We dedicate today’s hockey coverage to Pittsburgh Penguins Hall of Fame broadcaster Mike Lange. The voice of the Penguins passed away last evening, and we’ll offer more tributes today, including those from his friend Dave Molinari.
Obviously, we are disappointed that we didn’t win.” Sullivan will always be linked with his captain in Pittsburgh. As the captain of Team Canada, Sidney Crosby enjoyed yet another international victory,
Bob Grove is known amongst Penguins fans as the "preeminent Pens historian" and he was also a long-time friend of Mike Lange.
Lange began his career as a Penguins broadcaster in 1974 as a radio announcer. He left the Penguins after that first season, but returned in 1976. He spent 30 years doing TV broad
Lange spent 46 years with the Penguins. Story highlights Mike Lange, longtime Pittsburgh Penguins announcer, died at 76. Lange had a 46-year career with the Penguins. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2001.
Hall of Fame broadcaster Mike Lange, whose imaginative goal calls made his raspy voice immediately recognizable to Pittsburgh Penguin fans for decades, has died. He was 76. The team confirmed Lange’s death Wednesday.
Before Dan Bylsma arrived in Pittsburgh during the 2008-09 season, the Michigan native knew of Mike Lange’s goal calls and the color he added to Penguins broadcasts. “‘Scratch my back with a hacksaw’
"Let's go Pens," Mike Lange called to a large crowd at a parade following the Penguins' 2016 Stanley Cup win. Lange's unforgettable commentary made him a Penguins legend for decades. Lange spent 46 years with the team before retiring in 2021. Sign up for ...
Before starting a radio or television broadcast, the late Mike Lange famously told his audience, “It’s a hockey night in Pittsburgh.” It was his first famous catchphrase in a Hockey Hall of Fame career full of unforgettable ones.
Jack Gibson, who grew up listening to Mike Lange and whose son, John, now plays in the NHL, talks about the first moment he got to hear the beloved Penguins broadcaster call a game involving his son.
Lange, the voice of Penguins hockey for nearly 50 years, cast an everlasting shadow over a city and its hockey team.
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