
Television And Radio Announcing Pdf To Excel
Broadcasters for the Washington NationalsMajor League Baseball team.
- 1Television
- 2Radio
Television[edit]
Current announcers[edit]
Jenkins pioneers his mechanical wireless television system, radiovision, with a public transmission sent from a navy radio station across the Anacostia River to his office in downtown Washington, D.C. Jenkins’s radiovisor is a multitube radio set with a special scanning-drum attachment for receiving pictures—cloudy 40- to 48-line images projected on a six-inch-square mirror.
- Bob Carpenter, play-by-play announcer, 2006–present
- F. P. Santangelo, color commentator, 2011–present
- Dave Jageler, substitute play-by-play announcer
- Byron Kerr, substitute studio host, 2007–present
- Dan Kolko, field reporter, 2014–2018; studio host, 2019–present
- Phil Wood, substitute studio analyst, 2008–present
- Michael Morse, substitute studio analyst and substitute color commentator, 2018–present
- Alex Parker, substitute studio host, 2018–present
- Bo Porter, studio analyst, 2019–present
- Alex Chappell, field reporter, 2019–present
- Carol Maloney, substitute field reporter and substitute studio host, 2019–present
- Justin Maxwell, substitute studio host, 2019–present
Former announcers[edit]
- Mel Proctor, play-by-play, 2005
- Ron Darling, color commentator, 2005
- Kenny Albert, play-by-play, 2005 (when Proctor was unavailable)
- Jack Voigt, color commentator, 2005 (when Darling was unavailable)
- Tom Paciorek, color commentator, 2006
- Don Sutton, color commentator, 2007–2008
- Don Baylor, substitute studio analyst, 2007 (when Ray Knight was unavailable)
- Rob Dibble, color commentator, 2009–2010
- Debbi Taylor, field reporter, 2007–2011
- Kristina Akra, field reporter, 2012
- Julie Alexandria, field reporter, 2013
- Ray Knight, studio analyst, substitute color commentator, 2007–2018
- Johnny Holliday, studio host, substitute play-by-play announcer, 2007–2018
Broadcast outlets[edit]
When the Nationals arrived in Washington, D. C., the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network (MASN) acquired the television rights for almost all Nationals games. However, MASN was not available to most people in the Nationals broadcast area for nearly all of the first two seasons of play. Some of the games were also televised on WDCA, mostly on weekends.
Cricket 2005 full version for windows 7. Ea sports cricket 2005 download for pc highly compressed EA Sports cricket 2005 is the cricket video game based on the real cricket match. This game is Developed by HB Studios and released by EA Sports, it was released in July 2005 on Xbox, PlayStation 2 and Windows. You have played many games but yet if you have not played any cricket game. Cricket 2005 is a sports title published by Electronic Arts (EA) and developed by HB Studios. It runs on a modified version of the engine used for the Madden 2005 game. EA released Cricket 2005 for Windows, Xbox and PlayStation 2. The PC download is a demo version that allows the user to play a single match against preset teams. EA Cricket 2005 Game Free Download For PC Full Version This is the only web which hate fake links it always provide working and checked links some are in torrents others will be direct links take both of them now.
While MASN continued to televise nearly every Nationals game, the number of WDCA telecasts decreased to approximately 30 in 2006, mostly on Friday nights. By 2007, the number of over-the-air games was down to approximately 20. MASN's broadcast partner switched from WDCA to WDCW from 2009 to 2012. In 2013, WUSA became MASN's over-the-air broadcast partner for 20 Nationals games a year–all weekend games except for Opening Day. In 2018, over-the-air broadcasts ended, and all games now air exclusively on MASN unless picked up for national broadcast.
Radio[edit]
Current announcers[edit]
- Charlie Slowes, 2005–present
- Dave Jageler, 2006–present
- Pete Medhurst, 2019–present (seven games in 2019[1])
- Phil Wood, radio post-game show host, 2008–present
- Craig Heist, substitute radio post-game show host
Former announcers[edit]
- Kevin Brown (as needed), 2017
- Dave Shea, 2005
Broadcast outlets[edit]
Since the 2011 season, the Nationals' flagship radio station has been WJFK-FM, '106.7 The Fan', which is owned and operated by Entercom after Entercom's purchase of CBS Radio. Most games also are simulcast on WFED, 'Federal News Radio,' at 1500 and 820 AM, which is owned by Hubbard Broadcasting after its purchase of the station from Bonneville International and was the flagship station of the Nationals from the first season in Washington (2005) through the 2010 season. Whenever WFED cannot air a game due to a conflict, that game airs on WJFK's sister station WJFK (1580 AM, 'CBS Sports Radio 1580').
See also[edit]
See also[edit]
- ^Wagner, Bill (May 29, 2019). 'Navy announcer Medurst gets shot at the major leagues with Washington Nationals'. The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved May 30, 2019.