Slowes, 45, enters his eleventh big league season, his third with the Nationals. Charlie joined the Nationals on February 24, 2005 and it did not take long for him to reacquaint himself with the Washington, DC market. Within days of his Nationals premier, his trademark "Bang Zoom" tag line was a part of the Beltway lexicon. Before introducing the Nationals to their new market in 2005, Charlie spent the previous seven seasons as a play-by-play voice of Tampa Bay on the Devil Rays Radio Network. He joined the Devil Rays for their inaugural season in 1998. Before his return, Slowes was perhaps best known locally as the play-by-play voice of the Washington Bullets from 1986-97. During his tenure with the Bullets, Slowes did two seasons of television simulcasts and enjoyed representing the Bullets in a variety of community-related functions. He also worked at KMOX Radio in St. Louis for three years (1984-86), during which time he was exposed to broadcasting greats Bob Costas and Jack Buck while working in a variety of on-air functions for, among others, St. Louis University, the St. Louis Blues, the St. Louis baseball Cardinals and the St. Louis football Cardinals. Charlie broadcast Tidewater Tides Triple-A baseball for parts of four seasons from 1986-92. He has broadcasting ex-perience with NBC (television) and CBS (radio) for their MLB Game of the Week, as well as with the Baltimore Orioles and New York Mets radio networks. He's also dabbled in bowling and boxing for ESPN and MISL soccer (play-by-play with New York Arrows in 1983) in two-plus decades as a play-by-play broadcaster. Charlie is married to Christina. The couple has two sons, Jimmy and Alex.
Click here to read about Charlie on the NationalsPride blog.
Jageler, 35, joined the Nationals in 2007 after spending the previous season as the radio and TV voice of the Pawtucket Red Sox of the Triple-A International League. Prior to joining Pawtucket, he worked in Boston co-hosting an afternoon talk show as well as serving in various capacities with the Boston Celtics radio network, including fill in play-by-play. Jageler spent six years in Charlotte as the voice of UNC-Charlotte basketball and co-hosting a morning drive talk show. While in Charlotte he built his baseball resume with the Triple-A Charlotte Knights in the 1995, 1996 and 2001 seasons doing play-by-play. Jageler's voice may sound familiar to some in the D.C.-area, as he served as a host on the Virginia Tech Sports Network during the 1993-94 basketball season. He has also served as the studio host for Westwood One's NHL Game of the Week, the Florida State and Texas Longhorns football networks and has done fill in play-by- play for both the Seminoles and Longhorns. The Windsor, Conn., native is a graduate of Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications where he began his play-by-play career broadcasting Syracuse football and basketball games on WAER and baseball for the Triple-A Syracuse Skychiefs on Time Warner Cable and Empire Sports Network. During baseball's off-season, he can be heard as an ESPN Radio SportsCenter anchor and as the voice of Harvard basketball. Jageler resides in Alexandria, Va. He is married to Jennifer, and the couple has two children, Jared and Sarah.
Click here to read about Dave on the NationalsPride blog.
Bob Carpenter joined MASN and the Nationals in 2007 after 10 years in the TV booth of the St. Louis Cardinals and more than 20 in the Major Leagues. The St. Louis native debuted in 1984 with Cardinals baseball on the Sportstime Cable Network, then returned in '95 on KPLR-TV and KMOX Radio. He has been nominated for four St. Louis/Mid-America Emmys, winning twice (1996 and '97). His signature home run call "See ... you ... later!" got local and national recognition during Mark McGwire's record-setting home run chase in '98. Carpenter also appeared on TV in the '80s and '90s with the Texas Rangers, New York Mets and Minnesota Twins. One of sports broadcasting's busiest announcers, Bob has worked MLB, college basketball and college football during 17 play-by-play seasons. He has broadcast baseball playoffs, Triple-A All-Star Games, NCAA and NIT basketball tournaments and college football bowl games. His studio work included College Gameday and College Football Scoreboard shows. During his tenure with ESPN, Carpenter has been paired with former Major Leaguers Buck Martinez, Joe Morgan, Jim Palmer, Ray Knight, Jerry Reuss, Frank Viola and many others. On the basketball side, he worked with Dick Vitale, Bill Raftery, Larry Conley, Jim Valvano and among others. Carpenter announced the 2005 NCAA Basketball Final Four in his hometown of St. Louis for NCAA International TV. Prior to ESPN, Bob handled a variety of sports for USA Network, including college basketball and football, PGA Golf (including The Masters) and professional tennis (including the U.S. Open). Bob has announced numerous soccer events at RFK Stadium, starting as the TV voice of Team America in 1983. He also worked several matches during the 1994 World Cup. Carpenter began his broadcasting career in 1976 as baseball play-by-play announcer with the Tulsa Oilers, then St. Louis' Triple-A affiliate. Carpenter earned a Radio-TV-Film degree with honors from the University of Missouri-Kansas City in 1975. Bob and his wife, Debbie, have two daughters, Katie and Allison.
Click here to read about Bob on the NationalsPride blog.
Rob Dibble joins MASN for the 2009 season as color commentator for Washington Nationals broadcasts.
Prior to joining MASN, Dibble was a baseball analyst for MLB on Fox, and a contributor to FoxSports.com's baseball coverage. Additionally, Rob serves as a co-host (along with Fox's Kevin Kennedy) of The Show, MLB Home Plate's afternoon drive-time baseball talk show on XM Radio.
Dibble worked with ESPN from 1998-2004, as a co-host of The Dan Patrick Show on ESPN Radio, as well as on the network's Saturday Gameday coverage. He also appeared on Baseball Tonight, and served as analyst on select Major League Baseball games on ESPN Radio and TV. A full-time panelist on Fox Sports Net's Best Damn Sports Show Period from 2005-2008, Dibble made his television debut in 1997 as a studio analyst for National Sports Report on Fox Sports Net.
Rob was a seven-year Major League Baseball veteran; a right-handed pitcher, he retired from baseball in 1995. He had a 27-25 record with 89 saves and a 2.98 ERA with the Cincinnati Reds, Chicago White Sox and Milwaukee Brewers. He struck out 645 batters in 477 career innings. Dibble combined with Norm Charlton and Randy Myers to form the "Nasty Boys" bullpen which helped Cincinnati win the 1990 World Series. Dibble tossed 4-2/3 scoreless innings in three appearances during that World Series against the Oakland A's. In the playoffs that season, he was named co-MVP of the National League Championship Series for hurling five scoreless innings against the Pittsburgh Pirates, striking out 10 and picking up a save. Dibble had his finest major league season in 1991 when he saved 31 games for the Reds. He was named to the National League All-Star team in 1990 and 1991.
Click here to read about Don on the NationalsPride blog.
Debbi Taylor came to MASN in 2007 from Sun Sports/FSN, where she was a sideline reporter for the Orlando-based Regional Sports Network. She was also a sports anchor and reporter for the Fox and CBS affiliates in Orlando where she covered the Daytona 500 and the Super Bowl. Debbi got her start in sports broadcasting spending six years at the New England Sports Network (NESN) in Boston where she hosted the morning show as well as doing feature interviews and reporting for the Red Sox pre-game and post-game shows.
Debbi has won two local Emmys and a national Emmy for her trip to Cuba and "The Friendship Games." She was honored by Red Sox legend Ted Williams by being one of only two women included in the broadcast wing of the "Hitters Hall of Fame" (the other was longtime Red Sox owner Jean Yawkey). Taylor is a native of Nashua, NH and grew up attending baseball games at Fenway Park with her four siblings.
Click here to read about Debbie on the NationalsPride blog.
One of the finest play-by-play announcers in the country, Johnny Holliday came to MASN after 27 years as the "Voice of the Terrapins." In addition to calling the action for the Maryland football and basketball teams, Holliday hosts the Ralph Friedgen and Gary Williams television shows. As the Terps' director of broadcasting, he also handles a myriad of speaking duties within the athletics department, ranging from banquets to golf outings.
His long list of credits includes ABC's coverage of the 2000 and 1996 Summer Olympics and the Winter and Summer Olympics in 1984, 1988 and 1994. In addition, he has covered championship boxing, the Masters, and the Liberty and Aloha bowls.
Holliday's announcing career allows him to lay claim as Washington's most versatile broadcaster, and among the best nationally. Whether it be in radio, where he was named America's No. 1 disc jockey during his rock 'n roll deejay days, to his public address duties with the Cleveland Browns, Oakland Raiders, and Golden State Warriors, to his work in Washington television for the Senators and Bullets, Holliday makes a complicated business look easy.
A native of Miami, Fla., Holliday began his broadcasting career in Perry, Ga., and through the years has worked in four of the nation's prime radio markets: Cleveland, New York, San Francisco and Washington. Washingtonian magazine honored him as a Washingtonian of the Year for his many civic activities. His basketball and softball teams, the Radio Wonders, have raised more than $1 million for charity. In October 2003, he was inducted into the Radio-Television Broadcasters Hall of Fame.
Click here to read about Johnny on the NationalsPride blog.
Two-time MLB All-Star Ray Knight will serve as the co-host of Nats Xtra, MASN's new pre- and post- game show.
Few baseball players garner as much respect as Ray Knight. In the twilight of his playing years, Knight mustered one of his best seasons to triumphantly lead the New York Mets to a World Series Championship. It was the team's first title in 17 years. His play earned him the Most Valuable Player honor for the 1986 World Series and he was named the National League Comeback Player of the Year by The Sporting News.
The Albany, Georgia native played professional baseball for 17 years; 13 of those were spent in the Major Leagues as an infielder with the Cincinnati Reds, the Houston Astros, the New York Mets, the Baltimore Orioles and the Detroit Tigers. Knight retired from baseball in 1989 and moved on to become an ESPN broadcaster. In 1993, he returned to the Major Leagues to work as a coach for Cincinnati. He ascended to manager of the Reds in October 1995 and maintained the position until July 1997.
Knight is married to professional golfer Nancy Lopez.
Click here to read about Ray on the NationalsPride blog.
| 1 | More cuts on Friday, still no surprises (Hendo) |
| 2 | Will Jesus Flores ever be 100 percent? (Jeff) |
| 3 | Felipe Lopez's wife in FHM (Ian) |
| 4 | UPDATED: Nats make first Spring Training cuts of 2010 (Hendo) |
| 5 | National Anthem auditions (Ian) |
| 6 | More Twin(s) bills in the AL (Hendo) |
| 7 | Burning off-the-field issues to look out for this offseason (Ian) |
| 8 | The Food at Nats Park: Should Chico Harlan be Writing This? (Dautch) |
| 9 | It's not just the players who get traded (Ian) |
| 10 | Bottom of the Order (Hendo) |
| 1 | More cuts on Friday, still no surprises (Hendo) |
| 2 | Will Jesus Flores ever be 100 percent? (Jeff) |
| 3 | UPDATED: Nats make first Spring Training cuts of 2010 (Hendo) |
| 4 | The NL East, position by position: third base (Hendo) |
| 5 | The TV Watch: Strasburg’s Debut (Jon) |
| 6 | TONIGHT: Baseball Prospectus at Politics and Prose (Hendo) |
| 7 | MASN will carry Strasburg's debut today (Ian) |
| 8 | Panic? No. Get Real? Yep. (Jim) |
| 9 | Will Tuesday's Debut Show Better Pitching? (Jeff) |
| 10 | This Day in D.C. Baseball History (Mark) |