Premium Only Content
1957 04 16 Brooklyn Dodgers vs Philadelphia Phillies
1956-10-10 Yankees at Dodgers World Series Game 7 (starts in bottom of first)
1956-10-09 Yankees at Dodgers World Series Game 6
1956-10-08 World Series Game 5 - Yankees vs Dodgers
1956-10-07 Dodgers at Yankees World Series Game 4
1956-10-06 Dodgers at Yankees World Series Game 3
1956-10-03 Yankees at Dodgers World Series Game 1a
1956/10/07 Dodgers at Yankees | World Series | Game 4
1956/10/06 Dodgers at Yankees | World Series | Game 3
1956-10-03 Yankees at Dodgers | World Series | Game 1
1956-07-10 MLB All Star Game
1956-05-06 White Sox at Yankees | Game 1
1955-10-04 World Series | Dodgers vs Yankees | Game 7
1955-10-03 Dodgers at Yankees | World Series | Game 6
1955 10 02 Dodgers vs Yankees | World Series | Game 5
1955/09/29 Dodgers at Yankees World Series Game 2
1955/07/26 - White Sox at Yankees
1955/07/12 All Star Game (Called by Bob Neal, Ear Gillespie) Incomplete
1955/04/12 Cardinals at Chicago Cubs
1954/10/02 - World Series | Game 4 | Indians vs Giants
1954/10/01 World Series | Game 3 | Indians at Giants
1954/09/30 World Series | Game 2 | Indians at Giants
1954/09/29 World Series | Game 1 | Cleveland Indians vs Giants
1953/10/05 World Series | Game 6 | Yankees vs Dodgers (Partial With Postgame)
1953/10/02 World Series | Game 3 | Dodgers vs Yankees
1953/07/01 St Louis Browns at White Sox
1952/10/07 - World Series Game 7 - Yankees at Dodgers
1953/07/01 St. Louis Browns at White Sox
1952/10/07 - World Series | Game 7 | Yankees at Dodgers
1951/10/03 - NL Championship | Game 3 | Giants vs Dodgers
1950/10/07 Phillies at Yankees | World Series | Game 4
1950/10/06 Phillies at Yankees | World Series | Game 3
1950/06/11 Indians vs Athletics
1950/05/20 Pirates vs Dodgers
1950/05/13 - Braves at Dodgers
1950/05/20 Pirates vs Dodgers
1950/05/13 - Braves at Dodgers
1950/04/22 - Giants at Dodgers
1949/10/09 World Series | Game 5 | Dodgers vs Yankees
1949/10/08 World Series | Game 4 | Dodgers vs Yankees
1949/10/07 World Series | Game 3 | Dodgers vs Yankees
1949/10/06 World Series | Game 2 | Dodgers vs Yankees
1949/10/05 Yankees vs Dodgers | World Series | Game 1
1949/10/02 - Yankees vs Red Sox for the Pennant
1948/10/11 - World Series | Game 6 | Indians at Braves
1948/10/10 - World Series | Game 5 | Indians at Braves
1948/10/09 - World Series | Game 4 | Indians at Braves
1948/10/08 - World Series | Game 3 | Indians at Braves
1948/10/07 - World Series | Game 2 | Indians at Braves
1948/10/06 - World Series | Game 1 | Indians at Braves
1948/07/13 - All-Star Game | Sportsman's Park | St. Louis
1945/10/08 World Series | Game 6 | Cubs vs Tigers
1945/10/06 World Series | Game 4 | Tigers vs Cubs Wrigley Field
1945/10/05 | World Series | Game 3 | Cubs at Tigers
1945/10/03 World Series | Game 1 | Cubs vs Tigers
1944/10/09 World Series | Game 6 | St. Louis Cardinals vs St. Louis Browns
1944/10/07 World Series | Game 4 | St. Louis Cardinals vs St. Louis Browns
1943/10/11 Yankees at Cardinals | World Series | Game 5
1944/07/11 All Star Game
1943/10/10 Yankees at Cardinals | World Series | Game 4
1943/10/07 World Series | Game 3 | Cardinals at Yankees
1943/10/05 - World Series | Game 1 | Cardinals at Yankees Radio
1943/07/13 - All-Star Game at Shibe Park Philadelphia
1942/10/05 - World Series | Game 5 | Cardinals at Yankees
1942/10/03 World Series | Game 3 | Cardinals vs Yankees
1942/10/01 - World Series | Game 2 | Yankees at Cardinals
1942/07/07 Service All Star Game | Radio Broadcast Waite Hoyt, Bob Elson
1942/07/06 - All-Star Game at Polo Grounds, New York
1941/10/05 | World Series | Game 4 | Yankees at Dodgers
1941/10/02 World Series | Game 2 | Dodgers at Yankees
1941/10/01 - World Series | Game 1 | Dodgers at Yankees
1941/07/08 - All-Star Game at Briggs Stadium, Detroit
1940/07/09 All Star Game at St Louis (Called By Mel Allen, France Laux)
1939/10/05 | World Series | Game 2 | Reds at Yankees
1939/09/26 Cardinals at Reds | Game 1
1939/09/21 - Indians at Senators
1939/07/11 - All-Star Game at Yankee Stadium
1939/06/12 Hall of Fame Opens
1938/10/09 Cubs at Yankees | World Series | Game 4
1938/10/06 World Series | Yankees at Cubs | Game 2
1938/07/06 - All-Star Game at Crosley Field, Cincinnati
1937/10/10 - World Series | Game 5 | Yankees at Giants
1937/10/06 - Giants at Yankees | World Series | Game 1
1937/07/21 Senators at White Sox
1937/07/07 All-Star Game
1936/10/06 Yankees at Giants | World Series | Game 6
1936/10/05 Giants at Yankees | World Series | Game 5
1936/10/03 - World Series | NY Giants vs NY Yankees | Game 3
1936/10/02 - Cubs vs White Sox
1936/09/30 Giants at Yankees | World Series | Game 1
1936/08/04 Cardinals at Cubs
1936/08/02 - Red Sox at White Sox (Game 1)
1936/08/02 Red Sox at White Sox (Game 2)
1936/08/01 Red Sox vs White Sox
1936/07/31 Red Sox at White Sox
1936/07/30 - Philadelphia Athletics at Chicago White Sox
1936/07/29 Philadelphia Athletics at Chicago White Sox
1936/07/28 Chicago White Sox vs Philadelphia Athletics
1936/07/07 All Star Game
1935/10/07 Cubs at Tigers | World Series | Game 6
1935/10/04 Tigers at Cubs | World Series | Game 3
1935/07/08 All Star Game
1934/10/09 | World Series | Game 7 - Cardinals at Tigers
1934/10/06 Tigers at Cardinals | World Series | Game 4
1934/10/04 World Series | Game 2 | Cardinals at Tigers
1934/10/03 World Series | Game 1 - Cardinals at Tigers
1934/09/20 - NY Yankees vs Detroit Tigers Complete Broadcast
1934/07/10 All Star Game
1937/07/07 All-Star Game
You’re listening to radio broadcast of baseball from 1934 – 1973.
All the greats from the past can be heard in play-by-play action. You’ll hear All-Star games from the 30s as well as individual games of your favorite teams.
Baseball stormed into the 1930s on a voracious high, riding high-speed momentum on the field and on the bottom line; as the fans were thrilled by the boom in offense, the front office was similarly elated by the explosion in profits.
But outside events would slam the brakes on the game’s go-go mentality. The stock market crashed at the end of 1929—sending stocks on a downward spiral that bottomed out in 1932 with a Dow Jones Industrial Average not of 10,000 or 1,000, but 40. Unemployment shot up to 25%, and the only housing growth that seemed to be taking place was those of the shantytowns, makeshift encampments for the many out of work.
The American League continued to deliver all-out offense, propelled by its abundance of hitting stars led by Jimmie Foxx, Lou Gehrig, Hank Greenberg, Earl Averill and Charlie Gehringer. The only AL pitcher who seemed constantly capable of figuring out the hitters was unstoppable ace Lefty Grove.
Meanwhile, the National League—after cranking out an over-the-top batting binge in 1930—muted the hit parade and gave pitchers the equilibrium they’d been desperately seeking since the end of the dead ball era. The NL’s biggest stars of the decade lived on the mound: The colorful, controversial Dizzy Dean, and quiet screwball artist Carl Hubbell.
World War II stripped many of the game’s greats of up to four years of their prime in baseball. If not for armed conflict, Ted Williams—arguably the best pure hitter the game has ever seen—might have finished his career with 3,200 hits and 650 home runs. Warren Spahn, the game’s most productive southpaw, quite possibly would have topped 400 wins. Bob Feller, armed with a supersonic fastball, could have won 300 games, and struck out 3,500. Hank Greenberg might have joined the 500-home run club, while Washington’s Mickey Vernon could have made it to 3,000 hits. But from the heart and to a man, every ballplayer would have considered such a relatively trivial loss of statistics as a small sacrifice compared to helping America defeat the Axis powers.
The Yankees, along with their two brothers of New York baseball—the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants—owned major league baseball for much of the 1950s. Through the decade’s first seven years, every World Series winner represented Gotham—as did five of its losers. There has been great debate over what era of baseball is most rightfully represented as the game’s Golden Age, and if you were loyalists for any one of the three New York-based teams, it was easy to believe this period was it.
It was hardly a Golden Age outside of New York’s city limits. Attendance dropped through much of the 1950s, the blame for which was placed on everything from aging ballparks in decaying inner cities to television to Elvis. The lack of competitive balance that resigned many teams to concede their pennant hopes on Opening Day had something to do with it as well.
Early in the 1960s, 1950s-style baseball was still in charge. The Yankees continued to win pennants. Home whites and road grays remained in vogue. Ted Williams, Warren Spahn and Stan Musial were still producing.
But America of the 1960s evolved into a decade of quick change, if not complete metamorphosis. America’s internal and external problems —and the counterculture that spawned as a result—made major league baseball, the bastion of tradition for over 60 years, feel odd and out-of-place throughout the decade.
Answering to immense pressure, each league reluctantly expanded from eight teams to 10 early in the decade—and more contentedly added two more in 1969 to total 12. The relocations of the Dodgers and Giants to the West Coast at the end of the 1950s were just the beginning of an inevitable trend that would reach all corners of America—and beyond. By the end of the decade, the U.S. Northeast—the long-anchoring region of baseball—saw its geographic power diluted with new or relocated teams in San Diego, Seattle, Minneapolis, Atlanta, Houston and even Montreal in neighboring Canada.
-
LIVE
vivafrei
10 hours agoEp. 294: Pipe Bomber Caught? Pfizer Fraud before Appeals! Venezuela Boat Strikes! EU v. Elon & MORE!
14,142 watching -
LIVE
Barry Cunningham
2 hours agoLIVE FROM THE RED CARPET: President Trump Melania Trump, Sylvester Stallone, KISS And Others
1,097 watching -
LIVE
TheSaltyCracker
45 minutes agoMeme Warfare Goes Nuclear ReeEEStream 12-07-25
10,017 watching -
LIVE
EricJohnPizzaArtist
2 days agoAwesome Sauce PIZZA ART LIVE Ep. #72: John Lennon
103 watching -
LIVE
Akademiks
1 hour agoOffset and Steffon Diggs squabbled in the Club? Fif on Warpath still vs Diddy. NLE Choppa vs YB pt2?
1,090 watching -
LIVE
Laura Loomer
2 hours agoEP159: The Pentagon Press Corps Gets LOOMERED
631 watching -
LIVE
OFFICIAL Jovan Hutton Pulitzer Rumble
1 hour ago#ForensicBombshells - What Happens Next? Rumore? Rage? Retaliation?
108 watching -
LIVE
SpartakusLIVE
2 hours agoEarly ARC Stream for EXPEDITION Prep || WZ Buybacks LATER
200 watching -
LIVE
GritsGG
6 hours agoBO7 Warzone Is Here! Win Streaking! New Leaderboard?
1,091 watching -
20:00
DeVory Darkins
1 day agoSenator Kennedy drops BAD NEWS for Ilhan Omar calls for her prosecution
28.9K155