Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
List of Los Angeles Clippers broadcasters
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Broadcasters for the Los Angeles Clippers, San Diego Clippers, and Buffalo Braves National Basketball Association teams.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (August 2011) |
Television
Summarize
Perspective
Play-by-play
- Chuck Healy: 1972–1973 (WBEN-TV) [1]
- Van Miller: 1973–1978 (WBEN-TV)
- Ted Leitner: 1978–1984
- Al Albert: 1984–1985 (KTTV) [2]
- Phil Stone: 1985–1986 (KTLA)
- Dave Diles: 1986–1987 (KTLA) [3]
- Ralph Lawler: 1987–2019 (KTLA, KCOP-TV, KCAL-TV, Z Channel, & Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket)
- Tom Kelly: 1990–1991 (Prime Ticket) [4]
- Joel Meyers: 1991–1993 (SportsChannel Los Angeles)
- Brian Sieman: 2019–present
Color analysts
- Rudy Martzke: 1972–1974 (WBEN-TV) [5]
- Dick Rifenburg: 1977–1978 (WBEN-TV)
- Stu Lantz: 1978–1983
- John Olive: 1983–1984
- Ted Green: 1984–1985 (KTTV) [2]
- Tommy Hawkins: 1985–1986 (KTLA)
- Norm Nixon: 1986–1987 (KTLA) [3]
- Junior Bridgeman: 1987–1988 (KTLA) [6]
- Keith Erickson: 1988–1990 (Z Channel) [7]
- Kevin Loughery: 1988–1990 (KTLA)
- Mike Fratello: 1990–1992, 2019–Present (KTLA, KCOP-TV, Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket, Bally Sports SoCal, Bally Sports West, FanDuel Sports Network Socal) [8]
- Earl Strom: 1990–1991 (Prime Ticket)
- Jerry Tarkanian: 1991–1992 (SportsChannel Los Angeles) [9]
- Bill Walton: 1992–2002 (SportsChannel Los Angeles, KCOP-TV, KCAL-TV, Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket)
- Mike Smith: 2002–2017 (KTLA, Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket)
- Bruce Bowen: 2017–2018 (Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket)
- Don MacLean: 2018-2019, 2020 - 2021, 2023 - 2024, 2024 - 2025 (Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket, Bally Sports Socal, FanDuel Sports Network Socal)
- Chauncey Billups: 2019–2020 (Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket)
- Jim Jackson: 2020–present (Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket, Bally Sports SoCal, Bally Sports West, FanDuel Sports Network Socal, and KTLA)
When Walton worked for the NBA on NBC, Keith Erickson, Hubie Brown, Rick Barry, Reggie Theus, and Mike Smith served as alternate announcers.
When Fratello worked on NBC, Bob Weiss served as alternate announcer.
Broadcast outlets
Terrestrial television
Buffalo
- WBEN-TV: 1972–1978
San Diego
Los Angeles
Cable television
- Z Channel: 1988–1989
- SportsChannel Los Angeles: 1989–1990
- Prime Ticket:1990-1991
- SportsChannel Los Angeles: 1991–1992
- Prime Ticket/Fox Sports Net West: 1992–1997
- Fox Sports Net Prime Ticket: 1997–2021
- Bally Sports SoCal and Bally Sports West: 2021–2024
- FanDuel Sports Network SoCal: 2024– Present
Television network
Station lineup (as of 2022)[10]
Remove ads
Radio
Summarize
Perspective
Play-by-Play
- Van Miller: 1970–1978
- Ralph Lawler: 1978–1981, 1982–1984, 1985–1987, 1989–1990 (All non-televised games since 1987)
- Jerry Gross: 1981–1982
- Eddie Doucette: 1984–1985 [2]
- Pete Arbogast: 1984–1989
- Rich Marotta: 1990–1994
- Rory Markas: 1994–1999
- Mike Smith: 1999–2002
- John Ireland: 1999–2002 (Fill-in)
- Mel Proctor: 2002–2005
- Matt Pinto: 2005–2007
- Brian Sieman: 2007–2018
- Noah Eagle: 2019–2022
- Carlo Jiménez: 2023–Present
Color analysts
- Rudy Martzke: 1972–1974
- Dick Rifenburg: 1977–1978 [11]
- Stu Lantz: 1978–1983
- John Olive: 1983–1984
- Ted Green: 1984–1986 [2]
- Norm Nixon: 1986–1987
- Kevin Loughery: 1989–1990
- Keith Erickson: 1988–1990
- Rich Marotta: 1990–1994 (Non-televised games)
- Rory Markas: 1994–1999 (Non-televised games)
- Mike Smith: 1999–2017 (Non-televised games)
- Scott Brooks: 1998–1999
- Norm Nixon: 2004–2005
- Bruce Bowen: 2017–2018
Flagship Station
Buffalo
- WBEN (1970–1978)
San Diego
Los Angeles
Radio Network
Station Lineup (as of 2016)[13]
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads