Sean McDonough


Sean McDonough is an American sportscaster, currently employed by ESPN and the WEEI Boston Red Sox Radio Network. McDonough has play-by-play experience for all four major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada.

Early life

McDonough was born in Boston, Massachusetts, the son of Boston Globe sportswriter Will McDonough. He graduated from the S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications of Syracuse University in 1984 with a degree in broadcast journalism. At Syracuse, he joined the WAER-FM sports department and provided play-by-play calls for Syracuse Chiefs baseball games. During college, he worked for Syracuse football coach Dick MacPherson.

Career

Early career

McDonough was an intern at the short-lived Enterprise Radio Network in 1981.
It was in Syracuse where McDonough began his broadcasting career in 1982 as the play-by-play announcer for the Syracuse Chiefs of the International League. McDonough was also an Ivy League football announcer for PBS. He was a sideline reporter from 1984 to 1985 and a play-by-play announcer from 1986 to 1987.

Boston Red Sox and Boston Bruins

Four years after graduating from Syracuse, he began broadcasting Boston Red Sox games on WSBK-TV in Boston with former Red Sox catcher Bob Montgomery and later former Red Sox second baseman Jerry Remy. While not calling Red Sox games, he also hosted select Boston Bruins games on WSBK-TV with the most notable game being the last game at the old Boston Garden.
McDonough continued announcing broadcast Red Sox games through the 2004 season, moving over the years to various local stations, including WFXT, WABU, and WLVI. In 1996, he was teamed with Jerry Remy. He worked with Remy for nine seasons, ultimately only Friday night games, before being replaced in 2005 by NESN announcer Don Orsillo. McDonough attributed his firing to his salary and disputed talk that his "candor" was to blame.
He turned down an offer to become the New York Mets play-by-play man on television in 2005 before the Red Sox notified him that they would not pick up his option for 2005.
In 2019, McDonough returned to Red Sox broadcasts as a part-time play-by-play announcer on the team's radio network, announcing 30-32 games that season and becoming a permanent part-time announcer alongside Joe Castiglione, Will Flemming, and Lou Merloni in 2020.

CBS Sports

He began work for CBS Sports in 1990, where he broadcast college basketball, college football, the [College 1992 World Series|World Series on CBS|College World Series], the NFL, US Open tennis, three Winter Olympics, and golf.
In December 1999, CBS Sports President Sean McManus informed McDonough that his contract would not be renewed. Once Dick Enberg, late of NBC was available, McDonough became the odd man out.

''Major League Baseball on CBS''

Outside of New England, he is probably best remembered for his time as CBS's lead baseball announcer, a role in which he was teamed with Tim McCarver. In 1992 at the age of 30, he became the youngest man to announce the national broadcast of the World Series. Coincidentally, that particular record would be broken four years later by Fox's 27-year-old Joe Buck, the son of the man McDonough replaced on CBS, Jack Buck.
Perhaps McDonough's most famous call is his emotional description of the Atlanta Braves' Francisco Cabrera getting a dramatic, game-winning base hit in Game 7 of the 1992 National League Championship Series against the Pittsburgh Pirates:
He also called the final play of the subsequent 1992 World Series, in which the Toronto Blue Jays became the first non-American based team to win the Major League Baseball's world championship:
A year later, McDonough called Joe Carter's dramatic 1993 World Series ending home run off Mitch Williams of the Philadelphia Phillies:
Three years later, while calling the College World Series for CBS alongside Steve Garvey, McDonough called another series-clinching home run. This time, it was Warren Morris, who hit a two out, 9th inning walk-off home run that won the 1996 College World Series for the Louisiana State University Fighting Tigers against Miami.

''NCAA Basketball on CBS''

McDonough's other major endeavor at CBS was his coverage of the NCAA tournament with then-partner Bill Raftery. McDonough and Raftery covered a number of regional finals in the 1990s before McDonough's run at CBS came to an end. The pair developed a terrific on-air rapport, thereby enabling them to spice up their broadcasts. Before the 1999 South Regional Final between Ohio State and St. John's from Knoxville, Tennessee, McDonough and Raftery donned fishing gear as they previewed the game from a boat on the Tennessee River, which was just outside the arena.
In 1998, McDonough—with Raftery at his side—called one of the great buzzer-beaters in NCAA Tournament history, as Connecticut defeated Washington in the East Regional semifinals on a last-second shot by Richard Hamilton.

ABC/ESPN

Since 2000, McDonough has announced baseball, college basketball, college football, golf, NBA, NHL, and NCAA hockey for ESPN/ABC. Specifically, McDonough announced many Big East college football and basketball events. He has also contributed to ESPN's coverage of the U.S. Open and British Open golf tournaments, and called the 2010 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship Final Four alongside Quint Kessenich.
McDonough called NCAA basketball play-by-play on March 12, 2009, on ESPN between UConn and Syracuse which went into 6 overtimes, becoming the longest game in Big East history, clocking 3 hours and 46 minutes. The final score was 127-117 in favor of Syracuse. Also on the broadcast was color commentary from Bill Raftery and Jay Bilas.
On September 28, 2011, McDonough called the nationally televised game in which the Baltimore Orioles came back to defeat the Boston Red Sox 4–3 after Boston closer Jonathan Papelbon came within one strike of closing the game. McDonough called Baltimore's Robert Andino's walk-off single, which occurred only three minutes before Evan Longoria's walk-off home run against the New York Yankees in St. Petersburg gave the Tampa Bay Rays, who trailed the Red Sox by nine games on September 3, the American League Wild Card, as follows:

College football, the NFL, and the NHL

McDonough was also behind the mic for the fumbled punt in the final seconds of the Michigan State-Michigan football game on October 17, 2015, that resulted in the game-winning touchdown for the Spartans.
Starting in 2013, McDonough started play-by-play work for the NFL on ESPN Radio. Others included Ryan Ruocco, Marc Kestecher, and Bill Rosinski, who previously did NFL games for NFL on Westwood One as the Atlanta Falcons and the Carolina Panthers.
McDonough was named the lead play-by-play announcer for Monday Night Football beginning in the 2016 season. In March 2018, ESPN announced that McDonough would be leaving Monday Night Football and would return to announcing college football games.
On June 29, 2021, ESPN formally confirmed that he would be its lead play-by-play voice for their forthcoming NHL coverage beginning in the 2021–22 season, when the league returned to ESPN and ABC, after 16 years at NBC. He was reportedly interested in an NHL role ever since ESPN reacquired the rights to the NHL in March, and ESPN reportedly considered him and Steve Levy for the #1 play-by-play announcer role before eventually choosing him. He teams with up with former NHL center Ray Ferraro, and Emily Kaplan, who provides reports throughout the game, on the lead team. Previously, he teamed up with Brian Engblom on ESPN2 NHL broadcasts from 1993 to 2004. Initially, ESPN had McDonough and Ferraro together in the booth before the network decided to place Ferraro at ice-level.
On May 4, 2024, he called Game 7 of the Eastern Conference First Round series between the Boston Bruins and the Toronto Maple Leafs and he received praise for predicting the circumstance in which the overtime goal was scored immediately before it happened.

Acting

McDonough acted in the 1992 film Mr. Baseball.

Health

In 2012, McDonough had surgery for superior canal dehiscence syndrome which kept him from working for several months.

Honors

In 2014, McDonough was named to the WAER Hall of Fame along with Bill Roth, Syracuse University's noncommercial radio station, where he began his sports broadcasting career as a student. S. I. Newhouse School of Public Communications also honored McDonough in July 2016 with the 4th annual Marty Glickman Award. In May 2007, he received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Southern Vermont College.
In 2025, McDonough received the National Sports Media Association’s National Sportscaster of the Year Award.

Career timeline

Others

Radio