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The St. Louis Cardinals Radio Network is a United States radio network that broadcasts St. Louis Cardinals baseball games. The network consists of 146 stations 1 (including the flagship station) (52 AM, 58 FM) and six FM translators in nine states (four in the Midwest and five in the South). Its flagship station is KMOX in St. Louis.
Radio: KMOX AM 1120 (2011–present) Cable TV: ... www.stlradio.com - The Cardinals have a large embedded midwestern following due to radio broadcasting of games ...
KMOX (1120 AM) is a commercial radio station in St. Louis, Missouri.Owned by Audacy, Inc., it is a 50,000 watt Class A clear-channel station with a non-directional signal.The KMOX studios and offices are on Olive Street at Tucker Boulevard in the Park Pacific Building in St. Louis. [2]
Buck's father, Jack, and Caray's grandfather, Harry — legendary announcers in their own right — called Cardinals games on KMOX Radio from 1954-59 and 1961-69 while the franchise won three ...
In 2006, the Blues moved to competitor KMOX 1120 AM. After five years (2006–10), KTRS sold the rights to St. Louis Cardinals baseball games to KMOX starting in 2011. [9] The Cardinals nonetheless retained their ownership stake in KTRS and still airs the games of its owned-and-operated farm club, the Memphis Redbirds.
His early sportscasting career included work for the minor league affiliates of the St. Louis Cardinals. In 1954, he was promoted to radio play-by-play of Cardinal games on KXOK radio; the team's radio broadcasts would move in 1955 to KMOX. Buck maintained this position for nearly all of the next 47 years.
KZYM also features news from SRN (Salem Radio Network) at the top and bottom of the hour. Salem provides national news with a Christian view. KZYM broadcasts St. Louis Cardinals and Missouri Southern State University football, men's and women's basketball games. KZYM also airs Joplin High football and basketball.
Hyland emphasized and leveraged KMOX's relationship with the St. Louis Cardinals; he also made the decision in 1960 to eliminate the station's afternoon music programming in favor of talk radio, a critical change which led to the station's subsequent dominance of the St. Louis radio market. He also introduced the first listener call-in programs ...