ESPN (1990–2025) Jon Miller and Joe Morgan (1990–2010) The series debuted on April 15,
1990 with coverage of
New York Mets against the
Montreal Expos in
Montreal. From its inception through
2010, the series featured the broadcast team of
play-by-play commentator Jon Miller and
color commentator Joe Morgan.
Steve Phillips joined them for the
2009 season, and
Orel Hershiser did so for the
2010 season following Phillips' dismissal by the network. From
2004 until
2006,
Sam Ryan served as the
field reporter, but she left to join
New York City's
WCBS-TV and
CBS Sports in June 2006. On July 2, 2006,
Bonnie Bernstein joined the crew as the new field reporter, but did not return in 2007 primarily due to her request to cut back her schedule because of her continued recovery from a bout with
deep vein thrombosis in October 2006. Beginning in 2006,
Peter Gammons joined the broadcasts as a field reporter in the scouts position. Gammons, however, suffered a
brain aneurysm and didn't return until September 2006. In 2010, Miller and Morgan began their 21st consecutive season working together for ESPN. Following the 2010 season, ESPN announced that the television contracts of Miller and Morgan would not be renewed. Miller was offered, but chose to decline, a continued role with ESPN Radio.
Dan Shulman (2011–2017) Play-by-play announcer
Dan Shulman joined color commentators Hershiser and
Bobby Valentine as the new
Sunday Night Baseball crew beginning in
2011. In an essential trade deal, following the hiring of Valentine as the
Boston Red Sox manager, his predecessor
Terry Francona was hired to join Shulman and Hershiser for the 2012 season. Francona stayed with ESPN for only one season before he was hired by the
Cleveland Indians to be their manager for the
2013 season. Francona was replaced by
John Kruk, who had been part of the
Baseball Tonight team since 2004. Like Miller and Morgan before them, Shulman and Hershiser also formed the lead team on ESPN Radio's
World Series coverage. Prior to the
2014 season, Hershiser left ESPN to become an analyst for the Dodgers on
SportsNet LA, and was replaced by
Curt Schilling; however, Schilling's subsequent diagnosis of and treatment for an undisclosed form of
cancer led to his being unavailable to ESPN for most of the season. Shulman and Kruk worked as a two-man booth until Schilling joined them in September. On August 30, 2015, former softball player
Jessica Mendoza joined the
Sunday Night Baseball broadcast team as a color commentator. For the
2016 MLB season, former Yankees player
Aaron Boone joined Shulman and Mendoza in the broadcast booth as the second color commentator for
SNB. Shulman stepped down at the conclusion of the
2017 season, while Boone left the booth after being named new
Yankees manager.
Matt Vasgersian and Alex Rodriguez (2018–2021) On January 23, 2018, ESPN announced that
Alex Rodriguez and
Matt Vasgersian would join Jessica Mendoza,
Buster Olney, and the
SNB team for the
2018 season as analyst and play-by-play respectively. For the
2020 season abbreviated due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, Mendoza left
SNB as part of her new deal with ESPN, leaving Vasgersian and Rodriguez, who broadcast all games from a studio at ESPN's
Bristol, Connecticut headquarters.
ABC televised a
Sunday Night Baseball matchup between the
Chicago White Sox and the
Chicago Cubs on August 8, 2021. The broadcast marked ABC's first broadcast of
Sunday Night Baseball and the first regular season matchup it had
broadcast since its involvement in the
Baseball Network in 1995.
Ravech, Cone and Pérez (2022–2025) In 2021, ESPN and Major League Baseball agreed to a new contract that would last through the 2028 season. Beginning in 2022, ESPN would keep
Sunday Night Baseball as its
Game of the Week broadcast, but would no longer televise non-exclusive weeknight games unlike in previous years. It also gave ESPN the option to produce an alternate telecast on its sister networks (such as the popular alternate "StatCast" seen on ESPN2), as well as
simulcasts on
ESPN+ and
ABC. Matt Vasgersian left ESPN after the
2021 season to focus more on his duties for
MLB Network and
Bally Sports West, as he is the lead announcer for the
Los Angeles Angels, which in part, due to
SNB, saw his role taken by
Daron Sutton and
Rich Waltz for most of the
2021 season. On January 7, 2022, ESPN announced that Karl Ravech would become the fourth play-by-play announcer for
Sunday Night Baseball, joined by analysts David Cone and Eduardo Pérez. On May 14, 2023, ESPN was widely criticized for its decision to implement a
split screen between its
coverage of Game 6 of the
Stanley Cup Playoff Western Conference semifinal series between the
Vegas Golden Knights and
Edmonton Oilers and a
Sunday Night Baseball telecast between the
St. Louis Cardinals and
Boston Red Sox, which was being played at the same time and was ultimately won by St. Louis by the score of 9–1.
Jon Sciambi, the lead voice for
ESPN Radio's
MLB coverage, filled in for Ravech when the latter was on assignment for ESPN, most notably during the
Little League World Series. In 2024, it was reported that ESPN was expected to opt out of its contract with MLB at the end of the 2025 season. On February 20, 2025, ESPN and MLB mutually opted out of their contract. On September 21, 2025, ESPN broadcast its 865th and final
Sunday Night Baseball game, which was between the
Seattle Mariners and
Houston Astros.
KayRod Cast Started in 2022,
alternate telecasts of eight
Sunday Night Baseball games aired on ESPN2 with
Michael Kay and Alex Rodriguez calling the games. The presentation, nicknamed "KayRod Cast", was similar to the
Monday Night Football "
Manningcast" hosted by
Peyton and
Eli Manning.
NBC (2026–present) Jason Benetti and local color commentators (2026–present) Prior to the
2025 season, ESPN and MLB mutually agreed to opt out of final three years of the
Sunday Night Baseball contract, effective after the 2025 season. ESPN and MLB reportedly began negotiations on a new deal. In August 2025, it was reported that
NBC would take the rights to air a Sunday night exclusive game for the 2026–2028 seasons, while ESPN would continue to air exclusive games during the season on different nights. On November 19, 2025, MLB announced that, alongside
MLB Sunday Leadoff and the Wild Card games, NBC would indeed receive
Sunday Night Baseball. NBC Sports announced its inaugural
Sunday Night Baseball on January 9, 2026.
Sunday Night Baseball will air on NBCSN and Peacock from March 29 to May 24 (except April 12), and from September 6 to September 20. NBC will air
Sunday Night Baseball from May 31 to August 16, along with April 12 and August 30. NBC will also air 3 p.m. Sunday afternoon games from August 23 to September 6. On January 22, 2026, veteran NBC Sports host
Bob Costas announced that he would rejoin the network as a contributor for its MLB and
NBA coverage, and serve as the studio host for
Sunday Night Baseball. Costas had initially departed NBC in 2019, after which he became lead commentator for the
MLB on TBS from 2021 to 2024. On February 8, 2026, NBC Sports announced that
Clayton Kershaw,
Anthony Rizzo, and
Joey Votto would work as studio game analysts throughout the regular and post seasons along with
Ahmed Fareed also serving as studio pregame host. On March 4, 2026, NBC Sports announced that
Jason Benetti would return to NBC Sports and would work as the lead play-by-play for
Sunday Night Baseball. ==Notable games aired on
Sunday Night Baseball==