- Peter Gammons
Peter Gammons (born April 9 1945) is a sportswriter, media personality and a National Baseball Hall of Fame honoree.
- Bob Ryan
Robert P. Ryan (born February 21, 1946 in Trenton, New Jersey) is a longtime columnist for the "Boston Globe" and a sports talk show host on the New England Sports Network. He has been described as a basketball guru and is well known for his coverage of the sport including his famous stories covering the Boston Celtics in the 1970s. After graduating from Boston College, Ryan started as a sports intern for the "Globe" on the same day as Peter Gammons.
- Dan Shaughnessy
Dan Shaughnessy is a sports columnist and reporter for "The Boston Globe" as well as a best selling author and television and radio sports personality. Shaughnessy grew up in Groton, Massachusetts is a graduate of the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts.
- Ron Borges
Ron Borges is a former sportswriter for "The Boston Globe". He is a regular guest on Michael Felger's radio show The Mike Felger Show on 890 ESPN.
- Tony Massarotti
Tony Massarotti is an American newspaper sportswriter, author and columnist for the Boston Herald. Massarotti currently covers Boston Red Sox baseball beat for the Herald. He joined the paper in 1989, and has been covering the Red Sox since 1994. Massarotti is a 1989 graduate of Tufts University where he majored in English and Classics. He frequently covers the Boston Red Sox for Fox Sports New England, …
- Steve Buckley
Steve Buckley (b.1956) is an Irish-American journalist. He has been a sports columnist with the Boston Herald since 1995. He joined Boston Sports radio station WEEI in 1993, and has been a regular on the station's The Big Show since its debut in 1995. He also makes regular appearances on New England Sports Tonight on FSN New England and on WBZ-TV's "Sports Final". Prior to joining the Herald, he was a columnist with the National Sports Daily.
- Glenn Ordway
Glenn Ordway (b. 16 January 1951) is a Boston, Massachusetts-area radio host, television host, and former commentator for the Boston Celtics radio broadcasts. He hosts WEEI's The Big Show, Boston's top rated afternoon drive time radio program among men aged 25-54. Ordway is originally from Lynn, Massachusetts; he graduated from Lynn Classical High School.
- Michael Felger
Michael Felger is the Boston Herald's New England Patriots' beat columnist, a position he has held since 1999. He joined the paper in 1989, and was the lead reporter for the Bruins from 1997 - 1999. He also hosts a talk radio show from 3-6pm on weekdays on ESPN Radio's Boston affiliate, WAMG called The Mike Felger Show. Prior to hosting this show, he was a regular guest on a rival Boston radio station, WEEI.
- Gordon Edes
Gordon Edes is an American newspaper sportswriter, and covers the Boston Red Sox baseball beat for the Boston Globe. He is a voter for the Baseball Hall of Fame. He is also a frequent guest on WBZ television's Sports Final program with Bob Lobel. He attended High School at Lunenburg High School in Lunenburg, Massachusetts, graduating in 1972.
- Eddie Andelman
Along with his illustrious radio career, Eddie Andelman has given back to the community. Devoting his time to a number of local charities, Eddie has raised millions of dollars throughout the years. Being honored as the Jimmy Fund Man of the Year, Joey Fund Cystic Fibrosis Man of the Year, and the Big Brother Man of the Year. Eddie is the creator of the Hot Dog Safari.
- Gil Santos
Gil Santos is the longtime radio play-by-play announcer for the New England Patriots of the National Football League, and morning sports reporter for WBZ radio in Boston. He has called Patriots games continuously since 1966, except for a stretch between 1980 and 1990. His 28 years of services makes him the longest-serving current announcer in the NFL, tied with Merrill Reese of the Philadelphia Eagles.
- Bob Lobel
Bob Lobel is a sportscaster for WBZ-TV in Boston, Massachusetts. He anchors the sports segments on the evening newscasts between Sunday and Thursday, and hosts the weekly programs "Sports Final" and "Patriots 5th Quarter". A native of Apple Creek, Ohio, Lobel joined the station as weekend sports anchor in 1979 and was promoted to weekday anchor and sports director in 1981, making him the longest-tenured television sports anchor in Boston.
- Steve Burton
Steve Burton is a television sports reporter for WBZ-TV and WSBK-TV in Boston. The son of former New England Patriots player Ron Burton, Steve Burton grew up in Framingham, Massachusetts and is a graduate of Northwestern University holding a bachelor of science degree in Communications and a master’s degree in Broadcast Journalism. He lives in the Boston area with his wife and four children.
- Hazel Mae
Hazel Mae is the lead anchor for the New England Sports Network's SportsDesk news program. Hazel grew up in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and began her sports broadcasting career hosting a sports update show on campus at York University.
- Michael Holley
Michael Holley is an American television and radio sports commentator and writer. He formerly wrote columns for the "Boston Globe", "Chicago Tribune", "Cleveland Plain Dealer", and "Akron Beacon Journal". He has appeared on the ESPN television program "Around the Horn" as well as "I, Max" on Fox Sports Net.
- Jackie MacMullan
Jackie MacMullan is an American newspaper sportswriter, columnist and editor. MacMullan is currently a columnist and associate editor of the Boston Globe. She began writing for the paper in 1982. From 1995 to 2000 she covered the NBA as a senior writer for Sports Illustrated. In 1999, MacMullan collaborated with Larry Bird on his autobiography "Bird Watching: on Playing and Coaching the Game I Love".
- Ned Martin
Edwin (Ned) Martin (born 1923 in Wayne, Pennsylvania; died July 23, 2002 in Raleigh, North Carolina) was an American sportscaster, known primarily as a play-by-play announcer for Major League Baseball's Boston Red Sox from 1961 to 1992. Martin also was a football announcer, covering the American Football League's Boston Patriots in 1965, as well as collegiate games for Harvard, Yale, and Dartmouth.
- Don Orsillo
Don Orsillo joined NESN in April 2001 as the network's voice of Boston Red Sox baseball. Honored with two New England Emmy Awards, Orsillo was also named the 2005 Massachusetts Sportscaster of the Year by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association.
- Pete Sheppard
Pete Sheppard (b. March 26, 1967 in Providence, Rhode Island) is an Italian-American radio host, currently broadcasting on WEEI 850-AM in Boston. A graduate of of Bishop Hendricken High School in Rhode Island and the Connecticut School of Broadcasting (Class of 1987), Sheppard began on WEEI as a part-time host in 1994. After success, he was granted his own show with Jon Wallach on the weekends in 1997. Finally, since 1999, he has been a regular on "The Big Show", …
- Fred Cusick
Fred Cusick (b. November 7, 1918) is a former ice hockey broadcaster and served as the Boston Bruins play-by-play TV broadcaster from 1971 till 1997 on WSBK-TV (Channel 38) in Boston, and from 1984 until 1993 on NESN. A graduate of (and former hockey player at) Northeastern University in Boston, Cusick went into the United States Navy in World War II, …
- Steve Deossie
Steven Leonard DeOssie (born November 22, 1962 in Tacoma, Washington; raised in Roslindale, Massachusetts) is a former American football linebacker and long snapper. DeOssie was a standout player and Captain at Boston College, and went on to play in the NFL for the Dallas Cowboys, the New York Giants, and the New England Patriots. DeOssie was on the Giants' 1990 Super Bowl team. DeOssie also hosts "The Real Post Game Show", along with Pete Sheppard and Fred Smerlas, …
- Sean McDonough
Sean McDonough (born May 13, 1962) is an American television sportscaster. The son of legendary Boston Globe sportswriter Will McDonough, Sean graduated from Syracuse University in 1984. It was in Syracuse where McDonough began his broadcasting career in 1982 as the play-by-play announcer for the Syracuse Chiefs of the International League.
- Alice Cook
Alice Cook is a former American figure skater. She competed in pair skating with William Fauver. In 1976, they won the silver medal at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, and qualified to compete at the 1976 Winter Olympics, where they finished 12th. They placed 9th at the 1976 World Figure Skating Championships. Following her skating career, Cook became a television sports reporter, working for WBZ-TV in Boston, Massachusetts since 1984.
- Bob Neumeier
Bob Neumeier is an American sportscaster for NBC Sports, specializing in thoroughbred racing. Neumeier is originall from Weymouth, Massachusetts and is a 1972 graduate of Syracuse University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in television and radio.
- Will McDonough
William "Will" McDonough gave the American Football League honest exposure in his articles and columns in a nationally prominent newspaper, the "Boston Globe". Up until his death from a heart attack at the age of sixty seven, he had attended every AFL-NFL World Championship game and every Super Bowl. His knowledge of the game of professional football, his ability to get "the inside story", …
- Ken Coleman
Kenneth R. Coleman (April 22 1925 - August 21 2003) was an American radio and television sportscaster for 34 years (1954 - 1989). He was born in Quincy, Massachusetts. Coleman broke into broadcasting with the NFL Cleveland Browns (1952 - 1965), calling play-by-play of every touchdown that Hall of Fame running back Jim Brown ever scored. He also began his MLB broadcasting career in Ohio, calling Cleveland Indians games on television for ten seasons (1954 - 1963).
- Ted Sarandis
Ted Sarandis is a sports radio personality in Boston. Sarandis, who lives in Winthrop, is best remembered for being the host of the "Ted Nation" show that was broadcast from 7 PM to midnight weekdays on Boston sports radio station WEEI from 1995 until September 2005. During his tenure on WEEI, Sarandis was the leading advocate for college sports in the Boston area.
- Tom Caron
Tom Caron, originally from Lewiston, Maine is a television sports personality, sportscaster and play-by-play sportscaster in the New England area.
- Don Gillis
Don Gillis (born 1922 in Antigonish, Nova Scotia), is a retired American sportscaster, born in Canada, who was sports director of Boston's Channel 5 (WHDH-TV through March 18, 1972; thereafter WCVB-TV) from 1962 through 1983. Gillis pioneered the 11 p.m. sports report in Boston during his tenure at WHDH-TV, becoming the dean of the city's sports anchors, and also would host highly popular candlepin bowling programs on the station during the 1960s, 70s and 80s.
- Tina Cervasio
Tina Cervasio is a U.S. television and radio sportscaster, best known for her work as the Boston Red Sox sideline reporter on NESN telecasts.
- Dave Shea
David W. Shea (b. "c". 1950) is a former ice hockey announcer for Hockey East and the Boston Bruins.
- Andy Brickley
A nine-year veteran and two-time Emmy Award nominee, Andy Brickley entered the broadcasting world after a 14-year professional hockey career that included four seasons with the Boston Bruins from 1988-92 -- the time of Bourque, Neely, Lemelin, Moog, and other Stanley Cup finalist teammates. Brickley first began broadcasting on radio, providing color commentary for Bruins games in 1996.
- Eric Frede
Eric Frede has served as a reporter, anchor, host and play-by-play announcer on NESN. He joined the network in December 2002 as a "SportsDesk" anchor and field reporter for NESN's Boston Red Sox coverage. The versatile announcer has also hosted NESN's Red Sox and Bruins week-in-review programs, Bruins pre- and post-game coverage and provided play-by-play for NESN's college football and basketball telecasts.
- Jim Britt
Jim Britt was an American sportscaster who broadcast Major League Baseball games in Boston, Massachusetts, and Cleveland, Ohio, during the 1940s and 1950s. He was born in San Francisco, California. On June 15, 1948, Britt was at the microphone on WBZ-TV for the first telecast of a major league baseball game in New England, as the Boston Braves defeated the Chicago Cubs, 6-3, at Braves Field.
- Gene Lavanchy
Gene Lavanchy is the current co-host of WFXT Boston's Morning Show. Lavanchy was born and raised in Boston, and came onto the news scene in 1993 with WHDH, which is also in Boston. At WHDH, he became their leading sports director and their sports anchor in '94. As time progressed, he also hosted WHDH's "Sports Xtra" Sunday Late Night sports program, where he would interview and discuss current topics with many local New England sports stars.
- Carl Beane
Carleton E. Beane has been a sports radio broadcaster since 1972, and is best known as the public address announcer for the Boston Red Sox of Major League Baseball. Since 2003, Beane has been behind the microphone of every home game at Fenway Park. A native of Agawam, Massachusetts, Beane graduated from Agawam High School in 1971 and the Career Academy School of Broadcasting in 1972.
- Larry Whiteside
Larry 'Sides' Whiteside (September 19 1937 - June 15 2007) was a pioneering African American journalist known for his coverage of baseball for a number of American newspapers, most notably "The Boston Globe".
- Edwin Rumill
Edwin Rumill was a prominent sportswriter in the Boston area for approximately 40 years. A member of the Baseball Writers' Association of America, he wrote articles and editorials for the Christian Science Monitor from 1932 until his retirement in 1972. Rumill covered the Boston Red Sox and Boston Braves. His photograph can be seen in the Boston Red Sox version of the official 1946 World Series Program.