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ESPN 1000 Looks To Get Stronger With The Chicago Bears

“There’s credibility with ESPN, there’s credibility with the Sox, there’s credibility with the Bears. I think we were already strong. Now we’re just even stronger.”

Derek Futterman

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For the last 22 seasons, radio broadcasts of the NFL’s Chicago Bears have aired on Audacy-owned WBBM Newsradio 780 AM/105.9 FM. Now, its flagship station and live game broadcasts are set to move to ESPN 1000, owned and operated by Good Karma Brands, beginning at the start of next season in a multiyear agreement.

“We were incredibly impressed with the enthusiasm shown by the leadership team at Good Karma Brands,” Chicago Bears President and CEO Ted Phillips said in a statement included in the team’s press release. “Their plan for presenting Bears football on the radio is first class and we know that ESPN 1000 will be an excellent home for our games and an axis for Bears talk year-round. We look forward to working with the station beginning in 2023.”

There had been much speculation regarding the broadcast rights for the team with reports in June indicating three stations were involved in the bidding, according to Daily Herald media columnist Robert Feder.

In the end, ESPN 1000 Chicago has earned the distinction of adding an NFL team to its slate of programming and live game broadcasts, which also includes all games for Major League Baseball’s Chicago White Sox. In a span of nearly three years, the brand secured its second professional media rights agreement, and the first under new market manager Keith Williams.

“I think it all started with a conversation back in March where we were just asking questions about their needs, their goals and their ideas,” Williams told Barrett Sports Media. “Over the next few months, [it was] just conversations, developing relationships and understanding what would make the most sense for us and for them to form a partnership.”

Although ESPN 1000 was acquired by Good Karma Brands as part of a larger transaction earlier this year, the station has been operated by the company since October 2019. As a competitor to 670 The Score, ESPN 1000 continuously seeks to distinguish itself from others in the marketplace, or as Williams puts it: “Much like our company always does – when others zig, we zag.”

While they are unable to disclose specific changes that will take place under the agreement since it takes into effect at the start of next season, management at ESPN 1000 Chicago knows the Bears are central to covering sports in “The Windy City.”

“The Bears are the biggest team in town,” said ESPN 1000 Director of Content Danny Zederman. “Even though we’re not the home of the Bears currently, we’re still talking Bears from the minute we [go] on the air… to the minute we go off the air; however, we’re not going to treat the Bears as just 17 games. It’s a 365-day a year product.”

As part of the new media rights agreement, ESPN 1000 Chicago figures to gain more access to players, coaches and other team personnel. Additionally, it will air pregame and postgame programming, along with an additional Bears show once per week, according to Zederman, to maintain its coverage of the team which he says is “the best in the business.”

Just how the addition of the team will impact its ratings is yet to be seen – but it will now have the radio rights to two professional teams just as Audacy-owned 670 The Score does with the National Basketball Association’s Chicago Bulls and Major League Baseball’s Chicago Cubs.

“We’re not worried about that,” Williams said of the effect the deal may have on ratings. “We’re worried about putting the best product out to our fans that we have. If we can satisfy our fans and get results for our advertising partners, that’s what Good Karma Brands is all about.”

As the implementation of digital platforms and creating content tailored towards listeners proliferates in emphasis across the industry, ESPN 1000 Chicago will seek to remain at the forefront of innovation. Moreover, it will continue to produce and distribute content to consumers to ensure the brand is able to satisfy the overall fandom and aspiration that exists for entertaining and compelling coverage.

“As the radio industry pivots, we are going to pivot and grow with it,” Zederman expressed. “Any way we can reach the fans and provide them with something that they want to consume, we’re going to be there and doing it.”

For companies or brands looking to advertise, game broadcasts give them the ability to reach specific demographics within somewhat of a captive audience fixated on the gridiron. Since coverage of both the White Sox and the Bears will be year round on ESPN 1000 Chicago starting in the 2023 NFL season, advertising partners will have the ability to disseminate their messages to listeners and the potential to reach new sectors of the marketplace.

“In today’s time-shifted world of podcasts and recorded television programs, where ears and eyeballs are is in live sports,” Williams said. “Our belief is that the fans will be there; they’ll be listening and what better way to get your brand and your product out there from a marketing standpoint for some of our advertising partners to do it inside and around the game.”

Since its loss of the Chicago Bulls in 2016, ESPN 1000 did not have professional broadcast rights, although it was airing games for both Notre Dame football and University of Illinois Flames men’s basketball.

Nonetheless, one could argue the brand was losing potential streams of both revenue and listenership, thus weakening its position in the marketplace. Yet it has remained in steady competition with competing brands both inside and outside of radio, and now continues to strengthen its standing as the broadcast home of professional baseball and football teams.

“E-S-P-N are four of the most powerful letters in sports,” Zederman said, “and in the city of Chicago, there’s not a more powerful team than the Chicago Bears. I think that marriage speaks for itself.”

“The brand’s already strong,” added Williams. “We are ESPN 1000. Adding the Bears in addition to having the White Sox just continues to elevate everything. There’s credibility with ESPN, there’s credibility with the Sox, there’s credibility with the Bears. I think we were already strong. Now we’re just even stronger.”

There exists a distinct possibility that come opening week next season, the Chicago White Sox, led by new manager Pedro Grifol and young stars Luis Robert and Eloy Jiménez, could find themselves in contention for a playoff berth with the hopes of it culminating into a deep postseason run.

With that possibility comes the chance that the White Sox may be playing in a postseason game while the Bears are on the field, creating a quandary for ESPN 1000 Chicago; however, a plan is already in place if that situation were to arise.

“If the White Sox are in the playoffs, they will be on ESPN 1000,” Williams said, “and the Chicago Bears will be on a conflict station that we will determine in the future.”

As the new flagship station for the Chicago Bears starting next season, ESPN 1000 Chicago and the team will work to collaborate and maintain a mutually-beneficial, professional relationship with the goal of generating success.

Although that term is implicative of a connotative definition up for interpretation by those in different industries, it is quite bilateral in sports media from the perspectives of content and revenue, two properties which ostensibly garner a dependency on one another.

“If our advertising partners are increasing their business, it means we have a lot of fans that are listening to their message,” Williams said. “If the fanbase is there and they’re supporting our advertising partners, then that is success to us. I guess the flip side of that too is just… are the Bears happy with the broadcast and the coverage that we’re providing because they are partners with us in this venture.”

The city of Chicago has not had sports radio on the FM dial over the last several years – the HD2 partnership between Good Karma Brands and Hubbard Radio notwithstanding – yet it is still able to attract listeners on AM and various digital platforms.

As radio continues to utilize innovations in technology and adapt within the crowded sports media landscape, ESPN 1000 Chicago management believes that consumers know where to go to receive the best content.

“It doesn’t matter where you are on the dial,” Williams said. “I think if you’re putting out enough good content, people will find a way to get to you.”

With the addition of the Bears to its airwaves, along with the existing partnership with the White Sox and vast array of talk shows, ESPN 1000 Chicago looks to be a leader in the evolution of sports media. In so doing, it intends to utilize new technologies and methods in reaching both its dedicated listeners and those who occasionally tune in to the station or consume its content on digitally-based platforms.

“The more we can continue to push our team and just sports radio in general to educate, to inform, but most importantly [to] entertain, is going to grow fanbases and bring people to the format,” Williams said. “Obviously whether that’s live; whether that’s time-shifted with podcasts or videocasts or whatever ends up happening here in the future, we have to be fun; we have to do it in a fun way, present it with personality and grow from there.”

Since sports fans are easily able to find out the latest scores, statistics and news about their favorite teams or players through the internet, the compelling draw of sports radio is in its personalities. Even so, people can tune in to radio shows on-demand, diminishing the impact live programming has on the industry.

Yet with sporting events, fans want to be tapped in regarding the latest action and express their fandom through social media or mediated forms of communication; therefore, they opt to listen live and remain on the station during advertising. Part of the reason football fans enjoy listening to games on radio as well is because it is the medium on which local broadcasters are heard since the commentators in the television booths broadcast games nationally, and thus are subject to change by the week.

“The only thing you don’t consume on-demand are live games,” Zederman said. “You want to see the action when it’s happening; you want to hear the action when it’s happening. If you’re a Twitter person, you want to react with the fans on Twitter as the action’s happening. Having live games, be it the White Sox or the Bears, is a game-changer for us because people come to hear live sports; that’s what it’s all about.”

“We’re aggressive to grow our fanbase; we’re aggressive to get live sports on the air,” added Williams. “Combining that with ESPN will lift everyone’s brand.”

ESPN 1000 Chicago will officially become the flagship radio station for the Chicago Bears at the start of the new NFL league year in March 2023. The remainder of Bears games this season will be broadcast on WBBM Newsradio 780 AM/105.9 FM, along with TUDN Deportes Radio 1200 AM and Latino Mix 93.5 FM.

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Sports Radio News

Jason Puckett Launches PuckSports.com

“I am super motivated right now and I can’t wait. I have probably been busier now than I’ve ever been in the last 48 hours.”

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Logo for PuckSports.com

Jason Puckett, who decided to walk away from a contract offer from iHeartMedia’s KJR in Seattle after finding out his partner Jim Moore had been laid off, has launched a new venture – PuckSports.com. ‘Puck’ has a baseball opening day show posted on the Puck Sports YouTube page and also posted an introductory message about his new venture and what led to creating it.

“I wanted to talk to you guys, the listeners out there, the viewers out there, sorry for all of this,” an emotional Puckett said. “Sorry for what has happened and what has taken place. Thank you for all of the comments and the well-wishes and what you have said about myself and Jim.

“It has been a whirlwind of a last few days, for sure and I do want to say that I feel for the people that we used to work with. “I know it’s not easy to go through that, I have been on that side of it many, many times in this industry when someone is let go and you have to sit there and answer all the questions about them and for them…It’s unfortunate and it shouldn’t be that way, but the reality of this business is it’s like that.”

Puckett then told his fans that PuckSports.com and YouTube are where you will be finding his content along with Moore. “I am going to take what I have learned over the years and apply it to a new age of media,” he said and noted this was a direction he had been thinking about for a while.

As for what took place that led to his decision to not sign his contract and talk away, he said, “I just want to take you briefly back to last week. I don’t want to get too much in the weeds, I’m not here to lay any blame or point any fingers at anybody…there’s too many good people that I have worked with that I don’t want to drag into this. It was a process that was at times handled fine, handled perfectly, and at other times it got to a point where it just went on too long. But that’s corporate media and that’s what happens.”

Continuing on Puckett said, “…I had been without a contract since about January…when I was away from the station that was something that we and the station agreed upon…to see if we could get something done and we were all hopeful that we would…I was only supposed to be gone a couple of days…unfortunately as these things sometimes happen, it just went a little bit longer…We received the deal and it was what we wanted, but unfortunately with that news a few hours later came the news from corporate that Jim had lost his job. Obviously there was a mix of emotions with that from me.

“I wrestled with that and the decision and what I would do. It was hard for me to move forward…I couldn’t fight the perception more than anything that I had received a new deal while at the same time, my partner and good friend, guy I love to death, who I grew up reading…it was a hard reality…The loyalty I have, I couldn’t live with myself even though Jim knew what the truth was.”

Puckett said he was aware Moore was planning to step away from the radio show at the end of the year and was looking forward to the nine months they would have left to work with one another. Then, when iHeartMedia made the decision to make Moore a casualty of their latest round of layoffs, Puckett knew he needed to revisit the idea of starting his own venture.

He said, “It has kind of changed my timeline as far as what I wanted to do and where I felt I was at…I am super motivated right now and I can’t wait. I have probably been busier now than I’ve ever been in the last 48 hours.”

Puckett said several of the show’s regular guests would stay with the show and he thanked several sponsors who he said would remain supporters of the show with the new venture. ‘Puck’ noted that starting next week, “…We get underway in full force…I’m going to continue to try and make people laugh and entertain you and talk about sports…and all of the other things you have become accustomed to with this show.”

As he started to wrap up, Puckett said, “I’m jumping into the deep end of the pool and I am going to see if I can swim or sink.”

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Sports Radio News

Kirk Minihane: WEEI is “Going to be Andy Gresh and Rich Shertenlieb in Afternoons”

“Maybe the two most sensitive c***s in the history of radio. That’s a show we are going to ruin.”

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Photos of Kirk Minihane and Rich Shertenlieb

As the speculation continues on where Boston sports talker Rich Shertenlieb will end up, one former WEEI host said he has the scoop on what is going to happen. Kirk Minihane, now with Barstool Sports, said, “What I heard was, initially, was they were moving Rich Keefe from nights to middays, moving Adam Jones from afternoons to middays and keeping Fauria there, and moving Andy Gresh to afternoons…But now it appears Rich Shertenlieb is going to do afternoons with Andy Gresh.”

On Wednesday, Boston Globe sports and sports media columnist Chad Finn put out a post on X, saying, “Didn’t think Rich Shertenlieb would end up at WEEI after leaving Sports Hub. I do now, most likely in afternoon drive. Audacy management has been telling people to expect changes.”

Minihane continued commenting on the matter, saying, “It’s going to be Andy Gresh and Rich Shertenlieb in the afternoons, which is going to be so awful. Maybe the two most sensitive c***s in the history of radio. That’s a show we are going to ruin…we haven’t done that in a while, we are going to take that show down…Once that show starts, we are just going to blitz them with phone calls because Gresh can’t handle that.

“What they don’t understand, because they are so dumb, is that…Rich Shertenlieb has no fan base…no fan of [Toucher and Hardy] in the morning is going to be like ‘I’m not going to listen to Felger in the afternoons, I’ll now listen to Andy Gresh and Rich Shertenlieb.’ It’s going to be dreadful.”

Recapping what he has heard the rest of the WEEI lineup will be, Minihane said, “…And then in middays you have Adam Jones, failed afternoons. Rich Keefe who has now failed middays, drivetime, nights and is now going to fail again in middays… and Christian Fauria who has never drawn a rating in his life.”

WEEI has not commented on any of the speculation. BSM will have more as the story unfolds.

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Former 670 The Score Host Tommy Williams Has Died

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Photo of Tommy Williams
Courtesy: Lakeshore Public Media

Tommy Williams, who was heard for a decade on 670 The Score, died on Wednesday at the age of 66.

Williams began his broadcasting career in his hometown of Gary, Indiana in 1982 at WLTH before moving on to The Score. In 2003, Williams became the PA Announcer for the Gary Southshore RailCats of the American Association where he had his signature call to get the attention of the fans, “People, People, People.”

A story in The Times of Northwest Indiana said, “The longtime RailCats public address announcer and Lakeshore Public Media sports journalist was known for broadcasting countless games, interviewing countless athletes and covering Region sports at all levels. The Gary native and co-host of “Prep Sports Report,” “Prep Football Report,” and “Lakeshore PBS Scoreboard” often signed off shows saying, “Gary, Indiana, you know I love you.”

“The cadence he had in his voice echoed across the Region in a way we may never see again. He was widely known and widely loved,” Tom Maloney, vice president of radio operations at Lakeshore Public Media told the paper.

“He’d want to be remembered as the voice of Lakeshore sports,” his Regionally Speaking co-host and producer Dee Dotson told The Times. “Most people will remember him for covering prep sports all the way up to semi-pros. He’ll be remembered for treating each of his subjects like they were world champions. His depth of knowledge of sports at all levels is commendable. He was a walking encyclopedia of stats.” 

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