Jaime Jarrin (born December 10, 1935) is an Ecuadorian-born American sportscaster known as the Spanish-language voice of the Los Angeles Dodgers. He began broadcasting for the Dodgers in 1959 and was the 1998 recipient of the Ford C. Frick Award from the Baseball Hall of Fame. One of the most recognizable voices in Hispanic broadcasting, Jarrin, "the Spanish Voice of the Dodgers" is also heard on Spectrum SportsNet LA's SAP channel.Jamie Jarrin:Born in Cayambe, Ecuador, Jarrin began work as a broadcaster in his home country when he was just 16 years old. He went on to become the announcer for the National Congress of Ecuador. He came to the United States on June 24, 1955. At the time, he had never seen a baseball game.
When the Dodgers moved to Los Angeles in 1958, KWKW (1300 AM) was enlisted by team owner Walter O'Malley to be the team's Spanish-language flagship station; Jarrin was KWKW news and sports director, having joined the station as a news reporter in 1955.
Jamie JarrinFor the first six years, they did not travel with the team but would recreate the games on radio while listening to the English-language broadcast in a studio.For the 2015 season, Jarrin was paired for the first time in the booth with his son Jorge Jarrin. With the retirement of fellow Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully in 2016, Jarrin became the longest tenured active broadcaster in baseball on April 7, 2017.
Jamie Jarrin1962-1984
Jarrin never missed a game, calling close to 4,000 games over 22 seasons.On September 28, 2021 Jarrin announced he would retire after the 2022 season. At 64 total seasons, all with the Dodgers, he ends his career as the third-longest-tenured individual with one team (behind Scully, 67 years, and Tommy Lasorda, 69 years, both also entirely with the Dodgers).