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Rod Lakin Sees the Power of 94WIP on Display Every Day

“It’s crazy. WIP, I’ve never in my career seen a station so ingrained with the community.”

Brian Noe

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A photo of Rod Lakin and the 94WIP logo

Think about your biggest change in life. When did it occur and how big of a change was it? Was it relocating for school or work? Did it involve something more serious like death or divorce? We all experience major changes in life. How we respond to those changes reveals a lot about us as individuals. For 94WIP program director Rod Lakin, one of the biggest changes he’s ever experienced was moving from sunny Phoenix to the City of Brotherly Love. That’s like going from the chill vibes of a Phish concert, to being thrown straight into the mosh pit at a Lamb of God show.

Lakin didn’t just change addresses and get used to less sun. Immediately after beginning his new gig, Angelo Cataldi, an iconic host in Philly for 30 years, revealed his plans to retire. The major change box was officially checked for both Lakin and WIP.

Since that time, Rod Lakin and WIP have pivoted beautifully. The lineup is strong. The ratings are great. Life is good. We always talk about quarterbacks being cool under fire. Can you imagine if a program director like Lakin panicked during challenging times? WIP wouldn’t be where it is today if that were the case.

In the conversation below, Rod Lakin talks about the challenges he experienced while relocating across the country. He reveals the time he was most nervous as a PD. Lakin also shares excellent stories about Bryce Harper and a multitasking police officer. Only in Philly. Enjoy!

Brian Noe: How long did it take for you to feel comfortable in a new market over there in Philly?

Rod Lakin: I was out here on my own for the first few months. My family was back in Phoenix. That gave me a good chance to get to know all the people here and get a good understanding of the market and the way it worked. I think probably by the end of the year. I felt pretty good, like I was in a good place in terms of just understanding the way the city worked and the station. It took me a few months.

BN: I would think going from Phoenix to Philly is a huge change. Would you say it was as great as you expected it to be?

RL: Oh, definitely as great. My timing was good just because in Phoenix, the last summer I was there, the Suns were in the NBA Finals against the Bucks. It was just crazy. You’ve got to remember too, that was coming out of the pandemic. People were in the stands for the first time. It was the first time there were large-scale crowds again. The energy for that series was just completely nuts.

I remember thinking at the time, “I just love this, and this is what you want to be doing every day”. And then you come out to Philadelphia, and it is every day. These fans just get into it whether it’s Eagles, Phillies, Sixers, or anything else, they live and die by their teams.

BN: You were in Phoenix when the Suns came so close against the Bucks. You were also in Philly when the Eagles came so close to beating the Chiefs in the Super Bowl. When you think about those two outcomes, which was the bigger disappointment?

RL: Oh, man, that’s tough. That’s tough because the Suns have never won a championship before. For people that grew up in Phoenix, it’s like their first love because that was really the first professional sports team in Phoenix. But the Eagles one, that was crushing. Just to come so close. I went to the game. It was fun for me just to be back in my hometown, and then see the Eagles in the Super Bowl. It was the first time I had been to a Super Bowl. It was soul-crushing. So I don’t know, I’m not going to pick. I’m just going to say they were both equally bad.

BN: How about the challenge of losing Angelo Cataldi and not missing a beat? How has that been for you and the station?

RL: I mean, it’s been great. The new morning show has done a great job and that’s a huge task. We talked about it when we made the change, I knew Angelo was an institution out here, but I don’t even think I could really grasp how big he was until we made the announcement. Then we had the final show. What he meant to the city over the last 30 years, it’s just incredible.

So, yeah, to have a morning show come in with those kind of expectations and filling those kind of shoes, and to have the success that we’ve had, I think has been great. I think it’s gone better than any of us had a right to expect. It’s been nice.

BN: When Angelo moved on from doing a daily show, did you think about him being a guest once a week or having some type of presence on the station?

RL: Yeah, sure. Yeah, you have to think about all of that. But, ultimately, it comes down to the person too. Angelo, when he retired, was writing a book, which is out now. LOUD, it’s a great book. It’s on AngeloCataldi.com, or on Amazon bookstores. It’s really good book. He wanted to dive headfirst into his book. That was really where he was at the time.

Then for us, we wanted to place all energy in the new show. So yeah, we had discussed a couple of different options, whether it’s calling in or just having a semi-regular role at the station. But at the end of the day, he wanted to do his book and we wanted to get started on the new chapter for WIP. We’ve had him on, he’s been back promoting his book for the last month or so. We’ve had him on all the shows. It’s been great to hear his voice again.

BN: What convinced you that the current lineup was the best for the brand moving forward?

RL: Well, with Joe [DeCamara] and Jon [Ritchie], I knew that they already had a really good existing show. I felt like the pieces were in place to make it go to the next level. They have a good sense of humor. It was really about getting that show to the next level, adding complementary pieces because that had been a big part of Angelo’s show as well with contributors. Just putting it all together and making sure that we’re supporting it fully.

For middays, to have an opportunity to bring someone like Hugh Douglas back to Philadelphia was great. Joe Giglio, who has been doing evenings at WIP for a number of years, was ready to take that next step. Then putting them together and seeing that instant chemistry, it really worked.

I didn’t tell them, but Hugh came into town because he was inducted into the Eagles Hall of Fame almost about a year ago, I had him come in studio with Joe when he was doing his evening show. It was a tryout for me. They didn’t know about it. I could tell they had really good chemistry from the beginning. And then [Jon] Marks & [Ike] Reese in the afternoon, have been doing great all along.

I just knew that the pieces seemed to fit the culture, too. Hugh being somebody that everybody knew and worked at WIP previously. That was a really like, turnkey option for me too. I think it’s been great.

BN: How would you describe what it’s like to hear chemistry? What does that sound like to you?

RL: Yeah, it’s hard to say. It’s not anything you can really describe fully, you just kind of have to have an instinct for it. I guess the best way I could put it is, if you put somebody on the show and it sounds like they’re just being interviewed, as opposed to you putting somebody on the show and it sounds like they’re having a conversation. That really is the big difference, I think. And with Hugh, like I was saying before when he came in last year, when he and Joe did that hour together, it was supposed to be an interview. But really, it turned into a conversation.

BN: How do you think working for Arizona Sports and Bonneville prepared you for WIP and Audacy?

RL: Well, first of all, my old job in Arizona, it was just great because on the partnership level, they had all the teams. That really taught me early on the importance of these partnerships. Coming out here to WIP, we have two great partners with the Eagles and the Phillies, I had a lot of muscle memory on situations I dealt with in Arizona. That taught me a lot. And just the great leaders that I had there. Scott Sutherland and Ryan Hatch were mentors and they helped prepare me for future success.

I often fall back on lessons that they taught me, especially getting out here in the beginning, they were really good resources to talk to and help me. It’s a big change. Until I moved out to Philadelphia about two and a half years ago, I lived in Arizona. [Laughs] I never lived anyplace else. So it was a big shock for me.

BN: Working with all of those professional franchises in Phoenix and Philadelphia, what’s the most nervous you’ve been as a programmer?

RL: The last example I can think of, and it was here, I came in to make the announcement for the new morning show, and I had to sit across from Angelo as he interviewed me about the change and all of that. I was just so intimidated. He’s just this larger-than-life guy. I wanted to make sure that I was conveying to the city of Philadelphia why I thought this is the right choice. He made me take a phone call from a fan. I had to actually act like a host, take this guy’s call, and ask him questions and all that. That’s probably the most nerve-wracking thing I can remember recently.

BN: I can just imagine Angelo. Did he try to make you nervous on purpose?

RL: It’s a whole story. At one point, he had a program director that he brought on the air to take calls, and it didn’t go very well. I think the program director told one of the callers to go to hell or something.

BN: [Laughs]

RL: So it was kind of like a bit, he wanted me to do it. Obviously, I wasn’t going to do that. But I remember when the guy called in, he introduced the caller, and I don’t even know what I said. I remember Angelo just like motioning to me like, “Alright, keep going, ask him another question, keep this thing moving”. I was like “Oh my God.” It was very purposeful on his part. For sure.

BN: Can you think of a funny bit or anything over the years that one of your hosts did that you thought was hilarious?

RL: Funny bit. I’m sure there are many. There are stories I could think of that are probably not appropriate to talk to you about.

BN: [Laughs] What is the most inappropriate yet still appropriate phone call you’ve heard over the years? Meaning the guy wasn’t cussing, you didn’t have to dump it, but you were like, wow, this is pretty wild right now?

RL: Well, recently, before the Dallas/Eagles game, we had a caller on the midday show. He was just going on this epic anti-Cowboys rant and how much this rivalry means and how much he hates the Cowboys. Then all of a sudden you hear this little sound. It’s like a police siren. It was a police officer who’s pulling somebody over as he was talking and making this big Cowboys rant.

BN: Oh, that’s great. Man, you know you’re in a hardcore sports town when that’s the case.

RL: Seriously. Yeah, and we had Jason Kelce on the morning show. He calls in on Wednesdays. He said that Nick Sirianni, the Eagles coach, played the clip of that on WIP to the team before the Dallas game just to get them fired up.

BN: Oh, wow. How big of a compliment is that to your station?

RL: Yeah, it’s awesome. We’ve had a few, like Bryce Harper. We have this great caller Chuck from Mt. Airy who calls in on some of the shows. He was talking about Bryce Harper. Then Bryce Harper hit a home run that night and then in the postgame talked about how he hit it for Chuck.

It’s crazy. WIP, I’ve never in my career seen a station so ingrained with the community. To have one of the biggest stars in baseball listen to WIP first of all, which he does, and then make a point in the postgame show to say that he hit a home run for one of our callers, I don’t think that happens anyplace else.

BN: How about for you personally, just future goals? Do you think long-term or the next day?

RL: Yeah, next day. You go through a situation like I went through where you move cross-country to the huge powerhouse, sports radio brand. Then, a week later, the guy that’s been doing morning drive for the last 30 years says he’s going to retire. That’s enough. Just the expectations of living up to my predecessors here and making sure we’re putting out a quality product for the audience. Especially right now with the Eagles and the Phillies having such great seasons.

We have these great market conditions. For me, every day is just how do you execute the opportunity? That’s what I focus on.

BN: When you started off your sports radio career, if someone would’ve told you, “Look, man, this is the way it’s going to go. You’re going to be in Phoenix programming a great station. Then you’re going to go to Philly and you’re going to be programming WIP.” If someone had told you that, what would have been your reaction?

RL: I would have been really surprised. [Laughs] I didn’t really know early on in my career whether or not I was going to pursue something on air or behind the scenes. Certainly, the idea of being a program director was not on my radar at that time. It was only until I became an executive producer in Phoenix, and I got to know a lot of the great program directors around the country that I really started thinking about that as being a viable career path for me.

So yeah, I would’ve been pretty stunned if you told me I’d be in Philadelphia right now talking Eagles and Phillies with you, and moving my family across the country. That would not have been something I would’ve expected, but I’m happy.

BN: I’m glad you’re happy. It’s funny, man, because if I were in your shoes, I would be like, man, how are they going to treat me? How are they going to react? Are they going to be like, this guy is from Phoenix? What are we doing? It sounds like you didn’t feel like that at all.

RL: I mean, I didn’t. I’m sure there were people that were thinking that. I know I would’ve if I were here. But everybody from the beginning was very receptive to what I had to say. It wasn’t like I was coming in saying, all right, here we go, let me show you how we did things in Arizona. I came in to listen and just to align and enhance the brand here. I think we’ve landed in a good place.

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Endorsement Ads from Sports Radio Talent Can Be a Business’s Superpower

Radio endorsers can be your ‘superpower’ in achieving your marketing goals.

Jeff Caves

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Graphic for a story about talent endorsement ads
Graphic Credit: InsidersRadioNetwork.com

Many key local advertisers increasingly turn to radio on-air personality endorsement ads to enhance brand visibility and attract potential customers. It has been termed the ‘superpower’ of advertising. Securing the right radio endorser can significantly boost an advertiser’s credibility and reach among listeners. However, selecting the proper radio personality requires careful consideration and strategic planning. Here are some specific steps a local car dealership, for example, could take to hire a radio endorser and some insights on their effectiveness.

Step 1: Goals and Targets

Before hiring, define your marketing objectives and identify your target audience. Decide whether you want increased brand awareness, showroom visits, or website hits. Don’t expect all of it. Lift sales now or build them for tomorrow? Understanding this will help select a radio endorser and identify what the endorser should be talking about in their spots. Try short-term sales lift ads at the end of the month and brand-building the rest of it.

Step 2: Research Local Radio Personalities

Start by researching radio personalities in your market with a strong presence and influence among your target demographics. Listen to different radio stations and shows to familiarize yourself with the hosts’ styles, tones, and audience engagement. Consider factors such as ratings, time slots, and formats. AM/PM drive time hosts on news and sports stations often reach upscale males who are hard to reach other ways.

Step 3: Evaluate Credibility and Audience Connection

Judge the credibility and rapport of potential endorsers with their audience. Look for personalities who have built trust and reputation through their on-air presence. Ask around. Do the on-air personality and your values align with your dealership’s brand image and messaging?

Step 4: Consider Audience

Make sure the station’s demographics align with the dealership’s target market.

Step 5: Establish Contact

Reach out to express the dealership’s interest in collaboration. Provide details about your marketing goals. State precisely what you are looking for and what you want to sell. Selling luxury cars at a sports station is always a hit. Schedule a meeting or phone call to discuss potential partnership opportunities and gauge the endorser’s interest.

Step 6: Negotiate and Collaborate

Finalize the partnership agreement with the radio endorser. Ensure compensation, contract duration, endorsement frequency, and exclusivity agreements are in place. Ensure that both parties have a clear understanding of expectations and deliverables. Consider including a vehicle for part of the compensation.

Step 7: Create Engaging Radio Scripts

Work with the radio endorser and their team to create engaging and memorable radio scripts that effectively promote the dealership and your offers. Lay out several ideas so the endorser has plenty of direction. Provide key messaging points, brand guidelines, and any specific creative elements to be included in the ads. Keep it fresh and ensure the endorser is authentic, not just reading a script.

Step 8: Stick With It and Monitor Performance

Track the performance of the radio endorsements by monitoring the feedback you receive personally, website traffic, and sales. Ensure your sales staff knows the relationship and invite the endorser to sales meetings. Make it a 12-month program and be patient.

Hiring a radio endorser can be a potent strategy for local car dealerships aiming to amp their brand and connect with their target audience. Radio endorsers can be your ‘superpower’ in achieving your marketing goals.

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John Sterling Looks Back on a Monumental Career

“When you think of it, my career has been at its best when the jobs are extemporaneous.”

Derek Futterman

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John Sterling
Courtesy: Corey Sipkin

Perched high above the field in the radio broadcast booth at Yankee Stadium, John Sterling had a largely unobstructed view of a national pastime every summer. Sterling called 5,631 Yankees games over parts of 35 seasons as the radio play-by-play voice of the team – 5,420 in the regular season and 211 in the postseason – along with five World Series championships. This includes every one of Derek Jeter’s 3,465 hits, all 652 saves by Mariano Rivera and every one of Bernie Williams’ 287 career home runs.

In mid-April of this year, Sterling officially retired from the job and was honored by the organization with a pregame ceremony, messages from former players and personnel and gifts to commemorate his career.

“When a pitcher would be ready in his final inning, Mel [Stottlemyre] would tell him, ‘Empty the tank in your final inning. Empty the tank,’” Sterling recalled. “I retired because my tank is empty. I have emptied it by being on the air 64 years, so that’s why I left and I’m really happy about it.”

Sterling had signed a contract extension with WFAN, the team’s flagship radio station since 2014, to continue calling Yankees games in 2022. This came with a reduced schedule that implemented less travel on the road but still included trips to Citi Field, Fenway Park and Oriole Park at Camden Yards, along with every postseason game.

During that season, Sterling made sure to travel to Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas to watch superstar outfielder Aaron Judge break the American League single-season record for home runs. This, of course, was a change for Sterling, who had been resisting calls to diminish his workload for several seasons. He had called 5,060 consecutive Yankees games and did not miss a sporting event for which he was scheduled in 38 seasons total, a streak that predates his days broadcasting in the Big Apple.

When Sterling was younger, he remembers listening to The Eddie Bracken Show on the radio, a Sunday afternoon comedy program that entertained audiences around the country. It was not Bracken, however, that stood out to him on the air. Instead, Sterling wanted to emulate the sonorant announcer who exclaimed, “Live from Hollywood, it’s The Eddie Bracken Show, along with Eddie’s special guests.” Sterling developed a resonant voice of his own and focused on doing what was necessary to make it behind the microphone.

“From that point on, I knew it was going to be on the air, and it was very important to me because I never had to worry in school – and I should have because I was a terrible student – but I knew what I was going to do,” Sterling said. “When I became an adolescent – 12, 13 – there was no question in my mind what I was going to do to make a living.”

Throughout his youth, Sterling consumed and scrutinized over various broadcasts and announcers, including Mel Allen, the former voice of the Yankees. It helped that he grew up a fan of the team and had an understanding of what he was listening to. Moreover, he learned how to equip his voice to thrive in different scenarios, something that would prove to be invaluable as his career proceeded.

“I had spent my life listening to every broadcaster I could listen to,” Sterling said. “My favorite was the then-WNEW-AM – that station was considered the darlings of Madison Avenue – and they had personalities and newscasters, and boy did I want to be on WNEW-AM.”

Although Sterling took classes at Moravian College and Boston University, he never finished his undergraduate studies after his mother passed away due to heart issues. As a result, he was left to fend for himself and ultimately returned to the classroom at Columbia University’s School of General Studies. One of those classes was taught by the program director of WNBC, in which Sterling earned an “A” grade. Soon thereafter, he compiled an audition tape and took a broadcasting job in Wellsville, N.Y. at the age of 19.

“The funny thing is it was a very small station, so the morning man got up before the crack of dawn and did the morning show,” Sterling said. “The midday guy was the general manager, so whenever he finished his show at 12 or 1 – whenever he finished it – he left to sell the merchants on the street, and my first day on the air, I was alone on the radio station. Can you imagine?”

From there, Sterling began to work at a variety of radio stations in the Northeast region of the country before landing a job as an overnight disc jockey in Providence, R.I. Once he began broadcasting in 1964 on WCBM in Baltimore, Md., he was an early adopter of new technology allowing for radio hosts to implement live callers on the air.

“I had been doing a general talk show in Baltimore on radio and TV, and I didn’t know what the heck I was talking about,” Sterling said. “I kept putting sports into it, so I finally got a little bit of a sports rep in Baltimore.”

As listeners became familiar with Sterling’s knowledge of and passion for sports, he began to elicit more opportunities in that realm despite the lack of an all-sports radio format. In particular, Sterling had been noticed by Baltimore Bullets broadcaster Jim Karvellas, and he eventually called a year of games for the team in addition to Baltimore Colts contests.

In 1971, Sterling returned to New York City to host a sports talk show on WMCA, a heralded means of employment that he believed represented what he should be doing. Additionally, he used vacation days to fill in for Frank Messer announcing New York Knicks games on radio for two seasons, including the championship 1972-73 campaign with stars such as Walt “Clyde” Frazier, Earl Monroe and Willis Reed on the court. Even though he was situated in New York City and also called games both for the Knicks and Morgan State University college football, he perceived his program as having a broad focus.

“I wanted my show to be about everything,” Sterling said. “I wanted to talk about every team, and I had an opening like that. So [sports radio has] evolved where WFAN came in and then every single city had to have a sports talk station. It’s a very good format to combat the music.”

When WMCA became the radio home of the New York Nets in 1975, Sterling continued to host his sports talk show and also became the team’s play-by-play announcer in its final season within the American Basketball Association. The team moved to Piscataway, N.J. beginning in the 1977-78 season and became the New Jersey Nets, but Sterling still remained on the broadcasts, nonetheless. While balancing both of these roles, he was also calling New York Islanders games at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum on Long Island but stopped working on those broadcasts after the 1977-78 season finished.

Sterling eventually departed New York to work in Atlanta, Ga. to host a sports call-in show on WSB Radio and also began his astonishing streak of perfect attendance. This started in 1981 while calling games for the Atlanta Hawks for Turner Sports on TBS. Once the baseball season commenced, he was on the air for Atlanta Braves games and translated his panache and ebullience to baseball games.

“Let’s face it – you’re looking at one great job after another,” Sterling said. “Anyone in the business would have loved the [W]MCA thing with all the sports I did, and then I got to Atlanta and I start doing the Hawks and Braves. Who wouldn’t want that job?”

When Sterling first started broadcasting Yankees games during the 1989 season, the team featured stars such as Don Mattingly, Rickey Henderson and Dave Righetti but struggled to consistently win games. The team ended up finishing last in the American League East division with a 74-87 record and continued to have losing seasons through 1992. From that point on though, the organization did not have another year under .500 while Sterling was behind the microphone, an unprecedented run of consistent success that continues to this day.

“I live life by the seat of my pants; I broadcast by the seat of my pants,” Sterling said. “Whatever happens, happens. When you think of it, my career has been at its best when the jobs are extemporaneous. Think of it – disc-jockey shows, talk shows and play-by-play. It’s all extemporaneous, and that’s what I do best.”

The origin behind Sterling’s maelstrom of signature home run calls that have punctuated blasts by The Bronx Bombers for most of his career was merely happenstance. Over the years, baseball fans have been treated to his creative ingenuity for stars such as Aaron Judge, Robinson Canó and Curtis Granderson among others. Early in the 2024 regular season, Sterling coined the phrase, “There is a Soto photo” for home runs hit by new superstar outfielder Juan Soto, and also began to sing, “He’s Juanderful, marvelous” on the air as well.

“There was no process,” Sterling said of his calls. “Bernie Williams hit a home run and I exclaimed, ‘Bern, Baby, Bern!,’ and it kind of took off from there. It was never expected to be a cottage industry where I had to do a home run call for everyone; however, it became so popular, I should have been doing that.”

Ahead of the 2018 major-league season, the Yankees traded for Miami Marlins outfielder and reigning National League most valuable player Giancarlo Stanton, who was coming off a season where he hit .281 with 59 home runs and 132 RBIs. The trade prompted Sterling to call Berlitz, a company that provides Italian lessons and classes to those looking to learn the language, in a quest to devise a signature home run call for the new slugger. It was a rare moment where he had scripted one of the exclamations ahead of time.

“I spoke to the Italian mistress, [and] I told her I wanted a phrase,” Sterling said. “I said, ‘You probably won’t be old enough to remember this, but a phrase like, ‘Ronzoni, sono buoni,’’ and she came up with, ‘Giancarlo, non si può stoparlo!,’ which means you can’t be stopped, so that kind of worked out. Anyway, the home run calls have been kind of a fun thing, and it was very good for my career.”

Sterling makes time to listen to sports programming and keep up with the latest news, something that has been easier without his broadcasting responsibilities. With a preponderance of young players entering the league, consistent roster alterations and expanded interleague play, part of his responsibility was to stay aware of everything going on.

“As every player comes up or every pitcher or whatever, I try to give a little scouting report to give an idea of what they can do and what they can’t do,” Sterling said. “And of course, Suzyn [Waldman] is great at all that [with] finding out the background of the player. I mean, she’s phenomenal at it.”

The partnership Sterling has forged with Waldman, the first voice to be heard on WFAN when it launched in July of 1987, permeated through the airwaves for many fans listening to broadcasts. As was customary over the years they worked together, she brought him onto the air with the resounding introduction, “Stepping up to the microphone is the voice of the New York Yankees: John Sterling.” Sterling would then follow the parlance by saying, “Well, Suzyn, I thank you,” before proceeding to discuss the matchup on the field.

Sterling first met Waldman while he was filling in for Pete Franklin on WFAN after he had suffered a heart attack. As a guest host for the week, Waldman quickly observed that Sterling did the entire four-hour show standing up while placing his hand over his right ear. Working together on the Yankees radio broadcasts for parts of 19 seasons, the duo has made an indelible impact in team history, resulting in a custom-made talking bobblehead giveaway, T-shirts and other memorabilia. The synergy and rapport they shared consistently permeated through the speakers, adding to the nuanced verve and nostalgia offered through the radio medium.

“We became buddies and then we were buddies all those years when she was working for WFAN as being the [Yankees] beat reporter,” Sterling said. “The only radio station I know of that would have a beat reporter like a beat writer, and she was great at that, and I knew she’d be great as my partner and she was, so it all worked out.”

Sterling officially announced his retirement in mid-April, concluding his run of 36 seasons serving as the radio play-by-play announcer of New York Yankees baseball. In the past, he had stated that he would never retire and knew that his voice remained strong enough to continue calling the games. While he acknowledged that he was nearing the end of his career during the team’s opening homestand, the decision to move on from the job took time to actualize.

“Looking back, I have a great boss in Chris Oliviero,” Sterling said. “He’s so nice to me, so good to me. I should have told him March 1 – I knew then. I should have told him March 15 – I knew then – but I figured I have to do the final exhibition game so I’m on the air, and they were going to Houston and Arizona. So I went on that trip, and afterwards [it was], ‘I don’t want to do this anymore – I’m tired. I’ve done this long enough.’”

Sterling explained that Oliviero would have allowed him to only call the home games, a proposition that initially did not sound bad.

“I just didn’t have the desire,” Sterling said. “Like today, to get up, make myself beautiful and go to Yankee Stadium to broadcast a game – I want to sit back, lie on my bed and watch hockey, basketball and baseball together.”

While Sterling is no longer present at Yankee Stadium during games, he continues to watch the Yankees from afar, along with a variety of different sports both locally and nationally. The grandeur, erudition and devotion to the craft made him the voice of several generations of baseball fans and woven into the fabric of the 121-year history of the New York Yankees.

Although Frank Sinatra’s hit song “Theme From New York, New York” is played at the conclusion of a home game regardless if the team has won or lost, the Yankees have added a new wrinkle into the mix. Following home victories, a sound bite plays over the stadium speakers with Sterling delivering his signature call declaring a Yankees win. The gesture further cements Sterling’s enduring legacy in The Bronx and underscores the eminence, deference and veneration for which he has garnered among sports fans worldwide.

“Suzyn told me about it when they were last home, so that’s a nice thing,” Sterling said. “End of the game, ‘Yankees win! Theeeee Yankees win!,’ so if it makes them happy, it makes me happy.”

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‘CBS Sports HQ Spotlight’ Shines with News, Information and Fun

It is an all-encompassing look at the news of the day with hosts who understand the fun of sports and pass this fun along to viewers.

John Molori

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Logo for CBS Sports HQ Spotlight

I could call it the little show that could, but that would be an insult to the talented professionals behind the scenes and in front of the camera, so let’s instead go with hidden gem. I am talking about CBS Sports HQ Spotlight on the CBS Sports Network, a daily panoply of news, analysis, interviews, commentary, and slick repartee.

While HQ Spotlight does not have the over-the-top notoriety of ESPN’s SportsCenter, its quick pace, variety of topics covered, and most of all, strength of its on-air talent, should make it appointment viewing on your sports TV roster.

On the Monday, April 29 edition, host Chris Hassel drew me in with an off the cuff, good natured teasing of co-host Amanda Guerra. Apparently, Guerra, a Dallas Stars fan, attended Game 3 of the Stars-Golden Knights NHL playoff game in Vegas and left before the overtime period. Guerra’s Stars won the game 3-2 in OT.

Hassel lightheartedly chastised Guerra for leaving the game early, but the feisty Guerra came right back at him, saying that she knew he was going to give her some back talk about it because there was no set topic in the show open script. Personally, I love it when hosts tear down that wall of perfection on a production and give viewers an inside look at the inner workings. It is in the mode of the legendary David Letterman.

Mind you, this was the start of a network sports show. There was no trite “Let’s get to the highlights” or “This is what’s happening in sports.” Instead, Hassel doubled down on the subject teasing Guerra for traveling all the way from South Florida to Las Vegas to watch her favorite team and then leaving before overtime.

Guerra looked into the camera as if to get support from the viewing audience and responded that she knew her Stars would win, plus she was in Vegas and wanted to hit the strip with her friends. Her sarcastic and casual retort was wonderful.

After the fun exchange, Guerra adeptly segued into a discussion on the Minnesota Timberwolves with CBS Sports NBA analyst and cohost of the Beyond the Arc podcast Ashley Nicole Moss. The pair focused on Minnesota’s Anthony Edwards and veered into a discussion on the Phoenix Suns being swept by the Timberwolves. This was a really good exchange between Guerra and Moss.

From there, the show moved back to Hassel and an interview with NFL Draft analysts Ryan Wilson and Pete Prisco. Hassel, who joined CBS Sports in 2017 after an impressive run at ESPN, carries a tremendous on-air presence. The square jawed, blue-eyed, strong-voiced host looks the part of a TV maestro and proceeded to conduct an informative exchange with Wilson and Prisco.

I really enjoy watching Prisco’s regular turns on HQ Spotlight. He is an old school football writer who takes no guff and pulls no punches. His commentary is gritty, down to earth, and bare bones – no flash or flowering, just straight up truth.

HQ Spotlight also effectively uses graphics to back up what the personalities are discussing. It was really refreshing to be just 15 minutes into a show having already enjoyed humorous host banter, NBA playoff talk, and NFL Draft chit chat. On many Monday sports programs, the hosts are still droning on about what they did over the weekend or stuck overanalyzing the same topic.

HQ Spotlight holds a frantic yet rhythmic strength. Hassel and Guerra effectively move things along with insightful commentary, lively debate, and pure enjoyment for the audience. Hassel continued the pigskin parlance talking with former NFL defensive lineman Leger Douzable about rookies who could make an instant impact for their respective teams in 2024.

Again, efficiency was the watchword as Hassel and Douzable offered deep and solid information in a relatively short segment. I learned something without the conversation dragging on ad nauseum. Hassle is a dominating presence on the screen, combining wit and wisdom in the mode of Rich Eisen.

Guerra provided some quick-hitting headlines on NFL signings as well as golf highlights from the Zurich Classic adding another sport covered in less than a half hour of viewing. In addition to Guerra and Hassel, HQ Spotlight features some really interesting commentators ably plying their wares. Joining Moss to talk more NBA hoops were Tim Doyle and Chris Walker. They brought personality, enthusiasm, and knowledge to the table, and I really liked listening to their different points of view.

It might not seem important, but the talents on HQ Spotlight really seem to truly like each other. This was evident at the top of the show with the Hassel-Guerra back and forth and runs throughout the production. At one point, Walker said he had to remove his glasses because they were steaming up due to the hot takes from Moss and Doyle.

The mingling of technology and talent on HQ Spotlight is excellent. As the panelists are dolling out knowledge, well placed graphics support their words with lists and stats. While Hassel may be the backbone of the show, Guerra is unquestionably the heart and soul. Her effervescence and smile absolutely explode through the screen.

She is smart, quick-witted, and can dish out the sass as well as take it. There’s just a real comfort to her performance. She welcomes viewers into the conversation and holds them with her ability to ask the right questions. Her clear enjoyment of what she is doing is contagious.

Guerra is also sly and funny. She was in the middle of a conversation about the Chicago Bears with Wilson when Hassel interjected with an unrelated anecdote about Bears QB Caleb Williams and punter Tory Taylor. The thought was oddly irrelevant, and Guerra snidely replied, “OK, do you want to do the segment with Ryan?” Loved it.

As I kept watching HQ Spotlight, I realized that this afternoon sports cavalcade was quite the unexpected pleasure. Draft expert Wilson provided a tour de force on this episode not only dissecting this year’s picks but providing an early look at his 2025 NFL Draft big board with Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders at the top of the list.

Todd Fuhrman joined the program to talk NHL playoff hockey and some betting odds, and once again, the daring Guerra went off script and let the audience in on some inside info. She said that she had two complaints about Fuhrman.

First, she blamed him for telling Hassel that she left the Stars-Golden Knights game early, and second, she revealed that Fuhrman had promised to meet her at the arena wine bar after the second period and was a no show.

Fuhrman tried to wiggle out of it and obviously, Hassel was listening. The show closed the way it opened with Hassel joshing Guerra about going to a wine bar at a hockey game. Guerra took a breath, smiled, and deadpanned the all-important question, “What’s wrong with having wine at a hockey game?”

All due respect to Hassel, Guerra wins this one. I mean, you’re in Vegas. Leave the game early and drink anything you want anywhere you want. That’s a definite, as is my total recommendation to check out HQ Spotlight on CBS Sports Network. It is an all-encompassing look at the news of the day with hosts who understand the fun of sports and pass this fun along to viewers. Find it, watch it, or just head to a hockey arena wine bar near you and toast it.

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