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Born | (1961-02-02) February 2, 1961 (age 63) Bronx, NY |
Nationality | American |
Education | B.A. in Communications Fordham University |
Occupation(s) | baseball play-by-play announcer, interviewer, radio sports talk show host |
Employer(s) | New York Yankees, ESPN |
Michael Kay (born February 2, 1961), is the television play-by-play broadcaster of the New York Yankees, host of Centerstage on the YES Network, and the host of The Michael Kay Show heard on WEPN, WLIR-FM, WNJE, and XM141.
Biography
Michael Kay can only be described with one word. CHODE.
You may call him the Chode Doctor
Announcer for the New York Yankees
Kay spent a decade partnered with John Sterling as the radio announcers of the team on WABC-AM. Kay and Sterling also paired together in 1998 for Sports Talk with John Sterling and Michael Kay, a nightly radio show which aired on WABC. During the baseball season, the duo hosted Yankee Talk, a weekend pre-game radio show. From 1992 to 1993 Kay hosted his own show on WABC. Kay continued during that time as a spot reporter on ABC radio, doing off-season shows with Sterling and as a fill-in sports reporter for Channel 7 Eyewitness News New York. When ESPN launched an AM station, Kay moved downtown to 2 Penn Plaza to host a radio show on ESPN's WEPN from 10AM to 1PM. (See below)
On radio and TV, Kay has been best known for yelling "See-ya!" during his home run calls and noting the time of the game during the recap, often using the word 'unmanageable' if the game was longer than 3 hours. As a radio broadcaster one of Kay's best known trademarks was describing the uniforms of the Yankees and their opponent, this description typically ended with him describing the back of the Yankees' jersey as having "no name, of course."
When WCBS-AM acquired the radio rights to the Yankees broadcasts in 2002, Kay moved to the debuting YES Network on television and Sterling remained on the radio. Kay has been the Yankees' lead television play-by-play announcer since this time.
In 2008 MLB invited Kay to call the Home Run Derby at Yankee Stadium during that year's All Star festivities.
Since the late 1990s, Kay and Sterling have co-emceed the Yankees' annual Old-timers day ceremony (following in the tradition of the late Mel Allen and Frank Messer), players' number retirements, and the City Hall celebrations after Yankees' World Series victories.
Kay and Sterling also provided play-by-play commentary for Nintendo 64's All-Star Baseball video game from 1999 to 2001.
On September 21 2008, Kay joined Jon Miller and Joe Morgan to call the seventh inning of ESPN's broadcast of the final home game at Yankee Stadium against the Baltimore Orioles. According to Miller, Kay was brought in because ESPN felt that they should include the local aspects of broadcasting for the Yankees for this special game, as the YES Network's coverage was blacked out. Later that year, Kay was selected to call one of the 2008 National League Division Series for ESPN Radio.
The Michael Kay Show
Main article: The Michael Kay ShowKay currently hosts a drive-time talk show on 1050 ESPN Radio, as well as the YES Network's CenterStage, a sports and entertainment interview-format show. On Monday January 5, Michael Kay announced that The Michael Kay show will air from 2PM to 7PM starting on Monday, January 12, 2009.
Awards
In 2007, Kay was nominated for a number of New York Emmy Awards for his work with the YES Network, both for Yankees broadcasts and for his highly rated interview program Centerstage. Kay won one New York Emmy for his work on the YES Network as part of the team of the NYY broadcast: New York Yankees Baseball “Manny vs. NY – Yankees/Red Sox- 5/24/06.” (YES Network).
In 1998, he was on the MSG team that won an Emmy for Outstanding Live Sports Coverage—Series. In 1996 and 1997 he was a member of the MSG team that won Emmys for Outstanding Live Sports Coverage—Single Program for Dwight Gooden's no-hitter and The Battle for New York: Yankees vs. Mets.
Kay was also awarded the Dick Young Award for Excellence in Sports Media by the New York Pro Baseball Scouts in 1995 and the award for Best Sports Reporter at the 2000 New York Metro Achievement in Radio Awards.
References
- ^ "Michael Kay". Broadcasters. New York Yankees. 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-16.
- "And the nominees are..." (Microsoft Office Word). National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences—New York Chapter. February 8, 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-16.
- "And the winners are..." (Microsoft Office Word). National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences—New York Chapter. April 1, 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-16.
External links
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