Greg Amsinger
Greg Amsinger (born May 24, 1979 in St. Louis, MO) is an American sportscaster and currently a studio host for MLB Network.
Personal life
Amsinger is from a family of seven including 5 brothers and a sister. Amsinger has two children with his wife. He currently lives in the metropolitan area of New York City.
Career
Prior to arriving at MLB Network in 2009, Amsinger had worked at CBS College Sports/CSTV and at WTHI-TV in Terre Haute, Indiana. A 2001 graduate of Lindenwood University (St. Charles, MO), Amsinger worked numerous part-time radio jobs while in school including a two-year stint as producer of the St. Louis Cardinals Baseball Radio Network at KMOX.[1] Other side jobs included play-by-play broadcaster at KSLQ radio and inaugural voice of the now defunct River City Renegades indoor professional football organization.[2]
CBS College Sports/CSTV
Before signing with MLB, Amsinger was the first and primary studio host for CBS College Sports Network (formerly CSTV). He hosted numerous shows like Crystal Ball, Inside College Football, The #1 College Sports Show, Generation Next and NCAA March Madness Highlights (the official highlight show of the NCAA men's basketball tournament).[1] He has done play-by-play for women's college basketball and paintball.
In 2006, he hosted the "SEC Preview Show" with Gary Danielson and Brian Jones.[3] In 2007, Amsinger co-hosted the "World Series of Video Games" with former MTV host Susie Castillo.[4] In 2008, Amsinger also hosted the Tour de France for CBS.[1]
MLB Network
Amsinger is currently a studio host at MLB Network, regularly appearing on MLB Tonight and in special event coverage including MLB's All-Star Game and postseason games. Amsinger also hosted MLB Productions' weekly show during the 2012 MLB regular season, Player Poll.
References
- 1 2 3 "On-Air Personalities: Greg Amsinger". MLB Network. Retrieved 2009-08-09.
- ↑ "Greg Amsinger". WTHI.com archived through ZoomInfo. Retrieved 2009-08-09.
- ↑ "CBS Sports, CSTV huddle up with '06 SEC preview show". CBS Sports. Retrieved 2009-08-09.
- ↑ "CBS Signs World Series of Video Games for Second Year". GameDaily. 2007-05-30. Retrieved 2009-08-09.
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