Rahul Sharma (Editor)

WOFX (AM)

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City
  
Troy, New York

Frequency
  
980 kHz

Branding
  
Fox Sports 980

First air date
  
April 15, 1940

WOFX (AM)

Broadcast area
  
Capital District, Adirondacks, Berkshires

Slogan
  
The Capital Region's Sports Station

WOFX, known as Fox Sports 980, is an AM radio station broadcasting on 980 kHz licensed to Troy, New York. The station is owned by iHeartMedia and runs a sports radio format and is the Fox Sports Radio affiliate for the Capital District, Adirondacks, and Berkshires.

Contents

History

From the station's sign-on in 1940 until 2000, the station was known as WTRY which made an early splash by taking the CBS affiliation from WOKO. The station's original owner was Troy Broadcasting Co. During its 63 years, WTRY, gave birth or adopted three other stations at varying times: WTRI-FM 102.7 (in the early 1950s, went silent), and co-owned WTRI-TV (later became WAST-TV 13 (1959-1981); now WNYT) from 1954 to 1955 with Van Curler Broadcasting, and WTRY-FM 106.5 (now WPYX). When WROW took the CBS affiliation in 1954, they briefly were the ABC affiliate before WPTR took that affiliation several years later. In the early 1960s, the station took a Top 40 format (which gained a simulcast on 106.5 MHz, now classic rock WPYX, briefly in the early 1970s), which they maintained in some form until the early 1980s when it went through a long-term evolution which resulted in the station becoming oldies in 1986. In 1992, WTRY gained a simulcast on 98.3 FM which they lost in 1994, then regained in a mutual arrangement two years later in which the FM became primary and the AM secondary with the AM splitting for alternate programming at points. WTRY went through several ownership changes: Follow the selling its stake in WTRI, Troy Broadcasting, changes its name to Tri-City Radio, Inc. in late winter of 1956. In 1965, the station was acquired by New Haven based Kops-Monahan Communications. In 1972, WTRY and WTRY-FM (today's WPYX) were sold to Scott Broadcasting of Pennsylvania, Inc. In 1985, television personality Merv Griffin through his company Merv Griffin Enterprises brought the stations and then sold it to Capstar Broadcasting (which was controlled by billionaire mogul Tom Hicks) in 1994. In 1999, Capstar merged with another Hicks-owned company Chancellor Media Corporation to form AM-FM Inc.

After the merger of AM-FM and Clear Channel Communications (now known as iHeartMedia) in 2000, the WTRY stations were permanently split with 980 AM flipping to sports and becoming WOFX while the oldies format stayed on 98.3 FM.

WTRY was eligible to move from 980 to 1640 kHz however this was never done.

On September 20, 2010, with the flip of WHRL to a simulcast of talk radio WGY, WOFX's programming can now be heard on WGY-FM's HD2 channel.

Programming

In addition to Fox Sports network programming, the station is home to Jay Mohr Sports in middays. Previously, WOFX aired Imus in the Morning, a program which predated the sports format, however the show was taken off the schedule at the end of 2006 and replaced by Fox Sports Radio's Steve Czaban.

In addition to sports talk, the station clears a sizeable amount of play by play on both the local and national levels. WOFX currently is home to Boston Red Sox baseball, University at Albany football and men's basketball, some Syracuse University basketball games not heard on WGY, plus Westwood One's coverage of the National Football League and the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship among other events. Previously, WOFX has held the rights to the New York Giants (which were moved to sister WPYX), New York Jets football (currently on WTMM-FM), New York Mets baseball, as well as Albany Devils (previously the Albany River Rats) hockey (currently on WTMM-FM). WOFX is also the Albany market home to the syndicated Cigar Dave show,.

In the rare case of play by play conflicts, the latter games are usually heard on sister WTRY-FM, a procedure that has become more solidly done in the wake of the mild success of UAlbany football and the success of the Mets in the 2006 season.

References

WOFX (AM) Wikipedia


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