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College football games have been broadcast since at least 1919, including the Wesleyan at New York University contest on November 18 of that year, carried by Lee de Forest's experimental station, 2XG in New York City. [2] The first game broadcast nationwide happened the three years later, with the 1922 Princeton vs. Chicago football game. [3]
This is a list of active NFL broadcasters, including those for each individual team as well as those that have national rights. Unlike the other three major professional sports leagues in the U.S. (Major League Baseball, the NBA and the NHL), all regular-season and post-season games are shown on American television on one of the national networks.
On March 6, 1985, NBC Radio and the National Football League entered into a two-year agreement [2] granting NBC the radio rights to a 37-game package in each of the 1985–1986 seasons. The package included 27 regular season games and 10 postseason games.
The 49ers' flagship radio stations are Cumulus Media's KSAN 107.7 FM ("The Bone") in San Jose, while KNBR/FM 680 AM/104.5 FM, and KTCT 1050 AM serve as the San Francisco/Oakland flagships. KSAN airs all 49ers games on FM. On AM, they are simulcasted on KTCT when the San Francisco Giants are playing, and on KNBR when the Giants are not playing.
From the team’s arrival in Kansas City in 1963 until 1989, KCMO (then at 810 AM) served as the Chiefs’ flagship. From 1989 until the end of the 2019 season, Cumulus Media's KCFX (101.1), a.k.a. "101 The Fox", broadcast all Chiefs games on FM radio under the moniker of The Chiefs Fox Football Radio Network, one of the earliest deals where an FM station served as the flagship station of a ...
LAWRENCE — Kansas State football is angling for a return trip to the Big 12 championship game and Kansas will try to build on its first winning season since 2008 when the two teams meet Saturday ...
Sports USA Media is the largest independent sports broadcasting radio network in the United States, specializing in live broadcasts of American football, specifically of the NCAA football Division I-A and National Football League (NFL). In 2018, more than 450 radio stations across the United States carried NFL and NCAA football games from ...
ABC agreed to cover two games per week during regular season. For the Saturday night package in 1983, Shelby Whitefield, Ron Menchine and Steve Grad for the commentators. Other announcers for ABC Radio's USFL coverage included: Bob Buck (play-by-play) Dick Butkus [14] (color commentary) Don Chevrier (play-by-play, beginning in 1984)