News

One of baseball's most beloved voices is gone. Broadcasting icon Vin Scully died Tuesday at age 94. AILSA CHANG, HOST: All right. Today, baseball fans are remembering sportscaster Vin Scully.
Legendary broadcaster Vin Scully died on Tuesday at the age of 94. Scully served as the play-by-play voice of the Los Angeles Dodgers from 1950 until 2016, moving with the team from Brooklyn to ...
All right. Today, baseball fans are remembering sportscaster Vin Scully. Scully, who died yesterday at the age of 94, got to call some of the game's greatest plays. (SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING) ...
He was 94. Scully died at his home in the Hidden Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles, the team announced after being informed by family members. No cause of death was provided.
MLB Vin Scully, Dodgers broadcaster for 67 years, dies at 94 "He was the best there ever was." Vin Scully called games for the Dodgers from 1950-2016. Tom Tingle/The Arizona Republic via AP ...
For Scully, who died Tuesday at 94, there was never any fall from grace, never any fade-out into some new technology. He was as loved during his last ballgame as he had been throughout.
Dodgers broadcasting legend Vin Scully (1927-2022) died Tuesday at the age of 94, the team announced. The Athletic has live updates and reaction from around the league.
Vin Scully, the gentlemanly, yarn-spinning play-by-play man whose mellifluous voice provided the soundtrack to Dodger baseball from Brooklyn to Los Angeles for a jaw-dropping 67 seasons, has died ...
That was Vin Scully, a beautiful human being who made the world so much better simply being in his presence. I’ve known him for nearly 35 years, and never once did I ever see him in a bad mood.
Scully is survived by five children, Kevin, Todd, Erin, Kelly and Catherine, 21 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. His second wife Sandi died in 2021. His first wife Joan died in 1972.
On Jan. 4, 2021, Sandi Scully died of complications from ALS. The loss of his wife, paired with the death of Lasorda a few days later, was “almost too much to bear,” Scully wrote.