From 2006 to 2008, NBC's studio show was originally broadcast out of the rink at New York's Rockefeller Center, at the foot of NBC's offices during January and February. This allowed the on-air talent, including commentators for NHL on NBC , and their guests (often ex-players and youth hockey teams) to demonstrate plays and hockey skills. From April onwards, and during inclement weather, the studio show moved to Studio 8G inside the GE Building, where NBC produces its Football Night in America program. For the Stanley Cup Finals, the show was usually broadcast on location.
Beginning in 2008, the studio show originated from the game venue. In 2012, the studio show moved to NBC Sports’ new headquarters in Stamford, Connecticut. The studio show now usually goes on the road for special events like the Winter Classic, All-Star Weekend, the Stadium Series, and the Stanley Cup Finals.
NBC Sports Regional Networks personnel occasionally appeared on NBCSN broadcasts during the latter part of the season and the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.
Hahn works Stanley Cup playoff games broadcasts on TNT
Jackson also does Stanley Cup playoff game broadcasts on TNT
For the 1966 playoffs and 1972–75 coverage, play-by-play is listed first, followed by color commentator, and studio host or hosts. "Inside The Glass" reporters were not utilized by NBC until the 2005–06 season.
During its first 2 seasons, NBC used 3 regular broadcast teams for its regional coverage of the NHL. For its first season, they brought in Mike Emrick and John Davidson, the lead broadcast team for NHL on Fox , to be their lead announcing pair, and added popular is Pierre McGuire was used as "Inside the Glass" reporter (the one who stands between-the-benches). [3]
For both broadcast seasons of the NHL on NBC, the #2 team consisted of Dave Strader, Brian Hayward, and "Inside the Glass" reporter Joe Micheletti .
For the 2005–06 NHL season, the #3 broadcast team was Chris Cuthbert, Peter McNab, and "Inside the Glass" reporter Cammi Granato .
For the 2006–07 NHL season, the 2nd season of the NHL on NBC , John Davidson left NBC to become the president of St. Louis Blues, so studio analyst Eddie Olczyk was permanently used with Mike Emrick and Pierre McGuire. [4] [5] The trio remained as NBC's lead broadcast team until 2020. Furthermore, Darren Pang was used due to Granato's son being born. [6]
During 2006–07, the #2 and #3 broadcast teams were mixed up, due to travel constraints. An example of this is color commentators Peter McNab and Brian Hayward often switching roles during the season and playoffs.
During the season, due to Pierre McGuire's TSN commitments, a variety of "Inside the Glass" reporters have been used with the #1 team, including Joe Micheletti, Cammi Granato, and Peter McNab.
Due to NBC's move to flex scheduling & only broadcasting one game a week, Only the lead team of Emrick, Olczyk, & McGuire is now used. Also, NBC has scrapped the studio-based intermission show and fired Bill Clement and Ray Ferraro. Pierre McGuire, who continues his role as the "Inside the Glass" reporter, serves as host from the game venue. Former Boston Bruins head coach Mike Milbury is the new analyst. [7] During the Stanley Cup playoffs, NBC Sports reporters like Bob Neumeier and Bill Patrick served as a moderator for Pierre McGuire & Mike Milbury's analysis.
In this era, Darren Pang will fill in for McGuire when he has TSN commitments.
For the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals, Jeremy Roenick returned as a guest analyst for the intermission reports. For Games 5 & 6 on NHL on NBC, Dan Patrick was the studio host. For the 2011 Stanley Cup playoffs, Liam McHugh served as the host while Mike Milbury and Pierre McGuire returned as analysts for the intermission reports.
In the era, after NBC purchased VERSUS and renamed it NBCSN, there was generally a sharing of talent that led to Emrick, Olczyk, and McGuire calling the Sunday afternoon Game of the Week but frequently appeared on Wednesday telecasts on NBCSN. In addition, Dave Strader and Brian Engblom called Sunday night and Tuesday night games on NBCSN.
Cuthbert returned to the network and John Forslund came over from VERSUS. Frequently, a mix of Emrick, Albert, Strader, Cuthbert, and Forslund led NBC's Stanley Cup playoff crews with analysts Olczyk, McGuire, Joe Micheletti, Engblom, and Darren Pang providing analysis. TSN commentators such as Cuthbert, Gord Miller, Ray Ferraro and Mike Johnson also worked regular season and playoff games and especially helped out with the network's coverage of the NHL Draft once those rights transferred to Sportsnet in Canada.
At the start of the 2018–19 season, NBC rotated Pierre McGuire and Brian Boucher on the lead broadcast team with Mike Emrick and Eddie Olczyk. Boucher joined the pair for Wednesday Night Hockey early games while McGuire called the late game. [8] [9] McGuire, however, was still assigned to work with the lead team on single select Wednesday Night Hockey, Game of the Week broadcasts, and the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals. [10] However, as of the start of the 2019–20 season, Boucher now works with the lead team while McGuire continues to appear on other broadcasts. [11] [12] In addition, NBC began using U.S. women's ice hockey stars A. J. Mleczko and Kendall Coyne Schofield as game analysts on select broadcasts, and NBC even assigned Mike Tirico to call play-by-play on a few broadcasts.
Similarly, the studio show was largely a mix of NBCSN's Liam McHugh and Kathryn Tappen with analysts Mike Milbury (until his firing in 2020), Roenick (until his firing in 2020), Keith Jones and later on, Anson Carter and Patrick Sharp. Mike Tirico would occasionally substitute as a host and play-by-play announcer.
Towards the end of the NBC era – and with Milbury and Roenick's departures, Engblom moving to work full-time with the Tampa Bay Lightning, the retirement of Emrick and play-by-play man Dave Strader's death – the network began cycling in new talent. Brendan Burke, who eventually became the #2 play-by-play voice of the NHL on TNT and Alex Faust called several playoff games for the network. Recently retired players like Dominic Moore and Ryan Callahan were hired as a color commentators and studio analysts, and A. J. Mleczko became the first woman to regularly work for an American national hockey broadcast. Former coach Mike Babcock joined as a studio analyst in the network's last season.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, NBC often had commentators call games from studios as a safety precaution, with a mix of studio and in-person work during the 2020–21 NHL season and a return to largely full in-person commentary during the postseason. Occasionally, commentators would work multiple games per day from NBC's studios in Connecticut.
NBCSN broadcast one of the final games before the pandemic suspended the season, a Wednesday Night Hockey telecast on March 11, 2020 between the San Jose Sharks and Chicago Blackhawks, with the network providing updates on how the pandemic was beginning to affect the league. Emrick, Olczyk, and Boucher called the game, the last one Emrick worked in-person at an NHL arena in his career.
During the NHL's 'bubble' Stanley Cup Playoffs in 2020, Forslund, Gord Miller, Boucher, and, until his firing, Mike Milbury worked in the league's Toronto bubble, while Albert and McGuire called games from the Edmonton bubble, with some commentators working from the studio or, in Emrick's case, from home. Emrick called the last of his record 22 Stanley Cup Finals from a home studio in Michigan, with Olczyk (both Emrick and Olczyk are cancer survivors), Boucher (working his first Stanley Cup Finals), and McGuire providing analysis and reporting in Edmonton.
In the 2020–21 season, Kenny Albert – who had been calling the conference final that Emrick's crew did not work – replaced the retiring Emrick as the lead voice and called the top semifinal with Olczyk and Brian Boucher. Meanwhile, John Forslund worked with Micheletti and McGuire on the other. In addition, McGuire joined the lead team as an on-site reporter for the Stanley Cup Finals, making him the only person to contribute to every season NBC carried the Stanley Cup dating back to 2006, when he was on the top team with Emrick and John Davidson. During the first two rounds, Burke and Mleckzo and Faust and Moore were the other broadcast teams, with Cuthbert having accepted the job as the voice of Hockey Night in Canada.
McHugh hosted the studio show from NBC's home base in Connecticut with Jones, Carter, and Sharp, while Tappen and McGuire worked from a setting on-site at each arena.
The two networks combined for a final broadcast on July 7, 2021. Both McHugh and Jones in the studio and Olczyk and Albert on-site in Tampa thanked several people behind the scenes before wrapping up the post-game show. Emrick, who narrated short features for the network in his retirement, was the last voice heard on NBCSN's post-game coverage to end that year's Stanley Cup Finals.
Main commentators for NHL on NBC & NBCSN: [13]
Edward Walter Olczyk Jr. is an American former center in the National Hockey League for 16 seasons with the Chicago Blackhawks, Toronto Maple Leafs, Winnipeg Jets, New York Rangers, Los Angeles Kings, and Pittsburgh Penguins. He won the Stanley Cup with the Rangers in 1994. Olczyk was also the head coach of the Pittsburgh Penguins from June 2003 to December 2005.
Brian Boucher is an American former professional ice hockey goaltender who is a game analyst on national TNT games and also Philadelphia Flyers games on NBC Sports Philadelphia. He played 13 seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Philadelphia Flyers, Phoenix Coyotes, Calgary Flames, Chicago Blackhawks, Columbus Blue Jackets, San Jose Sharks, and Carolina Hurricanes.
Michael "Doc" Emrick is an American former network television play-by-play sportscaster and commentator noted mostly for his work in ice hockey. He was the lead announcer for National Hockey League national telecasts on both NBC and NBCSN. Among the many awards Emrick has received is the NHL's Lester Patrick Award in 2004, making him the first of only six to have received the award for media work, and the Foster Hewitt Memorial Award by the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2008. He has also won nine national Emmy Awards for excellence in sports broadcasting, the only hockey broadcaster to be honored with even one. On December 12, 2011, Emrick became the first member of the media to be inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame. In 2017, Sports Illustrated listed Emrick as the sportscaster of the year.
Kenneth Gary Albert is an American sportscaster, the son of NBA sportscaster Marv Albert and nephew of sportscasters Al Albert and Steve Albert. He is the only sportscaster who currently does play-by-play for all four major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada.
William H. Clement is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player who became an author, speaker, actor, entrepreneur, and hockey broadcaster.
Raymond Vincent Ferraro is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player and current broadcaster for ESPN/ABC and select Vancouver Canucks games on Sportsnet. He played for 18 seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Hartford Whalers (1984–1990), New York Islanders (1990–1995), New York Rangers (1995–1996), Los Angeles Kings (1996–1999), Atlanta Thrashers (1999–2002), and St. Louis Blues (2002).
Regis Pierre McGuire is an American-Canadian ice hockey executive who currently works for Sportsnet and last served as senior vice-president of player development for the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (NHL). He previously worked as a television analyst for NHL on NBC broadcasts in the United States and on The Sports Network (TSN) in Canada. McGuire has also been a player, coach and scout.
The NHL on NBC is an American presentation of National Hockey League (NHL) games produced by NBC Sports, and televised on NBC properties, including MSNBC, CNBC, Golf Channel, USA Network and NBCSN in the United States.
Joseph Robert Micheletti is an American ice hockey analyst and reporter, and a former defenseman who played in 142 World Hockey Association (WHA) games with the Calgary Cowboys and Edmonton Oilers between 1977 and 1979, and 158 National Hockey League (NHL) games with the St. Louis Blues and Colorado Rockies between 1979 and 1982. He is the brother of former NHL player Pat Micheletti.
Keith Jones is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player. He was a hockey studio analyst for NBC/NBCSN from 2005–2021 and TNT from 2021-2023. He currently works as the President of Hockey Operations for the Philadelphia Flyers. In 491 NHL games, Jones produced a total of 258 points between 1992 and 2000.
NHL Live is a television show on NBC Sports Network. The program airs after every National Hockey League game the network televises as part of NHL on NBC. The postgame show was initially known as Hockey Central, airing from their Stamford, Connecticut studios. With the new contract with NBC beginning in the 2011–12 season, the new pregame show is called NHL Live and the new postgame show is called NHL Overtime, which show the NHL on NBC studio host and analysts, from the NBC and Comcast merger.
The broadcasts of National Hockey League (NHL) games produced by ESPN have been shown on its various platforms in the United States, including ESPN itself, ABC, ESPN+, ESPN2, ESPNEWS, ESPNU, and Hulu. Since 2021, games have been broadcast under the ESPN Hockey Night branding, while those on ESPN+ have used the ESPN+ Hockey Night branding.
Hockey Weekend Across America is an annual event devised by USA Hockey to promote the game of ice hockey in the United States. The weekend is capped by "Hockey Day in America", with broadcasts of National Hockey League games on the national networks of NBC (2011–2021) and TNT (2024–present).
NBCSN was an American sports television channel owned by the NBC Sports Group division of NBCUniversal, a subsidiary of Comcast. It originally launched on July 1, 1995, as the Outdoor Life Network (OLN), which was dedicated to programming primarily involving fishing, hunting, outdoor adventure programs, and outdoor sports. By the turn of the 21st century, OLN became better known for its extensive coverage of the Tour de France but eventually began covering more "mainstream" sporting events, resulting in its relaunch as Versus in September 2006.
Liam McHugh is an American television sportscaster. He is a studio host for the NHL on TNT and MLS Season Pass on Apple TV. He previously worked on NBC Sports coverage of the NHL as well as Notre Dame Fighting Irish football and NBC Sunday Night Football. He was also perhaps the face of NBCSN, anchoring much of its staple programming, including the NHL, Tour De France, college football, college basketball and the Premier League, prior to joining Turner.
Wednesday Night Rivalry and Wednesday Night Hockey was the branding used for National Hockey League games that aired on NBCSN on Wednesday nights during the regular season from January 2013 to May 2021.
The NHL on TNT is an American presentation of National Hockey League (NHL) games produced by TNT Sports, and televised on TNT and streamed on Max in the United States.
NBC Sports's deal with the National Hockey League for U.S. television rights ran through the 2020–21 season, and was replaced in 2021–22 by seven-year agreements with ESPN and TNT to split coverage.
The National Hockey League (NHL) is shown on national television in the United States and Canada. With 25 teams in the U.S. and 7 in Canada, the NHL is the only one of the four major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada that maintains separate national broadcasters in each country, each producing separate telecasts of a slate of regular season games, playoff games, and the Stanley Cup Finals.