
John Sterling, the legendary voice of the New York Yankees, has passed away at 87 due to complications from heart surgery. His longtime partner, Suzyn Waldman, shared a favorite moment of his during a tribute.
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Screengrab: YES Network
John Sterling, the iconic radio voice of the New York Yankees, died at 87 years old, and few people knew him better than his longtime broadcast partner, Suzyn Waldman.
WFAN morning hosts Boomer Esiason and Gregg Giannotti broke the sad news Monday morning, with Sterling reportedly passing away from heart surgery complications after suffering a heart attack earlier this year.
Sterling retired from a 64-year broadcasting career in April 2024, with 36 of those years spent as the voice of the Yankees. He briefly returned later that year to call the Yankeesâ playoff run to the World Series before fully retiring from the booth. But his longevity was unmatched, with Sterling starting an impressive Iron Man streak of 5,060 consecutive games in 1989.
Sterling became synonymous with the Yankees, particularly their most recent dynasty, as a generation of fans gravitated toward his signature style, home run calls, and gentle personality. And no one knows that personality better than Waldman, who called Yankees games with Sterling for two decades. Monday morning, Waldman joined WFAN midday hosts Evan Roberts and Shaun Morash to reflect on her former broadcast partnerâs life.
According to Waldman, the person Yankee fans heard in the radio booth all those years was exactly the person Sterling was off-air.
âHe didnât have a mean bone in his body,â Waldman said. âHe never understood why anyone would be mean to him or to anybody else. Thatâs who he was. He was kind to everybody. He didnât know how to fight back when people were mean to himâŠhe had the best soul of anyone Iâve ever met in my life, and I donât think weâre ever going to see that again.â
Weâll certainly never see another broadcaster like Sterling because he was uniquely himself as an announcer, with a style and lilt that cannot be replicated. And for Waldman, her favorite call from Sterling was Jeterâs 3,000th hit, because it was so authentic.
âHe did a perfect job, and he had tears coming down his face. I was crying, and he was crying. When you see someoneâs whole career, we both met when he was 18,â Waldman noted. âHe (Sterling) never flinched, the call was absolutely perfect, and he had tears running down his face as he was doing it. Those kinds of things get me. Itâs not what he saidâŠitâs that he did it perfectly while he was really emotional about it.â
John Sterling died due to complications from heart surgery after suffering a heart attack earlier this year.
John Sterling spent 36 years as the voice of the New York Yankees during his 64-year broadcasting career.
John Sterling started an impressive Iron Man streak of 5,060 consecutive games in 1989.

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As Waldman explains, the emotion Yankee fans heard from Sterling in that moment was consistent with who he was on and off the mic.
âHe never wrote anything down, ever,â Waldman told WFAN. âWhat came out of him came out of his heart. And if you listen to it, itâs absolutely spectacular.â
The post Suzyn Waldman shares favorite John Sterling moment: âHe was cryingâ appeared first on Awful Announcing.