Sleep To Baseball Podcast

Barrelroomer

A semi-regular show bringing you original Major League Baseball broadcasts. Settle in with the crackle of vintage ambience and the voices of classic commentators from baseball’s past. Perfect for drifting off to the rhythm of the game, with the occasional unforgettable classic sprinkled in. Suggestions are always welcome — let us know if there’s something you’d like to hear added.

  1. 2D AGO

    Brewers @ Cardinals - 1982 World Series — Game 7 Pt2

    1982 World Series - Game 7St. Louis Cardinals vs. Milwaukee Brewers October 20, 1982 - Busch Stadium, St. Louis Final Score: Cardinals 6, Brewers 3 Context The series was tied 3–3. Milwaukee, known as “Harvey’s Wallbangers” for their power-heavy lineup, faced a Cardinals club built on speed, defense, and pitching Whitey Herzog’s “Whiteyball” philosophy. It was the Brewers’ first World Series appearance; St. Louis was seeking its first title since 1967. Starting Pitchers Brewers: Pete Vuckovich (Cy Young Award winner in 1982) Cardinals: Joaquín Andújar Both managers had short leashes, knowing the bullpen would likely decide it. Early Innings (Brewers Strike First) Milwaukee opened aggressively. In the top of the 1st, Paul Molitor singled, advanced, and scored on a Cecil Cooper RBI single. The Brewers added another in the 2nd, taking a 2–0 lead and briefly silencing Busch Stadium. Andújar settled in after the shaky start, preventing further damage and keeping the Cardinals within reach. St. Louis began chipping away: In the 4th inning, Keith Hernandez singled home a run, cutting it to 2–1. The Cardinals tied it in the 6th. Then came the decisive swing: George Hendrick’s two-run home run off Vuckovich gave St. Louis a 4–2 lead and ignited the crowd. Milwaukee managed to trim it to 4–3 in the 7th, but their offense stalled against the Cardinals’ bullpen. In the 8th inning, St. Louis manufactured insurance: Aggressive baserunning and situational hitting added two crucial runs. Milwaukee’s power bats — Robin Yount, Gorman Thomas, and Cooper — could not deliver the tying blow. In the 9th, closer Bruce Sutter took the mound. True to form, he induced weak contact and secured the final outs. The last batter grounded out, and the Cardinals celebrated on the field. Darrell Porter (Cardinals): Series MVP; reached base consistently and handled the pitching staff expertly. George Hendrick: 2-run HR that flipped the game. Bruce Sutter: Multi-inning save under maximum pressure. Cecil Cooper (Brewers): Early RBI but lineup faded late. Middle Innings (Momentum Turns)Late Innings (Cardinals Pull Away)

    1h 23m
  2. 3D AGO

    Brewers @ Cardinals - 1982 World Series — Game 7

    1982 World Series - Game 7St. Louis Cardinals vs. Milwaukee Brewers October 20, 1982 - Busch Stadium, St. Louis Final Score: Cardinals 6, Brewers 3 Context The series was tied 3–3. Milwaukee, known as “Harvey’s Wallbangers” for their power-heavy lineup, faced a Cardinals club built on speed, defense, and pitching Whitey Herzog’s “Whiteyball” philosophy. It was the Brewers’ first World Series appearance; St. Louis was seeking its first title since 1967. Starting Pitchers Brewers: Pete Vuckovich (Cy Young Award winner in 1982) Cardinals: Joaquín Andújar Both managers had short leashes, knowing the bullpen would likely decide it. Early Innings (Brewers Strike First) Milwaukee opened aggressively. In the top of the 1st, Paul Molitor singled, advanced, and scored on a Cecil Cooper RBI single. The Brewers added another in the 2nd, taking a 2–0 lead and briefly silencing Busch Stadium. Andújar settled in after the shaky start, preventing further damage and keeping the Cardinals within reach. St. Louis began chipping away: In the 4th inning, Keith Hernandez singled home a run, cutting it to 2–1. The Cardinals tied it in the 6th. Then came the decisive swing: George Hendrick’s two-run home run off Vuckovich gave St. Louis a 4–2 lead and ignited the crowd. Milwaukee managed to trim it to 4–3 in the 7th, but their offense stalled against the Cardinals’ bullpen. In the 8th inning, St. Louis manufactured insurance: Aggressive baserunning and situational hitting added two crucial runs. Milwaukee’s power bats — Robin Yount, Gorman Thomas, and Cooper — could not deliver the tying blow. In the 9th, closer Bruce Sutter took the mound. True to form, he induced weak contact and secured the final outs. The last batter grounded out, and the Cardinals celebrated on the field. Darrell Porter (Cardinals): Series MVP; reached base consistently and handled the pitching staff expertly. George Hendrick: 2-run HR that flipped the game. Bruce Sutter: Multi-inning save under maximum pressure. Cecil Cooper (Brewers): Early RBI but lineup faded late. Middle Innings (Momentum Turns)Late Innings (Cardinals Pull Away)

    1h 10m
  3. FEB 10

    A’s @ Dodgers - 1988 World Series – Game 1

    Oakland A’s vs Los Angeles DodgersDate: October 15, 1988Venue: Dodger StadiumAttendance: ~55,000Final Score: Dodgers 5, A’s 4Series: Dodgers lead 1–0 Pre-Game Context Oakland entered as heavy favourites: a dominant 104-win team featuring Jose Canseco, Mark McGwire, Dave Stewart, Dennis Eckersley. The Dodgers were underdogs and had just lost Kirk Gibson to serious leg injuries (both hamstrings), leaving him unavailable to start the game. Oakland started Dave Stewart, who had already beaten the Dodgers twice in the regular season. Game Flow Summary Oakland jumped ahead early, capitalising on Dodgers starter Tim Belcher, building a 4–3 lead by the 8th inning. Dave Stewart pitched effectively, and Oakland appeared in control heading into the late innings. In the bottom of the 9th, with Dennis Eckersley (arguably the most dominant closer in baseball) on the mound, the Dodgers trailed 4–3. With two outs and a runner on, an injured Kirk Gibson was sent up to pinch-hit. Gibson could barely run, visibly limping between pitches. After fouling off several Eckersley sliders, Gibson hit a 2-2 backdoor slider into the right-field pavilion. Walk-off, two-run home run. Dodgers win 5–4. National TV (NBC): Vin Scully – play-by-play Joe Garagiola – colour commentary Iconic Vin Scully call: “In a year that has been so improbable, the impossible has happened.” Scully’s restrained, poetic delivery — followed by extended silence and crowd noise — became one of the most famous moments in sports broadcasting history. Gibson’s home run completely flipped the emotional and psychological tone of the series. The Dodgers, previously written off, gained belief. Oakland never recovered momentum. The Dodgers went on to win the World Series 4–1. The Defining MomentCommentary / BroadcastWhy This Game Matters

    2h 43m
  4. FEB 1

    Yankees @ Red Sox - ALCS Game 4 - October 17, 2004 - Pt2

    Boston Red Sox vs New York Yankees — ALCS Game 4 - Pt2 Date: October 17, 2004Venue: Fenway ParkSeries status entering game: Yankees lead 3–0 Boston entered the night facing elimination, having lost the first three games of the American League Championship Series. The Yankees took an early lead in the first inning on a two-run home run by Gary Sheffield, quieting Fenway and putting Boston in immediate trouble. The Red Sox chipped away slowly. David Ortiz drove in a run in the third inning, and Boston tied the game in the fifth on a sacrifice fly by Mark Bellhorn. From there, the game settled into a long, tense stalemate, marked by careful pitching changes and conservative offense. New York regained the lead in the seventh inning on an RBI single by Alex Rodriguez, making it 4–3. That score held into the ninth, with Yankees closer Mariano Rivera on the mound and Boston down to its final outs. With one out in the bottom of the ninth, Kevin Millar drew a walk. Pinch-runner Dave Roberts was sent in and stole second base on the next pitch — a pivotal moment that kept Boston alive. Moments later, Bill Mueller lined a single into center field, scoring Roberts and tying the game. The contest moved into extra innings, stretching late into the night. Both bullpens held firm until the bottom of the 12th inning, when David Ortiz hit a walk-off home run into the right-field seats, giving Boston a 6–4 victory. The win kept the Red Sox alive in the series. Boston would go on to win the next three games, completing the first 0–3 comeback in postseason history, and eventually winning the 2004 World Series.

    1h 46m
  5. FEB 1

    Yankees @ Red Sox - ALCS Game 4 - October 17, 2004 - Pt1

    Boston Red Sox vs New York Yankees — ALCS Game 4 - Pt1 Date: October 17, 2004Venue: Fenway ParkSeries status entering game: Yankees lead 3–0 Boston entered the night facing elimination, having lost the first three games of the American League Championship Series. The Yankees took an early lead in the first inning on a two-run home run by Gary Sheffield, quieting Fenway and putting Boston in immediate trouble. The Red Sox chipped away slowly. David Ortiz drove in a run in the third inning, and Boston tied the game in the fifth on a sacrifice fly by Mark Bellhorn. From there, the game settled into a long, tense stalemate, marked by careful pitching changes and conservative offense. New York regained the lead in the seventh inning on an RBI single by Alex Rodriguez, making it 4–3. That score held into the ninth, with Yankees closer Mariano Rivera on the mound and Boston down to its final outs. With one out in the bottom of the ninth, Kevin Millar drew a walk. Pinch-runner Dave Roberts was sent in and stole second base on the next pitch — a pivotal moment that kept Boston alive. Moments later, Bill Mueller lined a single into center field, scoring Roberts and tying the game. The contest moved into extra innings, stretching late into the night. Both bullpens held firm until the bottom of the 12th inning, when David Ortiz hit a walk-off home run into the right-field seats, giving Boston a 6–4 victory. The win kept the Red Sox alive in the series. Boston would go on to win the next three games, completing the first 0–3 comeback in postseason history, and eventually winning the 2004 World Series.

    2h 12m
  6. JAN 20

    Brooklyn Dodgers @ Chicago Cubs - June 4, 1957 Pt2

    Game: Brooklyn Dodgers vs. Chicago Cubs Date: June 4, 1957 Location: Ebbets Field, Brooklyn Broadcast: Original Dodgers radio network (WOKO), Vin Scully opened the game’s calls, then Jerry Doggett with help from Al Helfer; Tex Rickards on PA. Final Score:Dodgers 7, Cubs 5 Pitching: Winning Pitcher: Sandy Koufax (Dodgers) — worked multiple innings and earned the win. Save: Clem Labine (Dodgers).  Game Flow & Scoring Highlights: 1st Inning: The Dodgers struck early when Roy Campanella hit a two-run double off the scoreboard, giving Brooklyn a quick 3–0 lead.  3rd Inning: Duke Snider belted a solo home run to extend the lead.  5th Inning: Gil Hodges added another home run for the Dodgers.  6th Inning: Cubs’ Randy “Hoot” Speake hit a home run to get Chicago on the board.  8th Inning: Ernie Banks contributed with a home run, keeping the Cubs competitive late.  Noteworthy Moments / Storylines (Ambient Focus): Joe Pignatano made his major league debut during this game after Campanella was hit by a pitch in the 3rd inning — something the broadcasters discuss (good for ambience and human detail).  Vin Scully’s voice opens the broadcast, calling the first three innings and portions of the middle innings, providing calm, descriptive narration before turning over to Doggett later.  Crowd, vendors, and PA announcements from Tex Rickards are audible throughout — adding to the period ambience your listeners appreciate.  Line Score: Chicago Cubs: 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 — 5 runs, 6 hits, 1 error Brooklyn Dodgers: 3 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 x — 7 runs, 7 hits, 0 errors Ambient Characteristics: Flow of the game is steady without dramatic playoff tension; mid-week regular-season feel.  Commentary is descriptive and relaxed — ideal for a sleep podcast.

    1h 19m
  7. JAN 20

    Brooklyn Dodgers @ Chicago Cubs — June 4, 1957 Pt1

    Welcome to the first episode of 2026, let's kick things off with a fairly chill game from Ebbets field featuring a young Vin Scully from 1957. Game: Brooklyn Dodgers vs. Chicago CubsDate: June 4, 1957Location: Ebbets Field, BrooklynBroadcast: Original Dodgers radio network (WOKO), Vin Scully opened the game’s calls, then Jerry Doggett with help from Al Helfer; Tex Rickards on PA. Final Score:Dodgers 7, Cubs 5 Pitching: Winning Pitcher: Sandy Koufax (Dodgers) — worked multiple innings and earned the win. Save: Clem Labine (Dodgers).  Game Flow & Scoring Highlights: 1st Inning: The Dodgers struck early when Roy Campanella hit a two-run double off the scoreboard, giving Brooklyn a quick 3–0 lead.  3rd Inning: Duke Snider belted a solo home run to extend the lead.  5th Inning: Gil Hodges added another home run for the Dodgers.  6th Inning: Cubs’ Randy “Hoot” Speake hit a home run to get Chicago on the board.  8th Inning: Ernie Banks contributed with a home run, keeping the Cubs competitive late.  Noteworthy Moments / Storylines (Ambient Focus): Joe Pignatano made his major league debut during this game after Campanella was hit by a pitch in the 3rd inning — something the broadcasters discuss (good for ambience and human detail).  Vin Scully’s voice opens the broadcast, calling the first three innings and portions of the middle innings, providing calm, descriptive narration before turning over to Doggett later.  Crowd, vendors, and PA announcements from Tex Rickards are audible throughout — adding to the period ambience your listeners appreciate.  Line Score: Chicago Cubs: 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 — 5 runs, 6 hits, 1 error Brooklyn Dodgers: 3 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 x — 7 runs, 7 hits, 0 errors Ambient Characteristics: Flow of the game is steady without dramatic playoff tension; mid-week regular-season feel.  Commentary is descriptive and relaxed — ideal for a sleep podcast.

    1h 42m

Ratings & Reviews

4.1
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

A semi-regular show bringing you original Major League Baseball broadcasts. Settle in with the crackle of vintage ambience and the voices of classic commentators from baseball’s past. Perfect for drifting off to the rhythm of the game, with the occasional unforgettable classic sprinkled in. Suggestions are always welcome — let us know if there’s something you’d like to hear added.

You Might Also Like