Felo Ramirez, a Spanish-language announcer who, beginning in Cuba in 1945, became one of the pre-eminent radio voices of Major League Baseball throughout Latin America for more than 72 years, died on Monday in Miami. He was 94.

His death was announced by the Miami Marlins, whose games he broadcast on radio for the last 24 years. He had been working until April, when he fell while leaving the team bus in Philadelphia. His family said he died from complications of the fall.

Tony Perez, the Cincinnati Reds’ Hall of Fame first baseman, recalled listening to Mr. Ramirez when he was growing up in Ciego de Ávila, Cuba.

“He described players like he knew them since they were born,” Perez said in a telephone interview. “I’d listen with my father, and the way Felo called the game, it was like you were there. It was a different feeling when you listened to someone else.”