
Tuesday's Red Sox game will feature all-female broadcast crew
It's the second time Tiedemann will join the Red Sox' broadcast booth, after she and former Sea Dogs play-by-play voice Rylee Pay
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Tiedemann and Pay were the second all-female broadcast duo in baseball history. Melanie Newman and Suzie Cool
were the first, for the Single A Salem Red Sox in 2019.
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Women are outnumbered by men in the field of sports media. As of 2021, women made up 19.3 percent of sports media staffs across the United States,
The all-female broadcast team is part of the network's 'Women of NESN' initiative, an effort to increase the visibility of women and women's sports across the network. It began as an internal resource group for female employees at NESN seven years ago.
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Tuesday's first pitch against the Royals is slated for 7:10 p.m., and the game will be shown on NESN and NESN 360.
Emma Healy can be reached at

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New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Surging Red Sox trying to recapture 2018 mojo with new version of ‘win wall'
BOSTON — Tucked off in a corner, near the doorway where players enter the Boston Red Sox clubhouse, six rows of neatly organized Polaroid-style pictures sit on wooden ledges screwed into the wall. Each snapshot captures a victory this season. After the Red Sox beat the Royals 8-5 on Monday night, there were 63. Advertisement Garrett Crochet pumping his fist after his first Fenway win. Roman Anthony swatting his first big-league homer. Ceddanne Rafaela, arms wide, skipping toward home plate to meet his teammates after a walk-off homer. Multiple Wally Head celebrations in the dugout. 'There's a lot of different faces up there,' shortstop Trevor Story said. 'I think that's a sign of a good team. Someone is playing a different hero every single win. You get to relive it every time you walk by.' They're snapshots of a hard-fought season, with an ending that has yet to be told. When wins were few and far between early in the season, many players hardly noticed the new clubhouse wall display. But as the Red Sox began to turn a corner from a seesaw of wins and losses over the first three months to a 17-7 July, during which they strung together 10 wins in a row, the win wall took shape. 'It's cool,' Story said. 'It's a great little reminder as you go in and out of the clubhouse, you get to see the guys, and it's kind of an affirmation for the hard work.' If the idea sounds familiar, it's because it's a reprisal of a project from seven years ago. In 2018, as a first-year manager in Boston, Alex Cora's office was decorated with 8×12 photos from each win that season. No one knew at the start of that year it would become the winningest season in Red Sox history or that the club would claim its ninth World Series title. It was a unique project that grew organically and offered something for the players to reflect on whenever they stepped into Cora's office. Reviving the project wasn't at the top of Cora's mind entering this season, but in spring training, when the team had its annual meeting with ownership, Fenway Sports Group partner Linda Henry reminisced about the wall with Cora. 'I was like, you know what, we should do it,' Cora said. 'It's a fun way to recognize the guys.' Advertisement There's no expectation that this new version of the project will repeat the magic of 2018. Rather, there is something to be said, in the midst of a long season, for a visual aid of what winning looks like. The 2025 version is similar, but different. There are no players from the 2018 team still here; Rafael Devers, the lone holdover at the start of the year, was traded in June. In fact, just Cora and bench coach Ramón Vázquez remain from the on-field personnel. The 2018 team was a juggernaut, rolling past opponents. The 2025 team floundered for much of the first half, dealt with the Devers drama and endured injuries to key players. For a while, there weren't many photos on the wall. Jarren Duran, who was drafted in 2018, had no idea about the win wall from the World Series run. 'That's pretty cool,' he noted. 'We'll try to get the mojo of 2018. Everybody's chipping in, so I like to see that.' Cora was open to a new version of the win wall but wanted it to be different from the original. Rather than have it displayed in his office, he wanted the photos in the clubhouse, among the players, for everyone to see more easily. Team photographer Maddie Malhotra suggested the Polaroid-style snapshots to go along with a vintage theme the social media team has implemented this season. (Case in point: They've had some players record video on camcorders this season.) Like her predecessor Billie Weiss, who chose the photos for the 2018 wall and hung them in Cora's office, Malhotra runs point on the 2025 version. A post shared by Boston Red Sox (@redsox) After each win, she'll choose a photo from whichever photographer shot the game that night, including staff photographer Rachel O'Driscoll or interns Clay Stark and Sarah Boeke. The photographers are not at every road game, so in that case, they'll use photos from the Associated Press or Getty Images. Advertisement 'We're just kind of drawing on big moments, big plays, milestones for guys, or sometimes it's just like our favorite photo that day,' Malhotra said. 'One that feels reflective of that day's storyline.' After Malhotra chooses the photo, she prints it, dates and labels it on the back with the score and opponent — 'I double check my work, I'm always counting,' she quipped — and props it up on the ledge near the door. Each ledge fits 11 photos, so if she doesn't realize how close she's gotten to the end of the ledge, she'll have to wait for the Fenway Park facilities team to make a new ledge before the next set of photos can be displayed. When the team is on the road and the home clubhouse is used for concerts or other events, clubhouse manager Tommy McLaughlin takes down the five dozen or so photos and stores them in an envelope in his office adjacent to where they're displayed. 'We don't want them to disappear or get knocked down or someone not knowing what they are take one with them,' McLaughlin said. When the team returns, he makes sure to put each photo back in order. The dates on the back are a crucial element for this step. 'It's just some added flavor to the clubhouse that we didn't have before, I like it,' Duran said. With fewer than 50 games to play and the Red Sox on a six-game winning streak, there's no telling what the wall will look like in two months. Either way, it will tell a story. 'Every win, it's a good day,' Vazquez said. 'Even when they're not pretty, you learn from them, so it's nice to see the photos.' (Photos: Sarah Boeke / Boston Red Sox)


Washington Post
2 hours ago
- Washington Post
Red Sox ride Duran HR, strong outing from Bello to 6th straight win, beating Royals 8-5
BOSTON — Jarren Duran hit a three-run homer and Brayan Bello pitched six effective innings, helping the Boston Red Sox beat the Kansas City Royals 8-5 on Monday night for their sixth consecutive victory. Rob Refsnyder drove in two runs, and Duran added a leaping, run-saving catch in front of the Green Monster in the fourth.


Boston Globe
3 hours ago
- Boston Globe
NESN's all-female broadcast booth ready for Tuesday's Red Sox game: ‘Once the first pitch is thrown, we just do our job'
Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up In other words, she's there to do her job. Just like Tiedemann. Advertisement These women get it: This particular iteration of their professional life is noteworthy. It is the first all-female broadcast team and all-female broadcast booth for a complete game in Red Sox history, a crew specifically hired by NESN for Women's Celebration Night at Fenway Park that includes Kasey Hudson at field level, Natalie Noury and Jen McCaffrey in the studio, and Amy Kaplan and Anna Gregoire in producer roles. But for all of them, the 'job' part is what matters most. Advertisement 'It's exciting and some may think it's unique, but for us, if you look at our résumés collectively, we have decades of experience, and once the first pitch is thrown, we just do our job,' Rizzo said. 'Emma's calling the game, I'm doing my tidbits. We love the game, we do the work, and it's important to recognize that we appreciate the opportunity. 'But I can't wait till it's not a big deal anymore.' Ditto for Tiedemann, whose first foray into calling a game came by the side of her grandfather, Texas sportscaster Bill Mercer, but was honed by hard work, beginning with a post-college job doing play-by-play for the Mat-Su Miners of the Alaskan summer league to her current job calling games for the Portland Sea Dogs, the Red Sox' Double A affiliate. 'I started loving all sports as a little girl, but I really came to love baseball through play-by-play and calling games every day for a season up in Alaska, that's how I fell in love with the sport itself, learning from players, learning about the art of broadcasting,' she said. 'The groundbreaking stuff has come along with it, but the forefront for me is putting on a headset.' Emma Tiedemann has been the radio play-by-play voice of the Portland Sea Dogs since 2021. Jim Davis/Globe Staff She's right. But for now, we still mark, notice, and celebrate nights such as this, because they are what make the vision of a different, less-notable future seem possible, perhaps even inevitable. Only with intentionality such as NESN is showing here, efforts such as their Women of NESN initiative to broaden opportunity for those long shut out from this male-dominated field, are new habits formed. Habits where viewers and/or listeners don't judge by the sound of the voice they hear, but by what they are saying instead. Advertisement 'I'm a sucker for a pitchers' duel,' Tiedemann said. 'I love that game of chess, the pitcher having to adjust on the mound. On the Double A level [in Portland], pitching seems to take a leap, seeing a guy work the second or third time through the lineup, leaning on the fastball the first time through, the curveball the second time through. I love pitching. 'But we also have been very fortunate with Ceddanne Rafaela's defense, seen multiple home run-robbing catches. He's the only player that has changed the way I call fly balls to center field, where I've had to adjust to a player's defense. Balls that were doubles for most players, Ceddanne was making catches. He made me fall in love with that first step on a fly ball.' For Rizzo, 'it's more about the storytelling and relationships of players. I'm drawn to finding out what makes this person unique off the field, to take viewers someplace they're not allowed to go. Yes, they're millionaires who make a lot of money, but they're humans, not robots, and I love the human interest side of things. There are only 780 people that start on a major league roster every season — they are one of the 1 percent. It's difficult to do what these guys do and that's more of what draws me to the sport, the storytelling, being the liaison between the players on the field and the fans at home.' Advertisement That path, from the ballpark to your living room, is the one that drives them most. But another path, from those who've gone before them to those who dream of following in their footsteps, that one matters so much, too. Tara Sullivan is a Globe columnist. She can be reached at