Eireann Dolan – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:52:14 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Eireann Dolan – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Washington Nationals Broadcaster Charlie Slowes Brings WFUV Training to the World Series https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/charlie-slowes-brings-wfuv-training-to-the-world-series/ Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:52:14 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=127265 Photo: Getty Images/The Washington Post

Although the New York Yankees fell just short of making it to the World Series this year, those who tune in to the Washington Nationals’ radio broadcasts of the Series will hear a voice honed in the Bronx and at Fordham.

Charlie Slowes, FCRH ’83, is the play-by-play announcer for Nationals games on the FM radio station 106.7 The Fan in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.

With the Nationals currently up two games to none against the Houston Astros in the World Series, listeners may soon hear Slowes make some particularly enthusiastic calls. Tonight’s Game 3 will mark the team’s first World Series home game and the first World Series game in Washington, D.C., since 1933.

Slowes, who was born in the Bronx and grew up in Yonkers, got his start in radio at Fordham’s WFUV, which has produced many professional broadcasters over the years, from Vin Scully, FCRH ’49, who retired in 2016, to current announcers including Mike Breen, FCRH ’83; Michael Kay, FCRH ’82; and Ryan Ruocco, FCRH ’08. After previously doing play-by-play for the Tampa Bay Rays, Baltimore Orioles, and the New York Mets, as well as the NBA’s Washington Bullets (now known as the Wizards), Slowes has called Nationals games since 2005, the team’s inaugural season.

In a Washington Post article from 2005, Slowes recounted watching Mets games as a child in the late 1960s and becoming hooked not only on the game but also on the way that broadcasters could create a sense of drama.

That sense of drama can be heard in Slowes’ calls, including his description of the scene at Nationals Park when the team recorded the final out to sweep the St. Louis Cardinals in the National League Championship Series. Slowes encouraged fans to appreciate the historical significance of the moment: “Remember where you are, so you’ll remember were you were … when you heard the Nationals have won the National League championship!”

Slowes isn’t the only person in the Nationals’ orbit with a Fordham connection. Sean Doolittle, a relief pitcher who earned the save in Washington’s Game 1 victory, is married to Eireann Dolan, who enrolled in Fordham’s online master’s degree program in pastoral studies in 2017.

Game 3 of the World Series takes place at 8:07 p.m. tonight, and fans can hear Slowes’ game call on 106.7 The Fan’s online stream.

]]>
127265
For the Love of Baseball and Social Justice: Eireann Dolan and Washington Nationals Closer Sean Doolittle https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/80245/ Thu, 16 Nov 2017 14:29:35 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=80245 Above: Newlyweds Sean Doolittle and Eireann Dolan share a passion for social causes, like LGBTQ rights and quality health care for all military veterans. Photo by Jacob MurphyFor more than a few fans, baseball is a kind of religion. Lately, Eireann Dolan’s life seems to be the perfect marriage of her passion for the two. Dolan, who’s working on a master’s degree in pastoral studies at Fordham’s Graduate School of Religion and Religious Education, recently eloped with Sean Doolittle, closing pitcher for the Washington Nationals.

Dolan confesses to being “not athletic at all,” but she’s always been a fan of the game and is a self-described stats and sabermetrics geek. She grew up in Chicago going to White Sox games and watching her brothers play. Baseball is also all over her Twitter feed, where she reveals herself to be a droll and thoughtful observer of sports, politics, and culture.

A Multireligious Upbringing

Dolan was also powerfully influenced by religion. Her family alternated between attending Catholic Mass and a Unitarian church, where her mother was the religious education director. And one of her grandmothers is an ordained Episcopal minister.

“I remember my mom giving sermons at Unity Temple as a kid, and then, when we went to St. Pat’s, it was difficult to see that only men could do that,” Dolan said recently over coffee at a café near Nationals Park and the Washington, D.C., home she shares with her husband and two dogs. “You almost get vertigo watching it.”

Fueled by a desire to understand why women don’t have an equal role in the church, Dolan pursued theology and religious studies in college, spending three years at L’Institut Catholique de Paris (her father was working in Amsterdam at the time, and she already spoke French) before graduating from the University of San Diego.

A Shared Sense of Humor

In 2015, Dolan took a job covering the Oakland A’s for Comcast SportsNet. A multitasker, she also worked as a speech writer (which she does full time now) and tried her hand at comedy writing.

A friendship with pitcher Brandon McCarthy, then a starter for the A’s and a fledgling comedy writer himself, led to an introduction that changed Dolan’s life. McCarthy thought she and his teammate Doolittle might hit it off. Five years and one Star Wars-themed marriage proposal later, the pair made it official on October 2.

That capped a busy stretch for the couple. Doolittle was traded from the A’s to the Nats in mid-July, reporting to the team about 12 hours later.

“It was an adventure, and you learn what you’re capable of,” Dolan said, laughing. She admitted guiltily to asking for one academic extension, directing her professor to her Twitter feed if he didn’t believe the reason.

A Passion for Social Causes

About that Twitter account. Dolan and Doolittle have a teasing, playful relationship online, with Dolan recording a video tossing out all of Doolittle’s stuff (including his Love Actually DVD) after he lost the “Face of MLB” contest to Buster Posey, or posting his awkward high school photos.

But they also use the platform to promote causes they believe in, including LGBTQ rights, aid to Syrian refugees, support for military veterans, and mental health issues. Those values drew the pair together, according to Doolittle.

“I would say that our general mission in life is firmly rooted in the Beatitudes and the imperative of Matthew 25:40,” he said of his and his wife’s commitment to social justice. “We are called to have an option for the marginalized, the oppressed, the ‘least among us.’”

In that vein, Dolan hopes ultimately to engage in one-on-one prison ministry with inmates and parolees.

She applied to Fordham’s online master’s degree program in pastoral studies late last year and started taking courses last spring, calling the program “very portable with my life.” She’s planning to increase her course load from one to two courses per session next year, and she’ll take an intensive on-campus session next summer.

In the meantime, she’s also planning a wedding.

“My big, Irish-Catholic family felt left out,” Dolan said of their elopement. So there will be a January ceremony in Chicago. She added, with a wink, that she’s counting on the cold weather to keep the guest list down. “It’s Darwinism as a wedding!”

—Julie Bourbon

]]>
80245