For decades, the rhythm of summer nights in New York carried a familiar soundtrack — one voice rising above the crack of the bat and the roar of the crowd. That voice is now gone.
According to the New York Post, John Sterling, the longtime radio play-by-play announcer for the New York Yankees, has died at 87, closing the chapter on a broadcasting career that stretched across eight decades.
Sterling spent 36 seasons calling Yankees games, becoming synonymous with the team’s biggest moments.
He was behind the microphone for five World Series championship teams and seven American League pennant winners, bringing those victories to life for generations of listeners.
His path began far from the bright lights of the Bronx.
In the late 1950s, Sterling broke into radio at a small station in Wellsville, New York, taking on nearly every role imaginable. He later described the experience as formative.
“When you work at one of those little stations you did everything,” he said. “I pulled a six-hour shift, afternoons, disc jockey work, you read the news. … Back then you had to work with platters, and tapes and cartridges.”
“It was good training because you find out what you’re good at. You have to find your own style. … That’s how I did it anyway.”
That style would become unmistakable.
Sterling’s signature calls — especially after Yankees victories — turned routine moments into theater. His emphatic “Ballgame over. Yankees win. Thuuuuugh Yankees win” became a staple, as did his creative home run nicknames for players like Bernie Williams, Hideki Matsui, Alex Rodriguez, and Giancarlo Stanton.
He never shied away from leaning into the performance.
“If someone tells you you stink, what do they know. It’s just their opinion,” Sterling once said. “There will always be people who don’t like what you do. It’s like any art form. That’s just the way it is.”
Even critics who questioned his flair couldn’t deny his endurance.
After missing two games in 1989 following the death of his sister, Sterling went on a remarkable run — broadcasting 5,060 consecutive games. That streak lasted 30 years before health issues forced him to step away briefly in 2019.
He officially retired shortly after the start of the 2024 season, citing the toll of constant travel.
In retirement, Sterling largely stayed out of the spotlight. He later revealed he had suffered a heart attack in January.
His longtime broadcast partner Suzyn Waldman once summed up his unique presence simply: “He is more comfortable in his own skin than anyone I have ever met in my whole life.”
Born John Sloss on July 4, 1938, in New York City, he knew early on that broadcasting was his calling.
“I must have been a little boy,” he said. “I heard an announcer say ‘Live from Hollywood, it’s “The Eddie Bracken Show” with Eddie’s special guest …’ I didn’t want to be Eddie Bracken. I wanted to be the announcer.”
From that moment on, he chased the microphone — and never let it go.
Even with countless iconic baseball moments on his résumé, Sterling pointed to a different highlight as the greatest game he ever called: a 1988 NBA playoff showdown between the Boston Celtics and Atlanta Hawks.
“The best game I’ve ever broadcast in my life,” he said. “It was like I was in the game. It was fabulous. Utterly, utterly fabulous.”
Sterling is survived by his four children, leaving behind a legacy that echoed through radios for generations and defined what it meant to call a game.














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