ESPN Radio When
ESPN Radio gained broadcast rights for
Major League Baseball's national radio package from
CBS in 1998, Steiner became its lead announcer, working Sunday night games, the
All-Star Game, and
postseason games. (Steiner never worked the
World Series while he was calling games for ESPN Radio, however, as those were covered by then-lead TV voice
Jon Miller.) Steiner's most controversial
home run call came in the
2001 All-Star Game at
Safeco Field on July 10. His utterance of "Who wrote this script?" to punctuate
Cal Ripken Jr.'s third-
inning homer off
Chan-Ho Park fueled speculation about whether the achievement was legitimate or that the pitch was
grooved to enable a legendary sendoff.
New York Yankees (2002–2004) Steiner left ESPN in 2002 and joined the
New York Yankees' radio booth, replacing
Michael Kay as
John Sterling's play-by-play partner. Steiner was at the microphone when
Yankees third baseman
Aaron Boone won Game 7 of the
2003 American League Championship Series with a home run in the eleventh inning to defeat the
Boston Red Sox. After Steiner completed his call, he joined Sterling in his famous "Yankees win! Theeeeeeeeeeee Yankees win!" call, saying he "had always wanted to do that". Steiner and Sterling reportedly had a contentious relationship during their three years together.
Los Angeles Dodgers (2005–present) Steiner left the Yankees after the following season, his last game being the infamous Game 7 of the
2004 American League Championship Series in which the Red Sox completed its historic
"reverse sweep" over its rivals after trailing 3 games to 0. He was originally slated to move to the
YES Network as a studio host, but after
Ross Porter, longtime radio voice of the
Los Angeles Dodgers (Steiner's favorite team growing up, with the team still based in
Brooklyn) was let go by the team, Steiner was hired to take his place. For four years covering the 2005 through 2008 seasons, the Dodgers' unique broadcasting arrangement had Steiner teamed with analyst
Rick Monday and working play-by-play on radio during all home and
intra-divisional road games. However, Steiner's duties during these games would begin with the fourth inning and cover the remainder of the game, as the first three innings were a radio/television
simulcast voiced by
Vin Scully. Steiner handled television play-by-play on all other games (with analyst
Steve Lyons), primarily road contests east of the
Rocky Mountains. For the 2009 season, the Dodgers had Steiner and Monday as their radio team for all 162 games, though the Scully simulcast of the first three innings would remain. Starting in 2014, Steiner was paired with
Orel Hershiser on the television broadcast for all games Scully did not call, and broadcast on the radio with Monday the other games. Steiner also used to host
Baseball Beat on
XM Satellite Radio's
MLB Home Plate channel, where he talked exclusively to writers, authors, columnists, broadcasters, or celebrities on their thoughts and analysis of the current state of baseball. Steiner's last episode of
Baseball Beat aired on January 16, 2009. Following Vin Scully's retirement from the Dodgers after the 2016 season, the team split its radio-TV duties between Steiner and
Joe Davis, with Steiner remaining on the radio side but switching to television on those occasions Davis has a
Fox Sports assignment. Starting with the 2019 season he worked radio only with
Tim Neverett and later
Stephen Nelson replacing him as the alternate TV announcers. Steiner was unable to work any games for the Dodgers during the 2024 season due to his battle with
multiple myeloma blood cancer. Steiner returned to call the Dodgers' domestic Opening Day at Dodger Stadium vs. the Detroit Tigers on March 27, 2025, but apparently had to leave the radio booth at the 7th inning stretch due to cancer aftereffects (fatigue), as his 2024 primary replacement, Stephen Nelson, began the bottom of the 7th and called the final two innings alongside Rick Monday. Steiner's sudden disappearance from the booth was not addressed during the broadcast apart from a throwaway line from Nelson, "I didn't know I was going to work today." ==Awards and accomplishments==