Being a broadcaster in any sport is always a challenge, and the NHL is no different. Imagine if you went to a hockey game, had a camera and microphone shoved in front of your face, and were told to describe everything that happened in the game for three-plus hours.
It’s not as easy as it seems. It’s not about yelling “Score!” at the top of your lungs after a goal, or “Great Save!” after a goalie stops a shot. It’s about the little things that nobody seems to notice: subtle line changes, where and how a player got injured, changes in a team’s power-play strategy, whether or not a play was offsides, who touched the puck first on an icing call, background information on a new player, and most importantly, the ability to track a small round puck for an entire game.
We seem to take all of this for granted, but the reality is, broadcasting a hockey game is a very difficult job to fulfill.
Although there are plenty of excellent broadcasters in the NHL, a few of them stand out from the crowd. So without further ado, I present to you the ten best TV broadcasters in the NHL today.
10. Jim Hughson – CBC
Hughson has perhaps the most soothing broadcaster’s voice in the NHL. His diction and enunciation is impeccable, and every single word he says has a distinct sharpness to it.
He is the lead broadcaster for CBC, and has called every Stanley Cup Final since 2008. Oddly enough, the first time that I ever heard of him was when he was the voice of EA Sport’s NHL 07, which is still my favorite hockey video game.
My personal favorite call is “Great Save Luongo!”, which he says every time Robeto Luongo makes a unspectacular save.
9. Chris Cuthbert – TSN
Chris Cuthbert is Canada’s other announcing great, and it seems fitting that they work for rival networks.
Cuthbert’s broadcasting career began on accident. According to rtbot.net
On April 18, he was positioned as a reporter in Washington, providing brief and periodic reports of the Washington Capitals-New Jersey Devils game to the national CBC viewing audience watching the Canadian network’s game broadcast from Montreal (the Canadiens against the Boston Bruins). A power outage struck the Montreal area, which postponed the game in that city, and CBC was forced to turn to Cuthbert in Washington to provide the full broadcast – play-by-play, analyst, host and everything else. The broadcast was totally done off the cuff as besides no regular analysts, there were no graphics or replay capabilities. His stellar solo effort caught the network’s attention, was nominated for a Gemini Award, and launched what has been a very successful broadcasting career.
And he has been broadcasting games on a regular basis ever since. Cuthbert has a very high voice, and it’s always amusing to hear his voice crack when he calls a goal:
8. Dave Strader – NBC
Strader is on this list because he is perhaps the most unbiased commentator in the NHL. Of course, he can’t be biased because he now works for NBC, but when he was broadcasting for the Phoenix Coyotes, you could hardly tell that he was their home announcer.
He isn’t an announcer that stands out. He’s never over dramatic and doesn’t have a go-to phrase such as “Great save Luongo!”. But that’s perhaps what I enjoy most about the way he broadcasts games; always steady, consistent, and most importantly, unbiased (cough, Jack Edwards, cough cough).
One of his finest games was Game 5 of the Western Conference Finals between the L.A. Kings and the Coyotes, where the Kings eliminated Phoenix and moved on to the Stanley Cup Finals. You might have expected him to lean a bit on the Coyotes’ side, considering he was their broadcaster for four years, but he showed absolutely no hint of homerism at all.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdvGtyfns4Q
7. Joe Bowen – Toronto Maple Leafs
As the “Voice of the Maple Leafs”, Bowen has called over 1,000 Leafs games since 1982, and I bet he’s showed the same passion and enthusiasm for the past thirty years.
His catchphrase is “Holy Mackinaw”, which he exclaims after a spectacular play on the ice (ex. Jonas Gustavsson robbing the Ducks on this play).
Bowen’s emotional attachment to the Maple Leafs is unmatched by any other announcer. I have never seen a broadcaster cry on air after a goal, but Bowen did after Mats Sundin scored to keep the Leafs’ 2002 Stanley Cup hopes alive:
Listen to him yell, “Don’t tell me about heart and dedication and resilience, this is unbelievable!”, as he fails to keep his emotions in check. Never gets old.
4. Joe Beninati – Washington Capitals
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BzM_1GT1bpk
2. Bob Miller – Los Angeles Kings
Because of his Los Angeles connection, I’m going to dub Miller the “Vin Scully of hockey”.
Why?
Thirty-seven years as the “Voice of the Los Angeles Kings,” Southern California Sports Broadcasters Hall of Fame inductee, Wisconsin Hockey Hall of Fame inductee, Kings Hall of Fame inductee, Hockey Hall of Fame inductee, a star on the famous Hollywood Boulevard Walk of Fame, California Sportscaster of the Year in 1997 and 2002, and, to top all of that, he was honored by having the Staples Center press box named after him and was presented with a “lifetime contract” by the club in 1997.
That should be enough.
The only thing missing from his resume was to call a Stanley Cup victory, and he got that wish this past season when the Kings miraculously came out of nowhere to capture hockey’s holy grail.
Like Scully, Miller doesn’t necessarily have a “go-to call”, but his consistency and durability in the broadcast booth is what sets him apart.
He has called numerous Kings’ comebacks over the years, which include the “Miracle at Manchester” in 1982, and a more recent comeback against the Dallas Stars, which is below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aceatl5Gkgo
you got it right, jim hughson and chris cuthbert ARE the best!
I don’t have many issues with the choices though I’m not personally a Beninati fan but I’m shocked at the exclusion of HoF broadcaster Mike Lange of the Penguins. Due to poor management of Fox Sports he’s on the radio side now but his take on the game and historical knowledge are second to none.
I can see why a lot of people like Doc, but he makes so many mistakes such as mixing up players and stuff like that. I think he needs to just stick to hockey and not worry about the other nonsense that he talks about.
Inspired choice of Razor Reaugh. Razor and Ralph Strangis are an outstanding pair in the Stars booth, but then Razor and *insert name here* would be also.
I know most of these calls have extra info, but to share the real special magic to Joe B’s call of Federov’s series winning goal was that in between the 2nd and 3rd periods CSN-Washington’s color guy Al Koken specifically said that federov was going to have something to say in this game before its all over. Then he went and won the series. Joe B is fantastic and I really like seeing/hearing him call other games too, after so long listening to him as a Caps fan watching a game with anyone else feels wrong.
Wow, I didn’t know that goal was foreshadowed. Thanks for the background info!
Good list, except for Hahn. Randy Hahn’s sole contribution to hockey is his partnership with Drew Remenda, and this is a contribution because it means they only heap their collective mediocrity on one team all year.
Hahn literally helped bring the Sharks to San Jose, so there’s a pretty important contribution.
I disagree. Both are very unbiased broadcasters that are both knowledgable of both teams on the ice who ever is playing and critical of there own team able to point out problems and bad plays. They are entertaining, funny, and have a great mind for the fundementals of how the game should be played while making it interesting and fun for the viewer who is not so knowledgable of the game. My wife literally learned hockey listening to these guys.
I was about to shit a brick if pierre penishead mcquire made it, good list.
lol thanks
Personally I think the best guy out there, no longer calls the NHL because he is an ESPN loyalist and that is Gary Thorne. But that could also be I grew up with him when the Hawks were not on TV.
Gary Thorne and Bill Clemment – old ESPN days!
Joe – have to agree that Gary Thorne is sorely missed. I live in Baltimore, where he currently does play-by-play for the Orioles. It’s hard to listen to, as I will always associate his voice with the NHL. While their voices are different, Joe Beninati’s style is quite similar to Thorne’s. Sure miss the old ESPN broadcasts and NHL 2Night theme song…
I absolutely hate Doc Emrick. I personally think he’s a horrible announcer. His voice makes me want to stab knitting needles into my ears. There’s only one other person I find has an even more annoying voice than Doc Emrick, and that is Jeanneret. Why these two are on this list is beyond me.
That’s your opinion, and I respect that, but I think they’re both entertaining and one-of-a-kind.
I love this article. Only change I would make is Randy Hahn off, and Gary Thorne on. Hahn is pretty good, but he doesn’t really belong on this list. Obviously, just an opinion.
jim hughson at #10 is a joke. i stopped reading after that.
Sorry to hear that. You wanted him higher?
Thorne doesn’t call NHL games anymore. If he did, he’d be on here in a heartbeat. As for Hahn, I’ve watched every Sharks game for several years now, so I might have been a little biased there.
Eric He in my opinion hughson is the best in the biz.
I swear, Walt, you and John Reger would have a TON of stuff to talk about!
Reger’s a big hockey fan, Warren?
Doc Emrick is embarrassing to listen to. Nobody cares if the assistant trainer’s grandfather has a peacock farm in Bearbutt, Saskatchewan. I won’t even comment on the rest, such as Beninati, ugh…
My top 3 :
3- Rick Jeanneret.
2- Jim Hughson.
1- Joe Beninati.
Joe give me chills on every Caps goal!
Love Beninati’s goal calls, that man was born to call hockey games.
Doc Emirick just plain talks too much. Yea for the casual hockey fan like your mother he probably sounds wonderful, but the picture on the screen should speak for itself.
I disagree. I like announcers that keep talking, especially if it’s a scoreless game in the second period because it keeps you more interested.
Hughson is the best for me. Some on this list wouldn’t be there for me, but I won’t nitpick.
No Pat Foley invalidates the list. I’m surprised to see Hahn on there, even though I think he’s pretty good.
Foley’s a good announcer, but to me he’s too much of a homer, which is why I left him and Jack Edwards out of the list.
I’m a Blackhawks fan, that was mostly tongue in cheek. But I do love the guy. He and Tallon together were great. Now he’s with Eddie No-check.
I’m a Danny Gallivan guy. He made an 8 year old feel drunk.
Interesting list Eric, thanks. As a kid growing up in a marginal hockey market, IO used to love getting tapes of highlights from Canadian broadcasts. Something about Bob Cole’s voice was so pure and different than what we heard in the States. Chris Cuthbert and Joe Bowen are my favorites to the north today. Don’t know if he’s strictly a radio guy, but the Canes’ Chuck Kaiton is pretty good too.
I’m happy Cuthbert is getting props. I love Bob Cole, but hey… he’s a Leafer.
This is a good list, but I don’t see how Beninati makes it and Forslund doesn’t.
What does one have to do with the other?
I just believe that Forslund is a far superior announcer than Beninati. Just my opinion.
Got chills listening to some of the calls. Great list!
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it.
The way it used to be…..always awesome!