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In addition to its affiliates, Houston Astros Radio Network content can be listened to on satellite radio via Sirius XM Radio and online using both MLB.tv and Sirius XM Internet Radio. Sports commentators for the network are Robert Ford and Steve Sparks in English and Francisco Romero and Alex Treviño in Spanish. Astros games returned to KTRH ...
Tolson produced advance publicity for the broadcast. [10] For the event, wires were run from the Kyle Field press box to the station in the Electrical Engineering building located a half-mile (800 meters) or so away. For reception, other wires were run to the home of a radio amateur who lived near the playing field.
When Eschenfelder was in elementary school, his father worked as a statistician and spotter for the Houston Oilers, giving him access to the radio press box at the Astrodome. [4] At the age of 15, he began helping his dad keep statistics for the Houston Astros and Houston Oilers. [5] Eschenfelder graduated from Dulles High School in Sugar Land ...
KBME (790 kHz) is a sports-talk AM radio station in the Houston, Texas metropolitan area. It is currently owned by iHeartMedia. The station airs local sports-talk and carries nationally syndicated Fox Sports Radio programming. KBME is also the flagship radio station for the Houston Rockets, Houston Astros and Texas Longhorns.
KSIX is the only station in the Houston Astros Radio Network to broadcast every season since the team came into the league as the Houston Colt .45s. In addition to the team broadcast rights, KSIX also carries the NFL on Westwood One Sports, the NCAA Basketball Tournament, and Westwood One coverage of college football and basketball.
Fox Sports Houston (2005–2012) Comcast Sportsnet Houston/Root Sports Southwest/AT&T Sportsnet Southwest (2013–2023) [1] Space City Home Network (2024-Present) Note: Fox Sports Houston was originally a sub-feed of Fox Sports Southwest from 2005 to 2008; however, the Houston feed became its own standalone channel as of January 2009.
The following is a list of current Major League Baseball broadcasters, as of the 2025 season, for each individual team.Some franchises have a regular color commentator while others, such as the Milwaukee Brewers, use two play-by-play announcers, with the primary often doing more innings than the secondary.
The game was broadcast on a taped delay by two local public-access television stations. [6] Trupiano also worked as on Westwood One's broadcasts of the NCAA Men's College World Series finals in 2007 and 2008. In August 2009, Trupiano returned to the air on a regular weekend sports call-in show on 98.5 The Sports Hub Radio (WBZ-FM) in Boston.