Episodios

  • Cardinals vs Cubs - Relaxing 1986 Full Game, Wrigley Field Ambience
    Apr 2 2026

    Drift off with a calm summer afternoon at Wrigley Field as the St. Louis Cardinals take on the Chicago Cubs in this full 1986 broadcast.

    This is classic daytime baseball at its most relaxing - steady pitching rhythms, gentle crowd ambience, and the unmistakable sound of a mid-80s broadcast drifting through the afternoon air. With both teams in a quiet regular season matchup, the pace remains unhurried and consistent throughout.

    Originally played during the 1986 season - where the Cubs finished well out of contention - this game carries that perfect low-stakes atmosphere ideal for sleep, focus, or background listening.

    Whether you’re winding down for the night or just need something soft and familiar in the background, this is baseball as it was meant to be heard: slow, warm, and timeless.


    Perfect for:

    • Sleep
    • Relaxation
    • Studying
    • Background ambience
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    2 h y 23 m
  • Mariners @ Oakland Athletics - MLB Opening Day – April 3, 1989
    Mar 24 2026

    MLB Opening Day – April 3, 1989
    Seattle Mariners at Oakland Athletics

    Opening Day of the Major League Baseball season on April 3, 1989 featured the Seattle Mariners visiting the Oakland Athletics at the Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum. The game marked the beginning of a season that would eventually see Oakland emerge as one of the most dominant teams in baseball.

    The Athletics started left-hander Dave Stewart, while Seattle countered with veteran right-hander Mike Moore. Early on, both pitchers worked quickly through the first innings, settling the game into the familiar rhythm of an Opening Day matchup.

    Oakland’s powerful lineup soon began to show its strength. In the middle innings, the Athletics broke through with timely hitting from stars like Rickey Henderson, whose speed and presence at the top of the order helped spark the offense. Sluggers Mark McGwire and Jose Canseco also contributed key hits as Oakland gradually built a comfortable lead.

    Stewart kept the Mariners’ hitters under control throughout most of his outing, mixing power pitching with careful control to limit Seattle’s scoring opportunities. The Athletics bullpen handled the late innings, preserving the lead as Oakland closed out the game.

    When the final out was recorded, the Oakland Athletics defeated the Seattle Mariners 5–3, giving Oakland a successful start to the season. The victory offered an early glimpse of the powerful club that would go on to capture the 1989 World Series later that year.

    Opening Day 1989 in Oakland stands as a reminder of the Athletics’ late-1980s powerhouse era—featuring a lineup full of stars, strong pitching, and the anticipation of a season that would ultimately end in a championship.

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    1 h y 27 m
  • Colorado Rockies @ San Diego Padres — May 3, 2005
    Mar 22 2026

    Colorado Rockies 1 – San Diego Padres 2


    📍 Petco Park
    🕒 May 3, 2005 (Night Game)

    This game is a microcosm of the Padres’ 2005 approach:

    • Strong bullpen
    • Close wins
    • Minimal offensive output

    They would go on to win the NL West that year despite a modest record — games like this were their blueprint.


    The Padres edged out a tight, low-scoring contest, using timely hitting and elite bullpen execution to beat a struggling Rockies side.

    San Diego scored late and leaned on their closer to shut the door — a classic mid-2000s Padres formula.

    Early Game (2nd inning – Rockies strike first)

    • Colorado scratched across a run to take a 1–0 lead.
    • It was a typical small-ball sequence — no explosive offense, just situational hitting.

    Middle Innings – Pitching Takes Over

    • Both teams struggled offensively.
    • Padres pitching kept the game within reach, allowing just 1 run on 6 hits total from Colorado.

    Turning Point (6th inning)

    • Padres finally broke through, tying the game 1–1.
    • Momentum subtly shifted — not explosive, but you could feel Colorado losing control.

    Decisive Moment (8th inning)

    • San Diego plated the go-ahead run to make it 2–1.
    • It wasn’t a big homer — just timely execution, which defined this Padres team.

    Closing It Out (9th inning)

    • Trevor Hoffman entered and secured the save (his 6th of the season).
    • Vintage Hoffman: calm, efficient, clinical.

    Key PlayersPadres

    • Trevor Hoffman
    • Akinori Otsuka


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    2 h y 5 m
  • Yankees @ Indians - MLB Opening Day - April 5, 1993 Pt2
    Mar 18 2026

    As the new MLB season draws closer i thought it would be fun and interesting to find some iconic opening games from the past.

    Let's start with this one from the Yankees at Indians.

    In the run up to the new season on the 25th, there will be a few more episodes to reminisce over.

    If there is one you remember, please let us know in the comments.


    MLB Opening Day - April 5, 1993New York Yankees at Cleveland Indians

    Opening Day of the Major League Baseball season on April 5, 1993 brought an extraordinary scene to Cleveland Municipal Stadium, where a massive crowd gathered to watch the Cleveland Indians host the New York Yankees. The attendance of 80,227 fans became the largest crowd for a Major League Baseball game in more than three decades, creating an electric yet nostalgic atmosphere for the start of the 1993 season.

    The Yankees handed the ball to left-hander Jimmy Key, while Cleveland started right-hander Jose Mesa. With the huge Opening Day crowd roaring early, the Indians took advantage in the first inning as Albert Belle delivered a powerful swing, launching a two-run home run that immediately energized the stadium.

    The Yankees answered in the third inning. Veteran slugger Danny Tartabull connected for a home run, trimming the Cleveland lead and settling the game into a steady back-and-forth pace. Both teams traded scoring chances through the middle innings while the pitchers worked carefully through deep lineups.

    Cleveland regained control in the sixth inning when the offense came alive again. Timely hits from Carlos Baerga and Albert Belle helped extend the Indians’ advantage, and the Cleveland bullpen held firm over the final innings.

    When the final out was recorded, the Indians secured a 7–3 victory over the Yankees in front of one of the largest crowds in modern baseball history. The Opening Day spectacle at Cleveland Municipal Stadium remains memorable not only for the game itself, but also for the remarkable attendance, a symbol of the excitement surrounding baseball at the beginning of the 1993 season.

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    51 m
  • Yankees @ Indians - MLB Opening Day - April 5, 1993 Pt1
    Mar 18 2026

    As the new MLB season draws closer i thought it would be fun and interesting to find some iconic opening games from the past.

    Let's start with this one from the Yankees at Indians.

    In the run up to the new season on the 25th, there will be a few more episodes to reminisce over.

    If there is one you remember, please let us know in the comments.


    MLB Opening Day - April 5, 1993
    New York Yankees at Cleveland Indians

    Opening Day of the Major League Baseball season on April 5, 1993 brought an extraordinary scene to Cleveland Municipal Stadium, where a massive crowd gathered to watch the Cleveland Indians host the New York Yankees. The attendance of 80,227 fans became the largest crowd for a Major League Baseball game in more than three decades, creating an electric yet nostalgic atmosphere for the start of the 1993 season.

    The Yankees handed the ball to left-hander Jimmy Key, while Cleveland started right-hander Jose Mesa. With the huge Opening Day crowd roaring early, the Indians took advantage in the first inning as Albert Belle delivered a powerful swing, launching a two-run home run that immediately energized the stadium.

    The Yankees answered in the third inning. Veteran slugger Danny Tartabull connected for a home run, trimming the Cleveland lead and settling the game into a steady back-and-forth pace. Both teams traded scoring chances through the middle innings while the pitchers worked carefully through deep lineups.

    Cleveland regained control in the sixth inning when the offense came alive again. Timely hits from Carlos Baerga and Albert Belle helped extend the Indians’ advantage, and the Cleveland bullpen held firm over the final innings.

    When the final out was recorded, the Indians secured a 7–3 victory over the Yankees in front of one of the largest crowds in modern baseball history. The Opening Day spectacle at Cleveland Municipal Stadium remains memorable not only for the game itself, but also for the remarkable attendance, a symbol of the excitement surrounding baseball at the beginning of the 1993 season.

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    1 h
  • Dodgers @ Yankees - World Series Game 3 - 1955
    Mar 13 2026

    The recording of this was quite bad, so I've tried my best to give it some restoration, and remove a lot of the silence and strange artifacts that was in the file.

    I have previously uploaded game 7 of this series on the podcast but this game 3 is a little more relaxed, even if it is a World Series final game.


    so enjoy - here is a short breakdown of what happened -


    1955 World Series – Game 3
    September 30, 1955
    New York Yankees at Brooklyn Dodgers – Radio Broadcast

    The 1955 World Series continued at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn on September 30, 1955, as the New York Yankees faced the Brooklyn Dodgers in Game 3 of one of baseball’s most famous rivalries. With the series shifting to Brooklyn, the atmosphere at Ebbets Field carried a quiet tension typical of October baseball, captured beautifully in the steady cadence of a classic mid-century radio broadcast.

    Veteran right-hander Whitey Ford took the mound for the Yankees, while the Dodgers countered with Don Newcombe, one of the National League’s dominant pitchers of the era. Both starters worked carefully through the early innings, with deliberate pacing and long pauses between pitches that defined the relaxed rhythm of 1950s baseball on the radio.

    Brooklyn struck first in the opening inning when Duke Snider delivered a key hit that helped the Dodgers take an early lead. The Yankees answered in the third inning, as their lineup—featuring legends like Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra—began to find their timing against Newcombe.

    As the game settled into the middle innings, the pace slowed into a classic pitcher-batter duel. The radio commentators described the quiet tension of Ebbets Field: the distant crowd murmur, the crack of the bat echoing through the ballpark, and the steady narration typical of the golden age of baseball broadcasting.

    The Yankees eventually pulled ahead behind timely hitting and steady pitching from Ford, who worked deep into the game while keeping the powerful Brooklyn lineup under control. By the late innings, New York had built a comfortable lead, and the Dodgers struggled to generate another rally.

    When the final out was recorded, the New York Yankees defeated the Brooklyn Dodgers 8–3, taking a 2–1 lead in the series. Although the Yankees won this game convincingly, the 1955 Fall Classic would ultimately become historic for Brooklyn, as the Dodgers went on to capture their first World Series championship.

    Today, the original radio broadcast of Game 3 remains a remarkable snapshot of baseball’s golden era , slow, methodical, and rich with atmosphere. For listeners, the steady commentary and unhurried pace make it a perfect example of classic baseball radio, transporting audiences back to a crisp autumn afternoon at Ebbets Field in 1955.

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    1 h y 32 m
  • Brewers @ Cardinals - 1982 World Series — Game 7 Pt2
    Feb 18 2026

    1982 World Series - Game 7St. Louis Cardinals vs. Milwaukee Brewers

    October 20, 1982 - Busch Stadium, St. Louis

    Final Score: Cardinals 6, Brewers 3


    Context

    The series was tied 3–3. Milwaukee, known as “Harvey’s Wallbangers” for their power-heavy lineup, faced a Cardinals club built on speed, defense, and pitching Whitey Herzog’s “Whiteyball” philosophy. It was the Brewers’ first World Series appearance; St. Louis was seeking its first title since 1967.


    Starting Pitchers

    • Brewers: Pete Vuckovich (Cy Young Award winner in 1982)

    • Cardinals: Joaquín Andújar

    Both managers had short leashes, knowing the bullpen would likely decide it.


    Early Innings (Brewers Strike First)

    Milwaukee opened aggressively. In the top of the 1st, Paul Molitor singled, advanced, and scored on a Cecil Cooper RBI single. The Brewers added another in the 2nd, taking a 2–0 lead and briefly silencing Busch Stadium.

    Andújar settled in after the shaky start, preventing further damage and keeping the Cardinals within reach.

    St. Louis began chipping away:

    • In the 4th inning, Keith Hernandez singled home a run, cutting it to 2–1.

    • The Cardinals tied it in the 6th.

    • Then came the decisive swing: George Hendrick’s two-run home run off Vuckovich gave St. Louis a 4–2 lead and ignited the crowd.

    Milwaukee managed to trim it to 4–3 in the 7th, but their offense stalled against the Cardinals’ bullpen.

    In the 8th inning, St. Louis manufactured insurance:

    • Aggressive baserunning and situational hitting added two crucial runs.

    • Milwaukee’s power bats — Robin Yount, Gorman Thomas, and Cooper — could not deliver the tying blow.

    In the 9th, closer Bruce Sutter took the mound. True to form, he induced weak contact and secured the final outs. The last batter grounded out, and the Cardinals celebrated on the field.

    • Darrell Porter (Cardinals): Series MVP; reached base consistently and handled the pitching staff expertly.

    • George Hendrick: 2-run HR that flipped the game.

    • Bruce Sutter: Multi-inning save under maximum pressure.

    • Cecil Cooper (Brewers): Early RBI but lineup faded late.

    Middle Innings (Momentum Turns)Late Innings (Cardinals Pull Away)



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    1 h y 23 m
  • Brewers @ Cardinals - 1982 World Series — Game 7
    Feb 18 2026

    1982 World Series - Game 7St. Louis Cardinals vs. Milwaukee Brewers

    October 20, 1982 - Busch Stadium, St. Louis


    Final Score: Cardinals 6, Brewers 3


    Context

    The series was tied 3–3. Milwaukee, known as “Harvey’s Wallbangers” for their power-heavy lineup, faced a Cardinals club built on speed, defense, and pitching Whitey Herzog’s “Whiteyball” philosophy. It was the Brewers’ first World Series appearance; St. Louis was seeking its first title since 1967.


    Starting Pitchers

    • Brewers: Pete Vuckovich (Cy Young Award winner in 1982)

    • Cardinals: Joaquín Andújar

    Both managers had short leashes, knowing the bullpen would likely decide it.


    Early Innings (Brewers Strike First)

    Milwaukee opened aggressively. In the top of the 1st, Paul Molitor singled, advanced, and scored on a Cecil Cooper RBI single. The Brewers added another in the 2nd, taking a 2–0 lead and briefly silencing Busch Stadium.

    Andújar settled in after the shaky start, preventing further damage and keeping the Cardinals within reach.

    St. Louis began chipping away:

    • In the 4th inning, Keith Hernandez singled home a run, cutting it to 2–1.

    • The Cardinals tied it in the 6th.

    • Then came the decisive swing: George Hendrick’s two-run home run off Vuckovich gave St. Louis a 4–2 lead and ignited the crowd.

    Milwaukee managed to trim it to 4–3 in the 7th, but their offense stalled against the Cardinals’ bullpen.

    In the 8th inning, St. Louis manufactured insurance:

    • Aggressive baserunning and situational hitting added two crucial runs.

    • Milwaukee’s power bats — Robin Yount, Gorman Thomas, and Cooper — could not deliver the tying blow.

    In the 9th, closer Bruce Sutter took the mound. True to form, he induced weak contact and secured the final outs. The last batter grounded out, and the Cardinals celebrated on the field.

    • Darrell Porter (Cardinals): Series MVP; reached base consistently and handled the pitching staff expertly.

    • George Hendrick: 2-run HR that flipped the game.

    • Bruce Sutter: Multi-inning save under maximum pressure.

    • Cecil Cooper (Brewers): Early RBI but lineup faded late.

    Middle Innings (Momentum Turns)Late Innings (Cardinals Pull Away)



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    1 h y 10 m