barber (13 yrs), Suzyn Waldman (12 yrs), Michael Kay (10 yrs)
Radio Announcers by Year
Garnett Marks, 1939
Arch McDonald β, 1939
Mel Allen β, 1939–1940, 1942, 1946–1964
J.C. Flippen, 1940
Connie Desmond, 1942
Don Dunphy, 1944
Bill Slater, 1944–1945
Al Helfer, 1945
Russ Hodges β, 1946–1948
Curt Gowdy β, 1949–1950
Art Gleeson, 1951–1952
Bill Crowley, 1951–1952
Joe E. Brown, 1953
Jim Woods, 1953–1956
Red Barber β, 1954–1966
Phil Rizzuto, 1957–1986
Jerry Coleman β, 1963–1969
Joe Garagiola β, 1965–1967
Frank Messer, 1968–1985
Bob Gamere, 1970
Bill White, 1971–1986
Dom Valentino, 1975
Fran Healy, 1978–1981
John Gordon, 1982-1985 (Pre and postgame only, 1986)
Bobby Murcer, 1986
Spencer Ross, 1986
Hank Greenwald, 1987–1988
Tommy Hutton, 1987–1988
John Sterling, 1989–present
Jay Johnstone, 1989–1990
Joe Angel, 1991
Michael Kay, 1992–2001
Charley Steiner, 2002–2004
Suzyn Waldman, 2005–present
Beto Villa, 1997–2013 en Español
Francisco Rivera, 2005–Present en Español
Felix DeJesus, 2006–Present en Español
Ricky Ricardo, 2014–Present en Español
β - indicates Ford C. Frick Award winner
WJZ/WABC 1939-40, 1981–2001
WOR 1942
WINS 1944-57, 1978–80
WMGM/WHN 1958-60, 1967–70
WCBS 1961-66, 2002–2013
WMCA 1971-1977
WFAN 2014–present
WADO 2010–present (Spanish)
The Yankees' New York City Flagship station has been:
WABD/WNYW: 1947-1951); 1999-2001
WCBS-TV: 2002-2004
WWOR-TV: 2005-2014
WPIX: 1951-1998; 2015-
Outside of New York City, over-the-air television broadcasts can often be seen on:
WCTX "My TV 9" New Haven/Hartford
WCWN "The CW 15" Albany (2013-)
WNYO-TV "My TV" Buffalo
WHAM-TV, WHAM-DT2 (The CW Rochester) Rochester
WSTQ-LP "CW6", WSTM-TV "NBC 3" Syracuse
WBPN-LP "My8" Binghamton
WQMY Williamsport/Scranton/Wilkes Barre
WPNY-LP Utica
SportsChannel New York 1979-1988
MSG Network 1989-2001
YES Network 2002-current