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KMVP-FM (98.7 MHz) is a commercial radio station in Phoenix, Arizona, featuring a sports format branded as "98.7 FM Arizona's Sports Station". Local programming airs on weekdays from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturdays from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m., with ESPN Sports Radio heard nights and weekends.
Bickley has won multiple awards for sports writing from the Arizona Press Club. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] [ 14 ] The Arizona Press Club's comment on his 2013 award: Bickley’s London Olympics columns were superbly crafted, painstakingly researched, wonderfully insightful — and stunningly far-ranging, with great depth and breadth as he presented multiple ...
Taurasi spoke about Clark again Friday during an appearance on Arizona Sports 98.7, noting that her previous comments were taken out of context and endorsing the idea Clark's game will translate:
Central Arizona Vaqueros: Central Arizona College: Coolidge: Arizona CC: Chandler-Gilbert Coyotes: Chandler-Gilbert Community College: Chandler: Arizona CC: Cochise Apaches: Cochise College: Douglas: Arizona CC: Eastern Arizona Gila Monsters: Eastern Arizona College: Thatcher: Arizona CC: Estrella Mountain Mountain Lions: Estrella Mountain ...
Later in the first half, Arizona guard Jaden Bradley was given a technical after staring down the ASU bench. Bradley had made a layup that tied the game at 23-all with four minutes remaining in ...
Rich Marotta is an American sports personality in Reno, Nevada. After spending nearly 30 years in Los Angeles, Rich worked the final five years of his radio career on LA-based KFI AM 640, broadcasting from his Nevada home. In February 2011, he was inducted into the Southern California Sportscasters Hall of Fame.
Miller's broadcast partners have included Dan Avey, Rich Marotta, Pete Weber, the current radio voice of the Nashville Predators, current Kings radio voice Nick Nickson and former Kings right wing Jim Fox. [8] He called games on both television and radio until 1990, when the Kings stopped simulcasting and Miller went exclusively to television.
Marotta was born in New York City and taught himself to play drums at the age of nineteen. [2] He was in a band called The Riverboat Soul Band; it released an album called Mess-up in 1968. Marotta was the drummer for his own group in the early 1970s, the short-lived Brethren. [ 3 ]