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Jason Ross Wants To Be Everywhere & Do Everything

“Generally I really love it in October and November. The Kings are going. I’m consumed with college football on the weekend and the prep that takes all week. Then a show and being the program director.”

Brian Noe

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Personal happiness is mostly tied to your mindset — whether you have a positive or negative outlook on the things you experience in life. In spite of having numerous responsibilities and a very hectic schedule, Jason Ross actually prefers his job to be challenging. It’s a good thing he views things favorably. Jason could become a crazy person if not.

His sports radio journey began at Sports 1140 KHTK back in 1994. Jason has remained in Sacramento ever since. Jason’s list of duties include talk show host, program director, pre/half/postgame host for Sacramento Kings basketball, and the radio voice of Sacramento State football since 1997. This definitely qualifies as challenging to say the least.

They say timing is everything. Whoever “they” happens to be has it right. Jason had to choose between two opportunites; he chose a fill-in shift for two weeks that turned into a 25-year career at the same station.

He shares great insight below in a very conversational tone. Jason also shares his thoughts about the role he covets most going forward. Enjoy.

Brian Noe: When did you figure out that you wanted to pursue sports radio as a career?

Jason Ross: It was pretty easy for me. I can pinpoint it exactly. I was a junior at UC Davis and I went to school to play sports and to possibly be a veterinarian. I was trying out for the basketball team. I made it all the way to the end and was one of the last cuts. That very weekend the men’s team was going to have their first game. One of my friends was working at the campus radio station and he said, “Hey, you know the team. You’ve been around the guys. I need someone to do color commentary with me. Would you like to sit in with me?

I thought, “Well I love sports. I’ve watched sports all my life. I want to stay involved in some way. Sure.” The second I did the first game, I knew that’s exactly what I wanted to do. Then I got an opportunity to do the women’s games. Everybody that was at the campus station at the time was a senior or moving on, or graduating and going to grad school.

That very next year I was a senior and I was the program director at the campus station. Then I got a chance to create my own show, do football, basketball, baseball, get commercials, sell, just all of it, everything all-encompassing. Right then and there I said, “Yeah, this is exactly what I want to do.”

Noe: You almost were a veterinarian?

Ross: (laughs) That was one of my goals. I wanted to play sports as long as I possibly could. I was actually on the baseball team my first year. I was a redshirt. It was a loose program that way where you could be a redshirt and be around. I really was just there for that, for the beginning of that first year. But then I was always playing basketball, basketball, basketball. That’s where in my third year; I tried out for that team.

I went to school thinking that would probably be my long-term goal. I think it was my sophomore summer in college; I worked at a veterinarian’s office. I liked it, but I kind of realized then that I don’t think that was the career path I wanted to go down. Shortly thereafter was when the opportunity to do some radio work happened and that’s when I fell in love with it.

Noe: What was the first station that you worked at?

Ross: I’m also unique in that regard. The second my college time ran up, I started putting out all of the flyers and feelers to see what can be next for me. I had an opportunity to go back home to Orange County and work at the Orange County Newschannel, which was a 24-hour news station at the time that was relatively new and have an internship. Or at Sports 1140, which was at the time Hot Talk 1140, in Sacramento as a part-time, fill-in board op for two weeks.

There was going to be a guy that was going to be on vacation for two weeks and the station needed a board op. I was really torn on which one to do, but I went for — as sad as it was — the money. It turned out the guy never came back. I got a job at the station and I’ve been there for 25 years. People move all over the place. I just stayed in one spot. Everybody’s got a different path, but that’s been mine.

Eventually that same summer, the station got the Sacramento Kings. We turned into a sports station. It was just incredible timing. My boss at the time said, “Hey, we’re going to need a locker room reporter. I said, “I’ll do it.” You just start saying you’ll do weekend shifts and work holidays and all of the things you have to do to move up. I’ve been at the same place longer than anyone at that station for 25 years.

Noe: The only reason you chose Sacramento was because the fill-in gig was paid?

Ross: Probably, and maybe being comfortable. I was still living in Davis. School had just ended. All of my friends were still here. I could have gone home. It seemed to make sense to at least try that to me. I had a girlfriend at the time. Friends, girlfriend, it was all still happening up here. Could I have gone home? Sure, but I took my chances on that and little did I know it would be just the greatest decision I could have made.

Noe: What do you remember most about those two weeks of fill-in work?

Ross: It was a nationally syndicated non-sports talk show. It was just learning the business, running the board, playing carts, cutting tape, just literally the old-school radio that’s not even a thing anymore. Just trying to figure that out. It just all seemed like it moved so fast — making my mistakes and figuring out the business. Not that you figure it all out certainly in two weeks, but just starting to dip your toe into it and figuring out what I didn’t know.

Noe: When you’re wearing so many hats — on-air guy, PD, doing the Kings stuff, play-by-play — what part of your job do you enjoy the most?

Ross: I would say my number one thing that I love more than anything is play-by-play. I just love the art of that. The preparation. No game is the same. The people you meet. You could have two terrible teams and you see the greatest individual performance or team performance that day. You could also see the worst thing. You see someone score seven touchdowns, someone score 60 points, someone go 0-for-25. The greatest dunk, the worst pass. I love that.

I just love all of those things about play-by-play and the art of calling it. Did I describe it perfectly there? What could I have done better? Then I try to take that same approach to the other elements too — creating a show, trying to do the best that I can for the station. I think overall my favorite thing by far is play-by-play.

Noe: Do you find yourself listening closer to play-by-play guys or sports radio hosts?

Ross: That’s a great question. Probably both because I think you can identify where someone is missing something, or what someone is good at based on your own experiences. For an example, in play-by-play — I know this has happened to me before — I take pride in knowing who everyone is out on the field and having as much prep on the court.

Football is the trickiest one. There are 11 offensive guys and 11 defensive guys. Maybe a ball is tipped and it’s a backup linebacker. In that moment you may not know who picked it off. Then you recover and you look at your chart and you find out who it is.

I can listen to a game especially on radio and hear someone that gets caught up in that same thing and describes a pass, “It’s picked off and they’re going the other way.” I say, “Oh, they don’t know who it is,” because I’ve been there. I know that they don’t know who it is and then they catch up and they go, “Oh, that was John Smith with the pick, his third of the season.” I say, “Okay, they got it. They recovered and handled it well.”

It’s the same idea on a talk show when someone asks a question, or they’re trying to go somewhere. I go, “Oh, they’re trapped. They’ve got a crutch.” Probably from what my own mistakes have been I can hear where people maybe get stuck in play-by-play or on talk shows.

Noe: What was your crutch word that was pointed out to you?

Ross: (laughs) I had a football game. Sacramento State was playing Cal State Northridge and they ran what would be like a run-and-gun offense. Their football program doesn’t even exist anymore, but they said, “Hey, I heard the game. You know how many times you said quick hitter?” I said, “Quick hitter?” Really?” They said, “You said it all the time.”

I went back and listened to the tape and it was disgusting. I literally said it for almost every pass. I couldn’t believe it. I wouldn’t have guessed I ever said it. I’d say, “Quick hitter over the middle. Quick hitter.” I mean it was disgusting. I said it way too much, but it was great that someone told me that. You need someone policing you out there, if it’s not yourself, because it’s hard sometimes to go back and listen to your work consistently.

That was constructive. It wasn’t meant to be mean. If someone can be honest with you like that, it’s really helpful. I think we can all get caught up in saying some of the same things. That’s the art of play-by-play too is describing something similar with different words and different sayings and being creative. That was frustrating, but a good lesson.

Noe: Play-by-play is so fluid and constantly moving forward based on how the game unfolds. Do you think that impacts you as a sports radio host where maybe you tend to move through topics more fluidly than other hosts?

Ross: I’m not sure because I only know this way of doing play-by-play and doing a talk show. I think the art of doing a talk show has been extremely helpful the other way around with play-by-play. I know a couple of years ago, the Kings had a game in Philadelphia. I was back in the studio doing the pre, half, and post — threw it out to Gary Gerould to basically start the coverage and there was condensation still on the hardwood from the ice underneath.

We had a delay, and then another delay. It was filling time, and now back in the studio. I’ve done talk shows so I know how to fill time, but that was a little unique because are we filling five minutes? Is this going to be 10? Is this going to be 30? The art of being able to talk and find different storylines and find things to talk about, but also being able to cut it off if you have to go right back out to the venue. It ended up that the game was postponed and made up on another day. It was a unique night. I felt that if I was at the game by myself doing play-by-play, I would have been able to fill too, but I was back at the studio and you just kind of have to adjust.

The practice of being in a talk show format where you might have a 12, 15, 20-minute segment, hopefully with someone else, but if you’re by yourself, you’ve got to be able to fill that airspace. It’s not always easy, but hopefully you’ve got enough reps that — alright you’ve got to go for 25 minutes straight and we’re in a crisis. Alright let’s go — and just figure out how to fill the space.

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Noe: When you mention how sports radio has changed over the years with smartphones and smart speakers and all these different choices that people have, what do you think is the most important aspect to keep in mind as a sports radio host as you structure your show?

Ross: I still think if it’s a topic that’s interesting to me, I hopefully then can relate that as something that’s interesting to someone else. If you’re digging for topics just to bring it up and I’m not buying it, I don’t know that the consumer there is going to go, “I’m all in on this.” Not everybody is going to love every segment of everything that you do. That’s impossible to please everybody.

I think if you find stuff that’s interesting to you for an angle, or a storyline, or a human-interest element that you feel that you can convey, then I think you’re going to do your best job at least at that, and in the end, feel good about the content you’re delivering. Again that’s not going to be for everybody, but at least then you know you were doing your best job. I think you just have to continue. I try to find the things that interest me and then that way hopefully I’m telling the best stories or relaying the best angles of those stories.

Noe: During an Army-Navy football game, they’ll take a player’s schedule and say at 0600 this guy wakes up and does this, and at 0700 he does that. That thought came to mind as it relates to your schedule. When you have so much on your plate, how does your day generally set up?

Ross: (laughs) It’s different based on the different times of the year. It’s funny that you say that because maybe when the Kings season ends, there’ll be a couple of days where it’s just not as much on my plate. But then I also find myself — it’s not bored — but it’s not as hectic. I think I prefer a lot of plates spinning. I love all of this.

Generally I really love it in October and November. The Kings are going. I’m consumed with college football on the weekend and the prep that takes all week. Then a show and being the program director. It’s completely hectic, but I love that. Different times of the year it varies, but generally I’m at the radio station by about 8:30 and trying to do program director type things for a couple of hours.

I try to transition into the radio show mode at some time during that, at least a half hour or so before the show. It’s the show from noon to 3. Then it just depends on if it’s a Kings night or not, but get back in the program director type mode. If it’s a game, you could be at the arena until 10:30 or 11 or at the station until 10:30 or 11 — it just depends on whether the game is East Coast or West Coast.

I don’t ever look at it like, “Aww man, I got to be at the station for 12 to 14 hours.” Maybe the next day there is no game and I’m at the station until 5:30 or so. It evens out and there’s less weekend work in the non-basketball and football season, but there’s always something going on and I actually prefer it that way.

Noe: Is it ever hard to avoid thinking negatively about your different roles meaning, “Hey, if I didn’t have this PD meeting, I could put a little bit more into the prep for my show,” or vice versa. Is there ever that mindset that you have to guard against?

Ross: Probably, yes, because I feel guilty at times. I’ve got a great partner now in Damien Barling who I do the midday show with. He is amazing. He is a preparer. He gets the show put together.

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I try to do as much as I can, but sometimes I feel like I cheated him because, “Oh man, this day I had a meeting at 9 and a follow up at 10. A crisis happened and I’m rolling in at 11:50 and we’re 10 minutes from showtime. I have an idea of what we’re doing, but I don’t feel like I contributed enough at least on that day.

Other days I do more. It’s just kind of a day-by-day basis. If it was a perfect world, I’d have time to do all of that, but sometimes I don’t. That part has been a challenge for me for sure.

Noe: Was there ever a realization you came to that helped you approach each day the way you have?

Ross: I still have the guilt. I don’t know that I’ve ever resolved myself from that. I think I’m better than ever with time management, but again it’s never perfect. I could come to work on a day and go, “I kind of have everything lined up. I’m in good shape. I can spend some real good time on the show.” Then a phone call, an email, a text, three things happen and all of a sudden I’m in crisis mode on something that I had no plan for.

You have to be ready to handle those things even when you think, “Alright, I’m going to have a good hour and a half, two hours here, where we can really lay out a great show.” Then it falls back to me rolling in near the end and Damien doing all of the heavy lifting.

Noe: I remember times when I’d get a phone call from a salesperson two minutes before I was about to do a show. I’d think, “They have no idea what it’s like to do a show.” Do you have that thought go through your head more, or the thought of, “You have no idea what it’s like to be a program director”?

Ross: The only thought I ever get sometimes on that is when someone will say, “Hey, can we meet tomorrow at 2?” I’ll say, “I’m on the air.” Sometimes it’s a concept of, “You’re selling the show. You know I’m on 12 to 3.” That one will get me every once in a while.

If it gets too close to that window, unless it’s the biggest of bosses or a true, true crisis, sometimes I’m just not answering that phone or that email. I’ll go, “Okay, well I’ll have to get to that after the show.” Or if it seems a little more important, “Alright I’ve got a four-minute break here, I can knock out a quick email.” But I try not to lose focus on the show at least in that three-hour window. Sometimes that’s hard to avoid.

Noe: What aspect of your many roles comes the easiest to you and which aspect do you think is the most challenging?

Ross: I guess just the love of sports I hope transfers over to all of them. I don’t know how much it does to being a program director, but to the play-by-play, to the talk show it does. I like people. I think I’m good with people so that helps. The most challenging thing I think is the program director for sure. I’ve worked under so many different ones and they have their style. I can only do it my way.

I don’t know if I’m doing it the right way, but I’m trying and I try to be there for people. I try to listen. I don’t think I have it all figured out so I try to be a good listener. I try to communicate what I think is best. If someone has an idea I’m all for it. I think that one is the one that takes the most work for me. It’s my newest of the jobs.

Noe: When you’re a fellow sports radio host, do you find it challenging to critique another talent when it might be something that you’re violating yourself?

Ross: (laughs) Yes, I try to use myself as an example. I’m not perfect and it’s very subjective. There are people that like my show, there are people that don’t. There are people that love our other shows, there are people that don’t. There’s not one way that’s considered right.

I try to point out something that’s a little bit more constructive like you’ve got to hit breaks on time. Stuff like that as opposed to — I try to stay away from content. If someone’s got and idea and it seems like a reach to me, I don’t know that I would talk about that, but in the end if you can pull it off and tell a great story, or get some emotion out of that, or say something funny, well that worked.

I try to do it more in the realm of something that’s truly constructive and may be beneficial overall for the concept of the show as opposed to, “Hey, I wouldn’t talk about this,” because who follows that? You know? I try to stay away from that.

Noe: You’ve been in Sacramento for so long. Do you see yourself remaining there always, or do you think the future will play out differently?

Ross: I’ve almost been here 25 years. I’ve only been here and it’s tough to see me anywhere else. I’ve applied sporadically to other things over the 25 years, but really wondered, “Man, if I did get that job, would I really leave? I’ve been in California my whole life. My family is out here. Would I do that?”

So at this moment I can’t picture myself anywhere else. I love Sacramento. It’s been great. The station’s been great to me. The Kings. Sacramento State. The community. There’s no reason for me to leave unless there was some offer out there that I was like, “Man, I can’t turn that down.” I’m really happy where I am.

Noe: That’s cool, man. You can’t mess with happy. What do you do outside of sports — I don’t want to say as a release because this is what you love to do, but in terms of something that’s non sports-related that adds some balance to your life — what do you like doing the most?

Ross: The reality is the time I get, I try to spend as much with my family. They’re so supportive, my wife and my son. We’ve got such a great family. My brother is in town. My in-laws. There’s always people at our house. It’s just a great time to come home. It’s rarely just my wife and son. We have friends over all the time.

It’s like when you were a kid and there was always one house we’d always go to. Well, we’re the house. I think that’s really fun. We’ll have barbecues. We just like to entertain and have people over. That’s probably it. I just love to be around people that I care about and have a good time. That’s my main thing when I’m not working, which seems like I’m working all the time.

Noe: How long have you and your wife been together?

Ross: We met at the radio station, which is another reason I’m thankful for all of the things that transpired. Staying at the station that long, I met her several years into being at the station. She was an account executive so we met there and struck up a friendship. It grew from that.

She since is no longer in radio, but she did it for a long, long time. She was really good at sales. So many friends, so many memories, my wife came from radio. It all feels like it was just meant to be.

Noe: Have there been other offers that you simply turned down for all the reasons you just mentioned?

Ross: No, nothing officially. There have been a couple of NBA things that I’ve applied for. I literally remember talking to my wife thinking, “Man, if I get offered this, I think I would say no. But how could I say no to one of 30?”

Now, it didn’t happen. I’ll give you an example; Cleveland was open years ago. I think it was Joe Tait who was their longtime broadcaster. I saw that was an opening and I said, “I don’t know if I want to go to Cleveland, but I have to apply. It’s one of 30 jobs.”

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I applied and nothing came of it, but I remember thinking, “Well, I feel like I’m qualified. I’ve done NBA games. What would I say if it really came down to we want to hire you?” I was really thinking, “Am I going to say no?”.

It didn’t get that far because again I’m happy here. I like it here. Maybe sometime that position will open up for me in Sacramento officially. It would have been hard to leave and it would have been hard to say no. I guess the short answer is I’m glad I wasn’t officially put in that spot to have to decide.

Noe: If you could essentially write out how you’d like the rest of your career to unfold, what would that look like for you?

Ross: I would like to do as much play-by-play as I can. I get that opportunity now, but I thirst for more of it. I’ve been lucky to be behind — and I know you know Grant Napear, Gerry Gerould is the radio guy, Grant is the TV guy — I don’t know if I’m technically behind Grant. Gary, I’ve worked so hand in hand with him for so many years. I’ve had the privilege to fill in for him. He is just a legend. He’s amazing. He is still killing it out there and he’s 78.

Whenever his time is done — he needs to write his own script — but whenever he decides he’s finished, I would love, love, love that opportunity to be the radio voice of the Kings. To go with that, to keep doing Sac State football because I’ve done that for 20+ years. If that opened up even more opportunities to do some national play-by-play, I really love radio. If TV came up I wouldn’t say no as far as play-by-play. Everything seems to be leaning towards that.

I enjoy doing the talk shows, but it’s almost like the thing I’m chasing has been play-by-play. If more things open talk show wise, certainly I would do it. I have a show now. I’m thrilled with it.

The PD job was something that became available and I thought, I’m going to grow from this. I wanted to take on that opportunity. I really have learned a lot more about myself and just managing people, and making mistakes, and making right calls, all those kind of things. I’ve enjoyed that, but I guess the thing I’m in a constant chase for is finding more play-by-play.

Noe: I hope that works out for you.

Ross: I hope so too. It’s really tricky because Gary is a friend. He’s awesome, but I know if it was my job, I’d be like, “I’m going until I’m done.” He should. He’s done it for 30-something years and he’s still great. He’s amazing.

Noe: If he was like, “What do you think, man? Do you think I should keep going?” It’d be hard to avoid saying, “No man, you should totally retire.”

Ross: (laughs) Yeah, because my friends always ask me when’s he going to stop? I’m like, “You know, I don’t know.” That’s his call. I root for him. Again, he’s a friend. He’s a mentor. He’s just awesome. I’ve been patient and I hope it would be my position after that, but nothing is ever guaranteed. I would feel really good about my chances though.

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BSM Writers

Ryan Hurley is Ready to Lead WFAN, Infinity Sports Network

“This is a team that already has a really good culture and has had some success. I’m being sarcastic with the word ‘some’ success.”

Derek Futterman

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Ryan Hurley
(Illustration) WFAN, Infinity Sports Network – Courtesy: Audacy

In 2023, The Walt Disney Company laid off 7,000 employees in an effort to slash $5.5 billion in operating costs. Four percent of the company’s global workforce was affected by the changes, including local program directors Amanda Brown at ESPN LA 710 and Ryan Hurley at ESPN New York. They were tough outcomes for both media professionals who had been with the company in various capacities for a combined four decades.

“The position or the job becomes part of your identity after almost two decades, so yeah, it was obviously tough [and] not an easy thing to cope with,” Hurley said. “But listen, if you stay negative about something too long, it’s not going to get any better.”

While Hurley was the program director of ESPN New York, the station underwent several changes to its lineup but always had a consistent presence in afternoon drive with The Michael Kay Show. Afternoon drive ratings battles between ESPN New York and WFAN drew public interest and cultivated on-air discussion about the metrics. Being within the number one media market in the United States, Hurley felt that he and his management team maintained a strong culture that held despite several alterations.

“You know you’re going to get your sports,” Hurley said. “It’s ESPN – we have that backing there over the years of course from a great sports brand, and you know you’re going to get there, but we really did a good job with the entertainment value as well I thought, and that’s throughout the building – production-wise; imaging-wise – and I just think the biggest part of that is the way the culture is building the team.”

Although Hurley was no longer in a media building on a daily basis for the first time since college, he did not sit on the sidelines. He spent more time with his family, something he had not done in recent years, while remaining vigilant and monitoring the business for potential openings in content creation, production or management. Whether or not an opportunity came in radio was not a deciding factor; rather, he wanted to assimilate back into the media business.

At the same time, Hurley also reflected on his career. He thought about decisions and subsequent outcomes during his time with ESPN New York. Over those two decades, he built several relationships with media professionals, receiving several offers of assistance and guidance.

“I’m not even over-exaggerating – the people that were just there and supportive [of] me – it’s humbling to be honest with you, and to see that, it was actually pretty awesome,” Hurley said. “The people and the support I got to try and make sure everything was going okay on my end, trying to help me out looking to get back in somewhere – all that stuff is positive stuff I took from a huge negative.”

While Hurley was preferential towards the business and greatly values the craft, he did not want to limit his options. Aside from wanting to work in New York, he did consider other industries in order to support and take care of his family. Despite being proud of what he and his colleagues achieved at ESPN New York, he wasn’t going to be restrained by the business.

“There weren’t a lot of opportunities, I’d say, in the beginning, and that goes for everybody in different industries,” Hurley said. “I just think it was a tough climate for openings and job availability, so eventually if I had to go do something else, I would have, and I don’t care what that is to be honest with you.”

When Jon Marks chose to decline a contract extension and exit SportsRadio 94WIP after six years, it began a chain reaction of events within Audacy that led to a drastic internal shakeup – at least it appeared that way superficially. In reality, then-Audacy vice president of programming Spike Eskin had informed Audacy New York market president Chris Oliviero that he was going to be leaving the station in October, roughly three months ahead of the public announcement.

With Marks out of afternoons, SportsRadio 94WIP crafted a new program with Eskin joining co-host Ike Reese and producer Jack Fritz. The vacancy for a role with oversight over WFAN and Infinity Sports Network intrigued many candidates to inquire about the position and resulted in a three-month selection process.

“This is a legendary station I grew up listening to, and even though I was with ESPN – the competition – for the last 20 years, being out of work and laid off and the climate for jobs being what it was, No. 1, I was looking feverishly to get back in and applying for a lot of positions,” Hurley said. “So, when this one came about and I saw that it was posted, I was very interested in [it and] basically through my hat in the ring right away.”

In his youth, Hurley would accompany his father to sporting events as he worked as a cameraman for several marquee matchups, including various Mike Tyson fights on HBO. Yet he always found time to listen to the station from his days in elementary school, often setting a 60-minute sleep timer on his alarm clock as he listened to shows at dusk.

When Hurley woke up in the morning to prepare for classes, he remembers hearing Imus in the Morning and Mike Breen delivering sports updates. Even though he ended up programming against WFAN at ESPN New York for the majority of his career, he always remained cognizant and respected the station’s standing as a pioneer in the sports radio format dating back to its launch in the summer of 1987.

“The appeal is that it is the station in the genre and iconic [and] historic,” Hurley said, “and just to be able to be considered and then throw my hat in the ring to possibly be the one who’s going to be a PD and basically the third person in the station’s history, it was very appealing.”

Going into his meeting with Oliviero, Hurley heard from other people in the business that he was a consummate professional, a sentiment that he concurs as being accurate. Being in his office and seeing the radio memorabilia that Oliviero has collected over the years, Hurley could evince the passion that he had for radio. The discussions centered around various facets of the station and included time to speak with Spike Eskin and Sean Argaman about the role as well.

“You want other people that you trust in your building and to say, ‘Hey, why don’t you meet with them as well?,’ and we did that as well at 98.7 – I thought that was important,” Hurley explained. “It’s just good to get other people involved in the process to bounce stuff off of, but the process was excellent and the people here are great, and it was great to sit with them.”

Hurley and Oliviero had several conversations about the role and ultimately ended up landing the position as brand manager of WFAN and Infinity Sports Network. Before he was offered the job though, he learned that Jon “Stugotz” Weiner was in the running for the role. A longtime WFAN enthusiast, Weiner expressed interest in the position. As time progressed, Weiner was in conversations for the job but ultimately did not take on the position.

“I know him well and he’s a good dude, and it would have been a definite interesting hire, but the way it shook out and the way they talk about it, I don’t know how everything really ended up working out as far as the conversations he had because I just wasn’t privy to it, and I wasn’t 100% sure if I was the guy afterwards,” Hurley said. “I felt I was the guy to do it – I’ll tell you that, and that’s not to be cocky – but just my confidence and I thought I’d be a great fit here and just thrilled that it worked out that way.”

Once the news circulated pertaining to Weiner, speculation and noise surrounding the decision continued to amplify, especially when Eskin shared that Audacy was on the precipice of making a decision in what was his final morning show appearance leading the station. Hurley was offered the role late the following week, an outcome to which he responded with exhilaration and euphoria. Galvanized by the possibility from the beginning, he arrived in the office for his first day the next week and has been interacting with personnel around the station.

“This is a team that already has a really good culture and has had some success. I’m being sarcastic with the word ‘some’ success,” Hurley said. “This is the place, and they do great work here and have for years, and the talent on the air we have here is incredible and the production staff is incredible and management is incredible.”

Concurrent with Hurley’s hiring was the promotion of David Mayurnik to assistant brand manager of WFAN and Infinity Sports Network. Mayurnik got his start in radio as a tape operator with WFAN and moved over to serve as the news operations manager and New York Yankees radio network producer for WCBS. In 2012, he became the executive producer of CBS Sports Radio and assumed program director responsibilities for the national outlet seven years later. Gaining insight on both brands, especially the recently-renamed Infinity Sports Network, is an invaluable resource for Hurley to utilize throughout his formative time at the outlet.

“The first few days here, we’ve already dug in and had a few meetings already and talking some strategy,” Hurley said. “It’s going to be great working with David – he’s an awesome guy – and then everybody here that has worked with David has just the most amazing things to say about him, and I’m looking forward to it.”

Last summer, WFAN instituted a new programming lineup upon the departure of Craig Carton from afternoon drive to work at FOX Sports 1 on a full-time basis.

“I think the lineup is in great shape,” Hurley said. “These guys do great shows and their production crews are incredible, and I’ve already dug in with some of the producers already for a few meetings and I’m just getting to know them as well.”

Through the changes at the station, its morning drive duo of Boomer Esiason and Gregg Giannotti have remained a consistent presence at the top of the ratings. The Boomer & Gio program includes well-versed personalities that Hurley acknowledges collectively operates akin to a machine.

“They know what they’re doing, and they’re doing a great job and they have done a great job for years,” Hurley said. “They put together incredible, entertaining radio and shows, and you’re going to get your sports obviously. You’re going to get your opinions and expert insights, but you’re also going to laugh your ass off, so I think that’s important.”

Infinity Sports Network contains a lineup of several prominent hosts, including Jim Rome, Bill Reiter and Zach Gelb. In fact, Hurley remembers Gelb’s father and WFAN executive Bob Gelb setting him up to do shows on Radio Row when covering the Super Bowl from the time he was in elementary school. Hurley will look to remain ahead of the curve with both outlets and cultivate a long-term strategy for continued prosperity despite fluctuations in radio and incessant discussions surrounding its sustainability.

“Its death has been predicted a million times, but there’s no other kind of platform that creates a type of intimacy and relationship with a listener or who someone consumes,” Hurley said. “Now there’s different modes and maybe some better technology in certain areas, but honestly, that relationship between radio and listener, it’s not going anywhere.”

On the same day Audacy officially announced Hurley as the new brand manager of WFAN and Infinity Sports Network, New York Yankees radio play-by-play broadcaster John Sterling retired from calling games after 36 seasons on the air.

No full-time successor has been named to the position, with Justin Shackil and Emmanuel Berbari currently among the rotation of announcers throughout the regular season. Upon hearing the news, Hurley reflected on the anecdotes he had heard about Sterling from Michael Kay, who worked with him on radio broadcasts for 10 seasons on WABC. During Hurley’s time at ESPN New York, he also produced The Michael Kay Show in afternoon drive and was on hand for its 20th anniversary celebration a year-and-a-half ago.

“The guy’s a legend – he’s going to be missed for sure – and it definitely came as a bit of a shock to hear that, but just some of those calls over the years are just iconic, fun and the creativity that he’s put on it,” Hurley said. “It’s going to be different – it’s going to be very different without him in the booth with Suzyn [Waldman].”

As Hurley begins his tenure with WFAN, his former employer is set to enact a drastic change to its means of dissemination. Good Karma Brands will end its local marketing agreement with ESPN New York 98.7, forsaking the lease of the FM signal from Emmis Communications. As a result, the outlet will be available to hear utilizing the 1050 AM signal or through other digital distribution means, including the ESPN New York app.

“It’s definitely a difference in sound and sometimes quality, but I don’t know that it’s essential to have an FM signal,” Hurley said. “It’s definitely helpful for sure, but you’re looking at a place in 98.7 or ESPN that still had 1050 rolling with either simulcasting or using 1050 for network programming and also as overflow for play-by-play properties and partners, so that’s the same here [with] 101.9 and then having 660 to simulcast but then also help out with overflow play-by-play is huge.”

Hurley intends to maintain the success of WFAN and Infinity Sports Network while also positioning both outlets for future growth under the aegis of Audacy Sports.

“The plan is to do everything we can to [try and] stay ahead on those other platforms and produce good stuff and content there that supplements and supports,” Hurley said. “But content is king, and we’re just going to work as hard as we can and do everything we can to keep churning that out.”

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The NFL Draft on ESPN Just Makes Sense

The draft has become such a quintessentially ESPN experience that it’s hard to fathom the two not being paired.

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A photo of ESPN broadcasting from the NFL Draft
Courtesy: ESPN

Unlike almost every major pro sports executive you can name, Pete Rozelle didn’t come from a law background. He was a public relations guy. And during his three-decade run as commissioner of the NFL beginning in 1960, Rozelle’s P.R. instincts served him beautifully time and again. He remade the league into an absolute powerhouse.

But Rozelle, whose watch included the AFL-NFL merger, the creation of the Super Bowl and the creation of Monday Night Football, missed one mark: He didn’t think anyone could be made to care enough about the NFL Draft to watch it on television.

That seems almost impossible now, as we sprint headlong into another edition of the three-day traveling extravaganza the draft has become. It’s the Super Bowl for franchises that aren’t close to a Super Bowl, and most of all for their fans.

It is also something that the executives at then-fledgling ESPN foresaw — or, more accurately, something in which they saw the promise. It was ESPN back in 1980 that decided to broadcast the thing, try to make it into something an advertiser would pay for. Their execs basically talked Rozelle into it — and full credit to Rozelle for agreeing, even when his NFL owners unanimously disapproved, fearing that agents would run the show.

ESPN, with its ability to market, its dearth of other programming and its deference to the NFL, was the perfect partner. It was willing to do the legwork needed to make the event something worth paying attention to.

And why not? The little network needed the draft.

Still does, as it turns out.

There’s been some chatter that ESPN might lose its rights to the draft once they expire after the 2025 edition. Among other things, it’s possible that one of the league’s traditional network partners will go crazy with a bid designed to take the rights completely, or that a streaming service will outright buy the draft in order to gain wider entree to the sports audience.

If there’s one thing we’re sure of, it’s that today’s NFL never leaves a buck on the table, so we wouldn’t bet against those possibilities. But the draft has become such a quintessentially ESPN experience that it’s hard to fathom the two not being paired.

It’d be a mistake for both sides if they weren’t.

ESPN’s painful contractions as a pawn in the Disney empire no longer constitute breaking news. Depending upon your personal taste, you’ve probably seen one or more of your preferred on-air talents let go over the past few years, and especially the last year or so.

But the NFL Draft — that’s still an ESPN thing. We all know where to find it, because it’s been in the same place for more than 40 years. This year, you’ll also find it on ABC, the NFL Network and ESPN Deportes, but c’mon, you’ll head to ESPN first. That’s what you always do.

The network didn’t create the draft, but there’s no question it elevated it to a position that even the marketing-savvy Rozelle didn’t imagine. We now have broadcast/streaming access to all three days of the event, and since 2015 the whole production has been on wheels. Last year, the draft was in Kansas City; this year it’s Detroit. Green Bay gets its shot at hosting in 2025.

Occasionally, ESPN does something dumb related to the draft that reminds you the network is a money business, not a public trust. Laying off Todd McShay, an almost perfect foil to Mel Kiper Jr., was one such move, even if it was part of the larger firing pattern the network initiated last year at Disney’s order.

Still, the draft production has endured plenty of turnover through the decades without losing its ESPN-ness. It’s a little bit about the stage look, a little about ESPN’s statistical deep dives on players. It’s a little about Kiper. Whatever it is, the draft on ESPN is about as close to a tradition as anything in the entertainment world ever gets.

It’d be shocking if ESPN doesn’t come heavy during the bidding for future rights to the draft. Among other things, it is already part of a planned consortium sports streaming service — and nothing screams sports app like a round-by-round, team-by-team selection of future talent.

But this is also a moment for both the network and the league to reflect on what makes the thing work. ESPN remains an easy home for the draft, totally accommodating and, as ever, deferential to the league, and for its effort the network gets an anchor tenant for a full weekend of programming every year, plus a seemingly unending run-up of coverage.

The NFL? They get a little hint of the image they constantly try to export, one of tradition and history. That goes back to Public Relations 101. The late, great Pete Rozelle would approve.

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Industry Guest Column: Connor Onion Gets Called Up to the Show

It was a day “10-year-old Connor” couldn’t believe.

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Graphic for an Industry Guest Column
Photo Courtesy: Connor Onion X Account

Connor Onion is a play-by-play broadcaster who has worked for the Big 10 Network since 2021 and has called college football, basketball, baseball and volleyball for the network. He has also done college football, basketball and baseball for ESPN. You can follow Connor on X at @ConnorOnion. Connor recently called his first Major League Baseball game on FS1 and shared his story for today’s guest column:

“¿Cómo estás, papi?”

When I unlocked the passenger door of my 2004 Chevy Suburban, those were the first words I heard from the stranger, a towering man, who climbed in next to me. It was May 15, 2017. I was a broadcasting intern for the Quad Cities River Bandits, the Single-A affiliate of the Houston Astros in Davenport, Iowa.

This was the “other duties as assigned” part of the job. Yes, I called games. But I also was responsible for dropping off and picking up the players at the airport when they were promoted or demoted from our team. The man sitting shotgun was, at the time, a little-known prospect. His name is Yordan Alvarez.

When Alvarez met me with that warm greeting that sunny Midwest morning, I had no idea we were in for a month-long joyride.  Alvarez socked nine homers in the only month he needed at that level of Minor League Baseball. One of his homers landed in the river beyond the right field wall.

Almost two years to the day of our car ride from the airport, Alvarez debuted in the big leagues for the Astros. He’s become American League Rookie of the Year, a World Series champion & a perennial All Star. I watched Alvarez in awe from minor league cities like Clinton, Iowa, Beloit, Wisconsin & Florence, Kentucky, working & hoping to one day join him in “The Show.”

______________________________________________________________________________________________________

“Connor, you’re getting called up to the big leagues.”

It’s late at night in the Spring of 2024. It’s my agent on the phone, doing his best impression of a Triple-A Manager promoting a prospect.

A cheek-to-cheek smile filled my face as I shared the news with my girlfriend, Danielle. She cried, maybe subconsciously knowing her sacrifice – five years of long distance, weekends away and holidays apart – made this opportunity possible.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________

“Let 10-year-old Connor soak it all in for a couple seconds.”

It’s Saturday, April 13, 2024. I’m in the car on the way to Minute Maid Park as those words come across my phone, a text from one of my best friends. It was a great reminder as I prepared to make my Major League Baseball Broadcasting debut, calling Rangers vs. Astros on FS1 with A.J. Pierzynski and Ken Rosenthal. 

But, before I could “soak it all in”, there was work to do. A closed-door meeting with Astros Manager Joe Espada, where Alex Bregman unknowingly interrupted by banging on the door, begging to be put in the lineup that day.

A breezy 20 minutes spent with Rangers skipper Bruce Bochy, where the game’s best bullpen manager shared with us his day-to-day stresses handling an increasingly injured pitching staff.

A quick exchange with Jose Altuve, who welcomed me to the Astros clubhouse with a handshake that felt like it came from a person twice his height.  

As the clock ticked toward first pitch, there was adrenaline, but I was at ease. Why? The people who believed in me.

Jake Levy gave me my first job in Quad Cities. Joe Brand — a Major League announcer in his own right — made me better every day during our time calling games together in Kane County. Terry Bonadonna – a caring, creative boss – allowed me to be a “lead voice” for the first time in professional baseball.

Those three, and the hundreds more, who helped me were the reason I could “soak it all in” as my producer said, “30 seconds to air.”

For the next three hours, we did what we came to do. We debated intentionally walking Corey Seager and applauded Jose Altuve’s superior strength when breaking the game open with a double. We busted each other’s chops on whether we read or watched Harry Potter.

It was a day “10-year-old Connor” couldn’t believe.

It was a day “2017 Intern Connor” could only dream possible when “2024 Connor” said on the FOX broadcast, “batting second and playing left field for the Astros, Yordan Alvarez.”

“Estoy agradecida, papi. Estoy agradecida.”

I am grateful.

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