Atlanta Braves acknowledging fans at a game in
1983. In
1976, Caray was added to the broadcast team for the Braves, a position he held until his death. In September 2007, he was not asked to announce
League Division Series games on
TBS, and was kept exclusive to the Braves as the team's broadcasts moved to local Atlanta station
WPCH-TV (Peachtree TV, a direct descendant of the original WTBS). Caray felt slighted by the move. Perhaps Caray's most memorable call was his description of
Francisco Cabrera's game-winning hit in Game 7 of the
1992 National League Championship Series against the
Pittsburgh Pirates. The game itself was ultimately decided on Braves first-baseman
Sid Bream beating out Pirates left-fielder
Barry Bonds' throw to home plate. Three years later, the
Braves defeated the
Cleveland Indians in Game 6 of the
1995 World Series to earn the city of
Atlanta its first major professional sports championship. Caray called
Marquis Grissom catching the final out in center field. According to
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Caray's calls of the 1992 pennant win and 1995 World Series win were "the two most iconic calls" in Braves history. Caray was inducted into the Atlanta Braves Hall of Fame in
2004 alongside long-time Braves broadcaster
Pete Van Wieren. He has been recognized with six Georgia Sportscaster-of-the Year awards from the National Sportswriters and Sportscasters Association, as well as a Georgia-area Emmy award. On December 18, 2006, the Braves organization announced that Caray (and partner Van Wieren) had signed three-year contracts to continue doing Braves game broadcasts on their radio network. However, Caray only announced ten games on TBS in the
2007 season before being relegated to Peachtree TV. On the final broadcast of
Braves TBS Baseball (September 30, 2007), Caray thanked fans saying, "To all you people who have watched the Braves for these 30 years ... thank you. We appreciate you more than you will ever know. ... Thank you folks and God bless you. And we're going to miss you every bit as much as you miss us."
NBC Sports In
2000,
NBC hired Caray to do play-by-play with
Joe Morgan on the
AL Division Series between the
New York Yankees and
Oakland Athletics. Caray was filling in for
Bob Costas, who sat out the Division Series after anchoring
NBC's
prime time coverage of the
Summer Olympic Games from
Sydney,
Australia.
Other appearances On December 11, 1982, Caray along with
Abe Lemons called the much hyped college basketball contest between
Virginia and
Georgetown (led by
Ralph Sampson and
Patrick Ewing respectively) for TBS. Caray also called play-by-play for the first two seasons (1990–91) of the
TNT network's
Sunday night NFL coverage as well as TBS' coverage of the
NBA and
college football, and anchored TBS' coverage of the 1990
Goodwill Games. He made his motion picture debut in the 1985 movie ''
The Slugger's Wife'', starring
Michael O'Keefe,
Randy Quaid and
Rebecca De Mornay. Caray frequently mocked his participation in the film on-air and referred to it as one of the
worst movies ever made, often saying that the actors in the movie probably watched it as the in-flight movie on their way back to Los Angeles. Caray was also the lead play-by-play man for
The Baseball Network's (a joint venture of
ABC and
NBC Sports respectively) regional coverage of Braves games during that ill-fated experiment's two seasons (
1994 and
1995) usually alongside the opposing team's secondary play-by-play man or color commentator. ==Broadcasting style==