Sports Radio News
105.7 The Fan Hosts Pay Tribute to Late Brooks Robinson
“Audacy’s 105.7 The Fan announced that it would be dedicating most of its programming on Wednesday to honoring Robinson.”

Published
2 months agoon
By
BSM Staff
Every Baltimore sports fan and baseball fans across the country are mourning the loss of Brooks Robinson. The Hall of Fame Orioles third basement died Tuesday at the age of 86.
Playing in the same division as the Yankees and Red Sox mean you are often smothered with stories of legendary names like Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle and Ted Williams. In Baltimore, those players were respected, but could not hold a candle to the admiration felt for Robinson.
Audacy’s 105.7 The Fan announced that it would be dedicating most of its programming on Wednesday to honoring Robinson.
Tomorrow, The Fan will be remembering Brooks Robinson.@BBMS1057TheFan and @IA1057TheFan will have special guests throughout their shows.
— 105.7 The Fan (@1057TheFan) September 26, 2023
From 10a to 2p, join @bobhaynie & @JimHunterTalks as they host a special 4hour program remembering the passing of a true #Orioles legend. pic.twitter.com/SWHDfLRP7Z
Members of the air staff, many of whom are Maryland natives, could not wait that long. They took to X (formerly Twitter) immediately to pay tribute to their hero.
Heartbroken and crestfallen. Brooks Robinson was the best of us. He was the ultimate ambassador for baseball and the city of Baltimore. It is impossible to quantify how deeply he will be missed and the indelible marquee made on generations of fans https://t.co/jtYaCx3Cjh
— Jason La Canfora (@JasonLaCanfora) September 26, 2023
I don’t have the words. He was so kind to everyone, I feel fortunate to have had a few laughs with him. https://t.co/qJFy1mKf6m
— Jeremy Conn (@JConnSports) September 26, 2023
RIP Brooks Robinson
— Rob Long (@RobLongSports) September 26, 2023
Never saw Brooks Robinson play but the man was an absolute legend in my house growing up. As good as he was as a player (he was damn good) he was an even better person. Any interaction I've ever had with him he couldn't have been nicer. We lost a good one today. RIP Brooks
— Ken Weinman (@KenWeinmanSport) September 26, 2023
Words can’t fully describe his impact.
— Ryan Ripken (@ryanripken) September 26, 2023
Mr. Oriole embodied so much for the City of Baltimore.
Nicest man you could ever meet.
No one could play the hot corner like #5. One of the best to ever play the sport.
But above all that, he was even a better man.
Thank you Brooks. https://t.co/KpmMbXIpXK
Fan hosts and others from around the sports world shared video of Jim Palmer on MASN. The Hall of Fame and three time Cy Young winner talked about his friend and former teammate during the pregame show ahead of the Orioles’ 1-0 win over the Washington Nationals.
Jim Palmer reflects on the legacy of Brooks Robinson. pic.twitter.com/2UlvMt5gBd
— Orioles on MASN (@masnOrioles) September 26, 2023
The love for Brooks Robinson was not confined to Baltimore. Plenty of Maryland natives that now work on national platforms took to social media to share their memories and love for him.
Long Brooks Robinson story I believe I told on radio:
— Scott Van Pelt (@notthefakeSVP) September 26, 2023
When the Orioles played in Memorial Stadium, the PA announcer was named Rex Barney. When a fan made a great catch of a foul ball, he'd say, "Give that fan a contract." At a game with my dad and Brooks fouls off a pitch. Dad… pic.twitter.com/tdfrksoBAX
Such a sad day. Brooks was a Hall of Fame third baseman, yes. He also was one of the kindest people you could ever meet, maybe *the* kindest. You hear it said about people all the time: “He didn’t have a mean bone in his body.” With Brooks, it was the absolute truth. RIP. https://t.co/OPvxl6f7Kv
— Ken Rosenthal (@Ken_Rosenthal) September 26, 2023
Rest in Peace Brooks. One of the kindest, warmest men I have ever met. Baltimore has been blessed with this man as one of the faces of the city and team.
— Gregg Olson (@GreggOlson30) September 26, 2023
I never saw him without a smile or a kind word. The world lost a great man. https://t.co/LNAgZxF6EG
Robinson played for the Orioles for 23 seasons, retiring in 1977. During that time, he won two World Series with the team, including in 1970 when he was also named the series MVP.
He was a sixteen-time Gold Glove winner an eighteen-time All-Star, and the American League MVP in 1964.
Sports Radio News
Merrill Reese: I Treat Every Broadcast Like Its Biggest of My Career
“As a radio broadcaster, you call almost every step and every yard line.”

Published
30 mins agoon
December 1, 2023By
BSM Staff
Merrill Reese has been calling games for the Philadelphia Eagles since 1977, and he is in the midst of chronicling what could end up becoming a storybook season for the team. The Eagles are off to a 10-1 start, and many experts around the league surmise that the team could be a favorite to qualify, and ultimately win, Super Bowl LVIII in Las Vegas.
He recently participated in an interview with Richard Deitsch of The Athletic, during which the venerated radio play-by-play voice was asked if he feels he can still improve as a broadcaster.
Within his answer, he described a book he read about former New York Yankees outfielder Joe DiMaggio, which divulged that “The Yankee Clipper” would feel as nervous before every game as he did during his rookie season in 1936. He can relate to the mindset approaching every game as he prepares to take the air. In fact, he views the weekly matchup as the most important game he has ever done in his career.
“I feel that way about a preseason game or a Super Bowl,” Reese said. “During the summer, I will go through three or four games and jot down notes how I used this word too often or I didn’t pick something up the way I wanted to. I don’t think my voice has changed. My eyesight is very good. I feel great. I’m doing what I’d rather do than anything else in the world.”
Although he had several opportunities to take his talents to the national level, Merrill Reese conveyed that he feels he has been fairly compensated enough not to leave the locale. At the same time, he also understands the unique facets of a radio broadcast that render it compatible with and enjoyable to the listeners.
“I love the fact that radio broadcasting is painting a picture,” Merrill Reese said. “I think the television guys do a great job, but it’s a little bit of a different job where you are captioning the picture. As a radio broadcaster, you call almost every step and every yard line.”
Sports Radio News
Damon Bruce After KNBR Cuts: ‘Radio’s Over, It’s Dead’
“A person who’s never listened to a show – not for a single day in their life – some accountant in another city somewhere just saw a number that they drew a red line through.”

Published
47 mins agoon
December 1, 2023By
BSM Staff
KNBR in San Francisco recently engaged in a round of layoffs that has affected the on-air lineup. Various on-air hosts from competitor 95.7 The Game addressed the staff cuts both during their programs and in social media posts. Damon Bruce formerly worked for the outlet and was let go as part of a lineup change earlier in the year. Since then, he has hosted his own independent programming distributed via digital platforms and took time to comment on what took place at KNBR, a station he used to work for as a producer.
“I don’t know if there’s a good time to lay anyone off, but just about to get into the month of December in-between the holidays is the biggest dickhead move any corporation can make,” Bruce said, “and you can see that these radio stations are owned by dickhead corporations.”
Bruce listed the employees and areas of the radio station that were affected by the move, including a producer and the outlet’s digital department. In fact, he chided the outlet for eliminating this facet of their coverage, referring to them as “morons” amid an era where digital content has been substantiated and inculcated within various sectors of the industry. For Brian Murphy, in particular, he just lost his morning partner of 18 years, something Bruce affirmed McCaffrey should be saluted for.
“Now I can speak from experience as someone who’s been laid off by a terrible corporation that I guarantee you what happened to Paul McCaffrey is the same thing that happened to me,” Bruce said. “A person who’s never listened to a show – not for a single day in their life – some accountant in another city somewhere just saw a number that they drew a red line through. Goodbye, Paul McCaffrey.”
Since the layoffs were announced, Bruce has reached out to McCaffrey and Santangelo and stated that he planned to put a call into Hammer. Moreover, he spoke with Murphy, who he surmises is going to take a few days to cool down before returning to the station.
A part of the layoffs that particularly bothered Bruce was the end of the 6 to 10 PM timeslot, which he used to host while at the outlet. Within his commentary, he conveyed that if KNBR had found a way to fairly compensate him, he would have remained in the timeslot for 35 to 40 years and been content with his role.
“I love an evening of taking calls and talking to fans and doing interviews and having an entire day of sports to look back on and an entire day of sports to preview,” Bruce said. “I love that timeslot, and it’s gone.”
Bruce is disappointed in the ramifications these layoffs have for the industry as a whole and expressed his concerns over finding the next generation of talent. He did acknowledge, however, that there are a variety of prospective talent hosting programming in the evenings and working to prove themselves. His concern in all of this is where young broadcasters will be able to broadcast on the air due to the elimination of evening and weekend programming.
“If all you’ve got on a radio dial is morning, middays and afternoon drive, those are usually always occupied by experienced people,” Bruce said. “How do you get experience? So we now live in a world where YouTube is going to matter more than ever before to not just up-and-coming broadcasters, but broadcasters that have been disregarded; broadcasters that have been laid off and people who want to do this.”
Within his YouTube segment, Bruce spoke directly to hosts in the San Francisco market from his experience and explained how a round of layoffs from five to eight years ago that let well-compensated professionals let go caused them to be replaced by young, inexperienced decision-makers. Because of the lack of experience and proficiency in the craft, he affirms that the new people in charge do not know what they are doing because they have not done it long enough and are simply focused on profitability and the bottom line.
“Radio’s over; it’s dead,” Bruce said. “And if anyone at 95.7 The Game is listening to me right now, if any remaining host at KNBR is listening to me right now, if any actual radio host is listening to me right now, I’m telling you you get your backup plan ready because that red line is coming for you. And it’s coming for you because there is middle-management corporate bloat that is part of the reason why these stations can’t figure it out.”
Sports Radio News
95.7 The Game’s Bonta Hill, Joe Shasky and Matt Nahigian Address KNBR Cuts

Published
12 hours agoon
December 1, 2023
Bay Area sports station KNBR parted ways with several staffers this week including morning show co-host Paul McCaffrey. The departures took many in sports media by surprise, including 95.7 The Game morning host Bonta Hill.
Hill, who worked at KNBR on the Murph and Mac show, felt obligated to discuss McCaffrey’s exit on The Morning Roast on Thursday, offering his condolences.
“Whenever I worked with him on that morning show as a board op or producer, I always left with a smile on my face,” Hill said. “They made me laugh, they treated me right, they taught me the ropes. And when you have an 18-year run together, that is legendary. Legendary.”
“Morning radio, that’s what we grew up on, and he was a pioneer,” Bonta added.
We are all one big family in the radio industry, even if we work at different radio stations. This morning, we wanted to give props to two Bay Area radio legends in Paulie Mac and Brian Murphy.
— The Morning Roast (@MorningRoast957) November 30, 2023
📺https://t.co/bEIduntz3E pic.twitter.com/6miF1hfnNV
Bonta Hill shared that Mac was one of his favorite people at the station, and that he did and continues to look up to him.
“I just feel bad, man. Christmas is around the corner, and people are losing their jobs,” Hill said. “You never want to see that. You never want to see that, but Paulie Mac, Murph, those guys are one of one. They are. They truly are man.”
“Murph and Mac is the combo in this market in terms of longevity, excellence, what they symbolized with that Giants run and how we gravitated towards them,” co-host Joe Shasky chipped in. “All of my sports radio love came through those guys’ love for each other. And you could feel it.”
95.7 The Game brand manager Matt Nahigian echoed the sentiments from Hill during a video commentary on X. He said despite the two stations being fierce competitors, there’s a mutual respect between leadership, talent and staff.
“I think it’s important to point out that the stations compete against each other hardcore,” Nahigian said. “We want to beat each other every month in the ratings and the whole bit. But all of us for the most part get along really well.”
From The Corner Office on a Thursday!
— Matt Nahigian (@mattnahigian) November 30, 2023
I address the changes across the street and play a little piece of @MorningRoast957 addressing it. pic.twitter.com/7iYI51CVRL
“KNBR didn’t gloat and celebrate when we made changes in March, and we won’t do that either,” he added. “Onward and upward. Great run by Paulie Mac, Murph and Mac.”

Jordan Bondurant is a features reporter for Barrett Sports Media. He’s a multimedia journalist and communicator who works at the Virginia State Corporation Commission in Richmond. Jordan also contributes occasional coverage of the Washington Capitals for the blog NoVa Caps. His prior media experiences include working for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, the Danville Register & Bee, Virginia Lawyers Weekly, WRIC-TV 8News and Audacy Richmond. He can be reached by email at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter @J__Bondurant.