Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
105.3 HD-3 aired an all-"Dallas Cowboys Radio" format, which carried archived football games and talk shows about the Cowboys, with the overnight hours occupied by CBS Sports Radio. [16] As of 2023, "Dallas Cowboys Radio" has ceased operations. However, Infinity Sports Network (the former CBS Sports Radio) continues to air full-time on KRLD-FM HD3.
KTCK (1310 kHz; "SportsRadio 1310 The Ticket") is a commercial sports AM radio station licensed to Dallas, Texas, which serves the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex (DFW). Its daytime power is 25,000 watts, which is reduced to 5,000 watts at night.
The Dallas Cowboys Radio Network is an American radio network broadcasting all Dallas Cowboys football games to stations across all of Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, ...
Longtime Dallas-Fort Worth sports broadcaster and radio host Norm Hitzges announced Thursday that he will retire on June 23, according to KTCK The Ticket, where he hosts a show from 10 a.m. to ...
KTCK-FM (96.7 MHz, "The Ticket") is a commercial radio station licensed to Flower Mound, Texas, and serving the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex. It simulcasts a sports radio format, along with sister station KTCK (1310 AM). KTCK-AM-FM are owned by Cumulus Media with studios on East Lamar Boulevard in Arlington.
As of 2018, the Dallas Cowboys' flagship radio station is KRLD-FM owned by Entercom. Brad Sham is the team's longtime play-by-play voice. Working alongside him is former Cowboy quarterback Babe Laufenberg. The Cowboys, who retain rights to all announcers, chose not to renew Laufenberg's contract in 2006 and brought in former safety Charlie ...
Those two are just the tip of a deep iceberg of talent Dallas must deal with when the District 2 champion Mountaineers (14-0) play District 3 and defending state champion Bishop McDevitt (13-0) in ...
Canty was selected by the Dallas Cowboys in the fourth round of the 2005 NFL draft. He also played for the New York Giants, winning Super Bowl XLVI with them over the New England Patriots in 2011, and the Baltimore Ravens. After his playing career, he became a sports radio host.