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List of Los Angeles Chargers broadcasters

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Map of radio affiliates

Radio

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The Chargers' official flagship station in Los Angeles is KYSR 98.7 FM, owned by iHeartMedia, Inc.[1] For the previous two seasons, the radio flagship was iHeart talk station KFI 640 AM. Chargers daily updates and specialty shows air on another iHeart station, Fox Sports Radio KLAC 570 AM.[2]

Play-by-play announcer Matt "Money" Smith and former NFL scout Daniel Jeremiah comprise the broadcast team with Shannon Farren serving as the sideline reporter. Past Chargers radio broadcasters have included Josh Lewin, Ralph Lawler, Stu Nahan, Tom Kelly, Lee "Hacksaw" Hamilton, Dan Rowe, Ted Leitner, Nick Hardwick and Hank Bauer. Bauer served seventeen seasons (1998–2014) as the radio color analyst. However, the Chargers and then-flagship station 105.3 KIOZ decided not to renew his contract.[3] Bauer was replaced by Curtis Conway starting with the 2015 season.

P.A. announcer

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Eric Smith serves as the P.A. announcer of all Charger home games at SoFi Stadium. Smith replaced legendary P.A. announcer Bruce Binkowski, who went on to become the executive director of the Holiday Bowl and Poinsettia Bowl games. Smith is also the public address announcer of all Los Angeles Clippers basketball games and is a former Dodgers baseball games announcer.

With the Chargers return to Los Angeles in 2017, the team became a beneficiary of league scheduling policies. Both the Chargers and the Los Angeles Rams share the Los Angeles media market, the second largest in the United States. This means that the Chargers cannot play home games, road division games against the Denver Broncos or Oakland Raiders, or interconference road games against the NFC West (in seasons that the AFC West and NFC West meet in interconference play) in the early 10:00 a.m. Pacific time slot. In addition, they cannot play interconference home games at the same time or network as the Rams. As a result, both teams generally will have more limited scheduling options, and will also benefit by receiving more prime-time games than usual. Thus, regardless of the previous season's record, the Chargers will receive a disproportionate number of Sunday Night, Monday Night and/or Thursday Night games, compared to the rest of the league.

Previously when the team was in San Diego its main flagship was KIOZ. The previous Los Angeles flagship was KLAC/570, in Los Angeles and Orange County, which like KIOZ, KLSD, and several other Charger radio affiliates, is owned by iHeartMedia. Prior to that KSPN/710 was the Los Angeles affiliate and before that, KMPC/1540 for several years.

As of 2014, the Chargers also stream their radio broadcasts on their official mobile application (through iOS and Android devices) as well as on their website.[4]

Radio affiliates

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Chargers Radio Network

English

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City Call Sign Frequency
Los Angeles KYSR 98.7 FM (new for 2020)
KLAC 570 AM (daily coverage, special programming & select game simulcasts with KYSR-FM that don't conflict with L.A. Dodgers and Clippers)
San Diego KOGO 600 AM
Temecula, California/Inland Empire KATY-FM 101.3 FM
Yucca Valley, California KNWH 1250 AM
Coachella, California KNWZ 970 AM
Palm Springs, California KNWQ 1140 AM
Palmdale/Lancaster, California KAVL 610 AM
Victorville/Hesperia, California KMPS 910 AM
Imperial Valley KXO-FM 107.5 FM

Spanish

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City Call Sign Frequency
Los Angeles/Orange County, California KBUE 105.5 FM
Los Angeles/Orange County, California KBUA 94.3 FM
Los Angeles/Orange County, California KEBN 94.3 FM
San Diego/Tijuana, Mexico XEXX-AM 1420 AM
Mexicali, Mexico XEHG 1370 AM
Ensenada, Mexico XHEPF-FM 89.1 FM

References

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  1. ^ "Charges Changes Flagships in 2020". 9 March 2020. Retrieved 2020-05-31.
  2. ^ "Chargers find broadcast home at iHeartMedia-LA's KFI-AM 640 | AM 570 LA Sports". Archived from the original on 2017-04-27. Retrieved 2017-04-26.
  3. ^ "Hank Bauer out as analyst for Chargers' radio broadcasts". 21 June 2015. Retrieved September 15, 2016.
  4. ^ "Official Chargers Mobile Apps". September 24, 2014. Retrieved September 15, 2016.