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It flipped to a sports talk station as "AM 1430 The Buzz". Originally it was a Fox Sports Radio affiliate. It carries live games from the Oklahoma Sooners, Tulsa Drillers and the Dallas Cowboys. In Tulsa, co-owned AM 1430 and AM 1300 had combined to form the Buzz Sports Network. In 2021, KFAQ switched to a sports format, as KTSB "The Blitz".
Tulsa is 1-6 in the AAC and 3-8 overall after Saturday’s 63-30 drubbing. Only FAU at 0-7 has a worse record in conference play this season. Tulsa has allowed over 40 points six times so far this ...
The deal closed on August 22, 2019, thus placing Fox Sports Oklahoma in common ownership with Sinclair stations KOKH-TV/KOCB in the network's homebase of Oklahoma City, and KTUL in Tulsa. [4] It was subsequently renamed Bally Sports Oklahoma on March 31, 2021. [5] On March 14, 2023, Diamond Sports filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy. [6]
KTBZ-FM (94.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Houston, Texas.Owned by iHeartMedia, the station serves Greater Houston.KTBZ-FM's studios are located in Uptown Houston, while the station's transmitter is located near Missouri City, Texas; KTBZ-FM has an effective radiated power of 100,000 watts.
Missouri State guard Zaxton King puts up a shot defended by Tulsa forward Justin Amadi, Saturday, Nov. 16, 2024, at Great Southern Bank Arena in Springfield. 'Unselfish' play continues for ...
KTBT's format history includes Freeform Rock radio in the early 1970s as KTBA, Country as KGOW in the late 1970s, and Adult Contemporary as "Sunny 92", KSNE. It switched formats to Top 40 as KELI-FM in December 1983, which also simulcasted with its AM counterpart KELI (1430 AM, now Sports KTBZ (AM)) as "14K & 92K", and became KQZZ in August 1985. [3]
In February 1999, the station premiered The Weekend Show, a Saturday evening local entertainment news program hosted by Jonathan Dylen that lasted only seven months due to low ratings and frequent NBC Sports event run-ins, while longtime documentary producer Jack Frank – who produced the Tulsa History Series documentaries for OETA and later ...
Donald W. Reynolds Center is an 8,355-seat multi-purpose arena in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Designed by HOK Sport (now known as Populous Co.), the arena opened in 1998 and is named for Donald W. Reynolds. Located on the University of Tulsa campus, it is home to the Golden Hurricane basketball and volleyball teams.