Baltimore Sun Sunday

Thorne won’t be back on broadcasts

On-air changes continue as team doesn’t renew contract

- ORIOLES By Nathan Ruiz

With the coronaviru­s pandemic preventing Orioles fans from attending games in 2020, their only access to their favorite team came through the television and radio broadcasts, but even those lacked the familiarit­y of years past.

That will continue into 2021.

After longtime broadcaste­r Jim Hunter announced Friday the Orioles did not renew his contract, Gary Thorne confirmed Saturday that the team informed his agent last week that his contract would also not be renewed. The decisions mean the team’s television and radio broadcasts going forward will lack the play-by-play voices they have had for more than a decade.

“It’s sad,” Thorne said by phone. “I would’ve preferred that I be there and [have] the opportunit­y to say thank you to so many people I worked with and, particular­ly, the fans. I really regret that I’m not going to have a chance to thank the fans for their support and friendship and kindness because that meant a lot to me — means a lot to me.

“I just really enjoyed the people who were listening to our broadcasts, and they were great to me for the whole time I was there.”

Thorne, 72, has served as the Orioles’ primary play-by-play broadcaste­r on Mid-Atlantic Sports Network since 2007 and said he did not know why the team chose not to bring him back. He did not appear on a broadcast in 2020 as a result of a contract dispute in the wake of the pandemic.

“I missed not being there,” Thorne said. “We had a contract disagreeme­nt that we had to get taken care of, and it wasn’t done until after the season had started. And then with the pandemic and the change in schedules, the Orioles had the right under our deal to not use me if they didn’t want to, and the decision was not to.

“And in all honesty, with the COVID situation, I don’t know if I could’ve gone or not. I don’t know if it would’ve been possible to make the physical part of it work, so it was just a lost year for me in terms of broadcasti­ng.”

But in other ways, there were benefits. Thorne was able to stay at home in California with his family and prepare for a decision from the Orioles that he said “didn’t come as a surprise.”

“We’ve had a deal of time, with ‘we’ being the family, to talk about where we are and what we’re doing, and we’re still kind of doing that,” he said. “I’m not anxious about any part of it, and being at home over the last year has been great. I’ve got a younger daughter who I get to share time with and my wife, so that’s been really wonderful.

“It’s the first time in 35 years of MLB broadcasti­ng that I had a summer off and a chance to remember what it was like.”

Thorne said his favorite memories were those from the Orioles’ playoff runs under manager Buck Showalter, watching a team and fan base that hadn’t experience­d a winning season since 1997 become the American League’s winningest organizati­on from 2012-16. But beyond that field, what he’ll take away most is the relationsh­ips he built, especially with analyst Jim Palmer.

Even as the Orioles’ on-field product trended downward in recent years, the combinatio­n of Thorne and Palmer kept fans watching at home engaged and entertaine­d. In 2019, Thorne’s tiredness of Yankees infielder Gleyber Torres’ repeated home runs against Baltimore became a source of humor amid a 108-loss season.

“We became great friends and will remain that way,” Thorne said. “It was great storytelli­ng. We had a tremendous crew that broadcast the games. We genuinely had a good time, worked hard, but [I] enjoyed it, and that’s the stuff I’ll miss.

“We had a situation where I think we provided a really good broadcast, and it wasn’t accidental. It was because of the people who were working it, and I’ll miss those relationsh­ips.”

Thorne is saddened that he didn’t get the true chance to say goodbye to the fan base and took that opportunit­y Saturday.

“I really want to say thank you for your support, thank you for your kindness, thank you for your friendship,” Thorne said. “Thank you for being there personally toward me in times, particular­ly around the city, when I would just run into people who were fans, and they would stop and talk and it was as if we were next-door neighbors.

“I really appreciate­d that. Oriole fans, in the city and wherever they were watching, were just great. They could not have been more supportive of the work we were doing and more outgoing in saying how much they enjoyed the games and the broadcasts. I’ll treasure that forever.”

Thorne and Hunter are among a large chunk of the team’s crew who won’t be part of the 2021 lineup, according to a report from The Athletic.

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