At the time, the Braves and Red Sox each broadcast only their home games and shared announcing teams and flagship stations. Because MLB schedules were then arranged so that the two Boston clubs were never home at the same time, there were no schedule conflicts. As such, Britt was the voice of two pennant-winning clubs, the 1946 Red Sox and the 1948 Braves. During the latter year, only the Red Sox' defeat at the hands of the Cleveland Indians in the 1948 American League tie-breaker game on October 4 kept Britt from being the play-by-play voice of both league champions.
At the close of the 1950 season, the teams' co-operative radio arrangement ended and each decided to air a full schedule of 154 games, home and away. Britt chose to stay with the Braves, and the Red Sox were left to look for their own lead announcer.
Britt did not accompany the Braves to Wisconsin. Instead, he relocated to Cleveland and joined the TV announcing crew of the Indians in 1954, working through 1957 with Ken Coleman, a native of the Boston area (and Gowdy's eventual successor, in 1966, as voice of the Red Sox). The highlight of Britt's Cleveland tenure was the Indians' 1954 American League pennant with their league-record 111–43 season (one game better than the 110–44 1927 Yankees). But the Indians were upset in four straight games by the New York Giants in the ensuing 1954 World Series.
Britt returned to Boston in the late 1950s as a newscaster and sportscaster for the city's ABC affiliate, then WHDH-TV, Channel 5. The station also was the flagship of the Red Sox' television network, but Britt never regained his former role announcing for the team. Instead, he initiated a popular candlepin bowling show he would host until 1966, and also hosted Dateline: Boston (a nonsports predecessor to many of the modern-day magazine-style television programs) and an ABC-TV network series of hourlong 18-hole matches between two golfers called All-Star Golf featuring the best of their time including Ben Hogan, Sammy Snead, Lloyd Mangrum and Billy Casper.
In retirement he eventually returned to his native California, where he died, aged 70, in Monterey.[1]