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Hockey world heartbroken by the loss a legendary voice who defined early years in the NHL, John Sterling

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Skyler Walker
May 4, 2026  (11:34)
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Photo credit: Facebook

John Sterling’s death hit the Islanders hard Monday, and Peter DeBoer now coaches a franchise still tied to one of its first great voices.

The club confirmed the passing of Sterling in a statement that landed with real weight across New York hockey circles.

This wasn’t just another former broadcaster being remembered.

Sterling was part of the Islanders from the start, one of the original voices that helped frame the team for fans listening on the radio.

The line that still sticks is simple and loud: Islander goal.

That call carried through the 1970s and stayed attached to the franchise long after Sterling moved on.

The Islanders made that point clear in their statement.

They leaned into the memory of his voice and the way he painted games for listeners over decades.

Sterling worked as the team’s radio voice from 1975 through 1980.

That gave him a front-row seat to the early years of the franchise and locked him into its history.

A voice that outgrew one sport: Heartbreak from John Sterling

Before that Islanders run, Sterling had already broken in with the New York Raiders in the WHA.

He was building a career in the city before most fans knew how big it would get.

Baseball eventually became his other stage, and then his biggest one.

Sterling became the radio voice of the New York Yankees in 1989 and stayed there until 2024.

That matters here because it shows the scale of the loss.

The Islanders weren’t talking about a local footnote. They were mourning a broadcaster whose reach stretched across 2 major teams.

Sterling also collected 12 Sports Emmy Awards over his career.

That number says plenty, but it still doesn’t fully explain why so many fans felt this one in the gut on Monday.

Earlier in February, Sterling had shared on WFAN that he suffered a heart attack in January.

At the time, he sounded upbeat, which makes Monday’s announcement land even harder.

For the Islanders, this is about more than nostalgia. It’s a reminder that voices can shape a franchise just as much as the players on the ice, the bench decisions, or the names on the blue line.

Sterling left the booth years ago, but he never really left the Islanders. When a call becomes part of a team’s identity, it keeps living long after the mic goes quiet.