Monday, November 16, 2015

2011 New York Yankees Broadcasters

KEN SINGLETON (YES Network)
"Former major leaguer Ken Singleton enters his 10th season as a game analyst and announcer for YES Network broadcasts of the New York Yankees. Known on the diamond as a consistent power hitter, Singleton has proven to be equally as reliable since joining the radio and television broadcast booths.
Prior to joining YES, Singleton divided his time calling play-by-play and providing commentary at the MSG Network. In 1998, he was part of MSG's production team that won four New York Emmys for its Yankees coverage.
Singleton joined the MSG Network in 1997 from The Sports Network (TSN), where he served as an analyst for the Montreal Expos from 1985-96. From 1991-96, he also called play-by-play and served as an analyst for CIQ Radio, the Expos' flagship radio network. In 1996 and '97, he was named by FOX Sports as a lead analyst for Saturday afternoon baseball broadcasts. In 1997 and '98, he worked as an analyst for Major League Baseball International.
Singleton enjoyed a 15-year major league career with the New York Mets, Montreal Expos and Baltimore Orioles, batting .282 with 317 doubles and 246 home runs. He is one of only 10 players in baseball history to hit 35 or more home runs in a season as a switch-hitter. He also ranks among the all-time leaders in most Baltimore offensive categories, including homers, RBI and total bases. During his career, Singleton was named to the American League All-Star team in 1977, '79 and '81. He was named Most Valuable Oriole in 1975, '77 and '79 and was a member of the Orioles' 1983 World Championship team. In 1982, he was the recipient of Major League Baseball's Roberto Clemente Award, honoring him for his contributions both on and off the field.
A native New Yorker, Singleton played both baseball and basketball in high school and also played baseball in the Bronx Federation League at Macombs Dam Park on the current site of Yankee Stadium. After getting a basketball scholarship to Hofstra University and playing baseball as well for one year, Singleton was drafted by the Mets in 1967.
He enjoys golf and reading historical novels and lives with his wife Suzanne in Sparks, Maryland. He also has three sons and a daughter."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book


JACK CURRY (YES Network)
"Jack Curry joined the YES Network in 2010 as a studio analyst, reporter and program contributor, following a 20-year career covering the Yankees for the New York Times. In addition, he contributes as a columnist on YESnetwork.com.
During his career with the Times, Curry authored more than 4,500 articles and covered 18 World Series and 11 All-Star Games. The New Jersey native also was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1999 and won multiple Times Publisher Awards.
Curry's television experience extends back to 1991 when he began contributing to Madison Square Garden Network's Yankees pre-game show and weekly baseball magazine show. Since November 2005 Curry has been a regular contributor to YES' Yankees Hot Stove and Yankees Baseball Daily shows. He also co-wrote a book with Derek Jeter entitled 'The Life You Imagine: Life Lessons for Achieving Your Dreams' a New York Times Best Seller.
A 1986 graduate of Fordham University, Curry resides with his wife, Pamela, in New Jersey."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book


JOHN FLAHERTY (YES Network)
"Former Yankees catcher John Flaherty enters his sixth season as a field reporter, studio analyst and game analyst for YES Network telecasts in 2011.
Drafted by Boston in 1988, Flaherty progressed through the Red Sox farm system before joining their major league squad in 1992. He played 14 seasons in the majors with Boston (1992-93), Detroit (1994-96), San Diego (1996-97), Tampa Bay (1998-2002) and the Yankees (2003-05), compiling a .252 average with 80 home runs in 1,047 games.
Flaherty brought his knowledge of the game and his veteran style of leadership to the Yankees clubhouse when he signed as a free agent in 2003. He played in 134 games with the Yankees across three seasons and will be long-remembered for his dramatic pinch-hit, walk-off single that defeated the Red Sox in the 13th inning of a 5-4 victory on July 1, 2004, in the contest that featured Derek Jeter's famous dive into the third base stands.
Flaherty is a New York City native and a graduate of George Washington University. On May 15, 2009, he was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from St. Thomas Aquinas College in Sparkill, New York."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book


KIMBERLY JONES (YES Network)
"Kimberly Jones returns for her seventh season as a Yankees pregame and postgame clubhouse reporter. She is also a contributor to YES Network's This Week in Football and Yankees Hot Stove shows, as well as occasionally hosting talk shows on WFAN-AM 660 in New York.
Jones previously spent four and a half years at the Star-Ledger (Newark, NJ), where she covered the New York Giants for three seasons and was the NFL columnist for one. For the 2005 NFL season, she contributed to the Star-Ledger's Sunday NFL notes column and also appeared as an NFL contributor on Out of Bounds on CN8, the Comcast Network.
Prior to moving to New Jersey, Jones worked at the Central Daily Times (State College, Pennsylvania), where she was the beat writer for Penn State football and men's basketball.
A native of Dallastown, PA, Jones graduated from Penn State with a B.A. in journalism and an M.S. in exercise and sports science. Following graduation, she completed an internship in the communications department of the Big Ten Conference in suburban Chicago."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book


AL LEITER (YES Network)
"Entering his sixth year with the YES Network, former Yankees pitcher Al Leiter serves as a color commentator, providing viewers with insight gained from his 19 years as a player in the major leagues. Prior to signing with YES, Leiter had worked as a postseason game analyst for FOX Sports and ESPN.
Originally drafted by the Yankees in 1984, Leiter played parts of 19 professional seasons with the New York Yankees (1987-89, 2005), Toronto Blue Jays (1989-95), Florida Marlins (1996-97, 2005) and New York Mets (1998-2004). He was a two-time All-Star (1996, 2000) and was a part of three World Championship teams (Toronto in 1992 and 1993 and Florida in 1997). On May 11, 1996, Leiter tossed the first no-hitter in Marlins history in an 11-0 win against Colorado.
A native of Bayville, New Jersey, Leiter has been nearly as busy off the field as he was on it. Since 1996 he has donated more than $1.5 million to various charities in the New York area and South Florida. In 2000 he was honored by Major League Baseball with the Roberto Clemente Award for his contributions to the community and in 2002, he was appointed to the board of directors of the Twin Towers Fund in New York City.
He was named the March of Dimes Sportsman of the Year in 2003 and the John V. Mara Sportsman of the Year in 2004 by the Catholic Youth Organization. With his wife, Lori, he created Leiter's Landing, a charitable organization committed to the betterment of youth through education, health care and social and community service.
Leiter has also been the recipient of numerous other awards and honors as a result of his charity work, including the 2008 'Breakthrough Spirit Award' at the Children's Cancer and Blood Foundation gala in New York City."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book


PAUL O'NEILL (YES Network)
"Paul O'Neill returns for his 10th consecutive season in broadcast television in 2011, serving as a game analyst for the YES Network.
The five-time All-Star outfielder played 17 years in the majors, spending his final nine seasons in pinstripes. He appeared in six World Series, winning five titles including four with the Yankees (1996, 1998-2000).
Affectionately known as a warrior to most Yankees followers, O'Neill began his major league career in 1985 with the Cincinnati Reds and earned the first of his five World Championships in 1990. He joined the Yankees in 1993 after eight seasons with the Reds, and in 1994 claimed the American League batting title with a .359 average. From July 1995 to May 1997, he played in 235 consecutive games in right field without making an error. In 2001, at 38, O'Neill became the oldest player in major league history to steal 20 bases and hit 20 home runs in the same season.
He lives in his native Cincinnati with his wife, Nevalee, and their three children: Andrew, Aaron and Alexandria. He was named 'Father of the Year' in June 2008 by the National Father's Day Council at its 67th Annual Father of the Year dinner in New York."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book


CARLOS SILVA (Producer/Engineer, WCBS)
Carlos Silva, a native of Caracas, Venezuela, enters his sixth season producing and engineering Yankees games on WCBS Radio 880 AM (Spanish and English). The 2011 season will mark his 11th year working on Yankees radio broadcasts and his 22nd overall season in baseball. It also marks his second year producing and conducting interviews in Spanish for YESnetwork.com
Silva has also worked for ESPN radio, Phillies Spanish radio, and the NBA's Orlando Magic and New Jersey Nets. He is also responsible for the translation and recording of Spanish broadcast spots throughout the season.
In the off-season, Silva resides in Tampa, Florida with his wife, Teresa, and his children Leslie, Kimberly and Matthew."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book


BETO VILLA (WADO)
"Beto Villa, a native of Caracas, Venezuela, has been broadcasting the Yankees since the beginning of the club's Spanish radio network in 1997, becoming one of the most recognized voices in baseball. The 2011 season will mark Villa's 15th as the 'Spanish Voice of the Yankees.' His famous home run call, 'La Bola va atras, se va, se va, se va, se vaaaaaaaaa ... se fue de cuadrangular ... jonron de!' has made him very popular in the tri-state area and around the world.
Beto provides Spanish listeners with thorough and thoughtful Yankees coverage. He treasures his pages and pages of statistics of Latin American ballplayers, which he uses during his radiocasts.
Since beginning his career in 1981, he has had the opportunity to broadcast both the Major League World Series and the Caribbean World Series. He is currently a senior editor of Latinobaseball.com, a website covering Latin American ballplayers in the major leagues and the winter leagues. Beto has a daughter, Margarita."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book


FRANCISCO RIVERA (WADO)
"Since 1995 Francisco Rivera has been involved in baseball as a color commentator and play-by-play announcer, including six years in the Yankees broadcasting booth. A native of Morovis, Puerto Rico, he covered the Philadelphia Phillies for Radio Tropical from 1995 to 1998 and worked the American League Championship Series in 2003 and 2004 for ESPN.
Rivera received his Bachelor's degree in Spanish literature from Rutgers University and graduated from the Cambridge University-affiliated Miguel Angel Torres School of Communications in Manhattan in 1978. He was one of the pioneers of the talk show WADO Deportivo where he worked until 2003, and began his communications career covering NBA basketball for WADO."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book


FELIX DEJESUS (WADO)
"Felix DeJesus, a native New Yorker, enters his sixth season as a backup commentator for the New York Yankees. He also serves as a Yankees correspondent for WCBS, writes for Listin Diario and is one of the co-hosts of El Mundo de Las Grandes Ligas, an internet show on MLB Radio.
DeJesus has been involved with the Hispanic market since 1993 when he became the color commentator for the NHL's Florida Panthers. He has worked in all areas of broadcasting- television, radio and the internet. From 1998 to 2004 he covered major league baseball on television for XTRA Innings in New York. He also covered the Caribbean World Series in 2002 for New York's Radio Unica 1660 AM and served as one of the play-by-play voices for the international broadcast of the 2007 Caribbean Series. He has also worked for FOX Sports, ESPN International and CNN. In 1999, he became the first announcer to broadcast in SAP for NBC News. DeJesus has also served the last five years as the Spanish language translator for Showtime Championship Boxing.
DeJesus graduated for Fordham University in 1988 with a degree in economics and currently resides in the tri-state area. He and his wife, Melissa, have three children, Christopher, Brendan and Giselle."

-New York Yankees Official 2011 Media Guide and Record Book

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