Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
All Dallas Stars games are broadcast on radio on KTCK and KTCK-FM (1310 AM and 96.7 FM) under a five-year deal announced in January 2009. [1] KTCK replaced WBAP 820 AM, which had broadcast games since the beginning of the 1994 season after KLIF has broadcast the first season in Dallas in 1993.
Weekdays feature local Dallas-based sports shows, while Fox Sports Radio is heard late nights and weekends. KTCK-AM-FM are the flagship stations for the Dallas Stars Radio Network. KTCK-FM has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 90,000 watts. The transmitter is on Farm to Market Road in Rosston, Texas, about 35 miles northwest of Dallas. [2]
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.
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 ...
The Detroit Red Wings visit the Dallas Stars tonight at 8 p.m. Monday, ... Where: American Airlines Center in Dallas. TV: Bally Sports Detroit. Radio: WXYT-FM (97.1; Red Wings radio affiliates).
The Dallas Stars finally get a little bit of a breather after avoiding another Game 7 on the way to their second Western Conference final in a row. The last one stretched past midnight into early ...
All Dallas Stars games are broadcast on radio on KTCK under a five-year deal announced in January 2009. [73] KTCK replaced WBAP, which had broadcast games since the beginning of the 1994 season after KLIF has broadcast the first season in Dallas in 1993.
The station's morning show featured Norm Hitzges on sports. Up until then, sports talk had primarily aired in afternoons and evenings in most U.S. cities. That lineup made the station one of the most respected Dallas-Fort Worth talk radio stations. [9] Community leaders and politicians listened regularly, according to a Dallas magazine report.