Sam Rosen (sportscaster)

In 2016, Rosen was enshrined as the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award winner for outstanding contributions as a broadcaster by the Hockey Hall of Fame.

Rosen's current responsibilities include Rangers telecasts and Sunday NFL games for Fox.

lasted 20 years together, the longest-serving NHL broadcast team, before Davidson left for a management position with the St. Louis Blues[7] and later with the Columbus Blue Jackets[8][9] Davidson returned to take over duties as the President of the Rangers on May 17, 2019[10][11] and return to Columbus on May 20, 2021.

"[15] Then when the Rangers won the Stanley Cup, the highest-rated game in MSG Network history:[14] The waiting is over!

[4] Before taking the Rangers play-by-play job in 1984, Rosen also served as a studio host for New York Knicks basketball telecasts on MSG.

By 1975, he was a full-time sportscaster for United Press International's 1000-station radio network ("UPI Audio") and was appointed its Sports Director in 1979.

While at UPI, Rosen traveled to and covered most major sporting events, from the Super Bowl to the World Series.

[21][22] Even though the UPI position was a full-time responsibility, while he held it Rosen continued his other part-time positions: back-up voice of the Rangers and Knicks on radio and television, Cosmos soccer play-by-play announcer and weekend news anchor on WNEW-AM radio, and spot television boxing assignments for ESPN and USA Network.

Rosen was employed by ESPN from 1979 to 1988, calling a variety of sports for the network including non-Rangers hockey with Mickey Redmond,[23][24][25] college football, boxing,[26] table tennis, Australian rules football, college baseball,[27] collegiate wrestling, and NASL soccer.

He has called the Stanley Cup playoffs on the radio for many years, as well as the 2002 and 2006 Winter Olympic Men's Hockey Tournaments.

Rosen also called preseason NFL games for the Chicago Bears from 2009 to 2017, when he was replaced by Adam Amin, and previously did this for the New York Giants for several seasons.

His broadcasting partners have included Heath Evans, Kirk Morrison, Ron Pitts, Ray Bentley, Jerry Glanville, Tim Green, Brady Quinn, Matt Millen, Bill Maas, Brian Billick, Tim Ryan, Ronde Barber, Chad Pennington, Daryl Johnston, Cris Carter, John Lynch and Charles Davis.