News

Seifert’s involvement with volleyball continues today. She helps coordinate the CYO program for Sacred Heart Church in North ...
Gary Cohen could not believe the call. The famous Mets play-by-play announcer had already declared the infamous pitch that dramatically swung Tuesday’s 5-4 loss to the Phillies a strike when he ...
Keith Hernandez has never been afraid of speaking his mind in the New York Mets’ broadcast booth. Even when he is ...
The Mets can't possibly sink any lower than this. Those were the thoughts of Gary Cohen, the team's longtime play-by-play broadcaster on SNY, who lamented the state of affairs during the eighth ...
And Cohen has often done that this season, which hasn’t gone particularly well for the Mets. Despite a record $353 million Opening Day payroll, the team is just 43-50 on the year as of Monday.
Gary Cohen recalls Doc Gooden’s reverence as Mets retire No. 16: ‘He was always treated like royalty’ Dwight "Doc" Gooden's number 16 was retired by the Mets, with Gary Cohen offering a ...
Gary Cohen is perhaps the most beloved baseball announcer by his home fanbase, but it apparently is not like that for all the players he announces for. Cohen has broadcast New York Mets games ...
New York Mets broadcaster Gary Cohen ripped the Baltimore Orioles after play-by-play announcer Kevin Brown was reportedly suspended indefinitely for remarks he made about the organization’s wins ...
The owner, Steve Cohen, a life-long Mets fan, should already be familiar with Cohen’s unvarnished, blunt stylings. Yet hearing them as a fan is much different than as an owner who had $282 ...
For Gary Cohen, the journey started as a six-year-old, the year the Mets brought Major League Baseball to Queens and he started making the trip to Shea Stadium’s upper deck. It can reach a ...
Gary Cohen and Howie Rose delivered calls worthy of the Mets’ thrilling win to clinch a playoff berth. The Mets rode a two-run Francisco Lindor home run in the top of the ninth to a wild 8-7 ...
Fred Wilpon, 86, had owned the Mets when their new class of Hall of Famers — Howard Johnson, Al Leiter and the broadcasters Gary Cohen and Howie Rose — made their marks with the team.