ESPN Deportes Radio
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2019) |
Type | Radio network |
---|---|
Country | |
Ownership | |
Owner | ESPN, Inc. (Disney 80%/Hearst 20%) |
History | |
Launch date | October 5, 2005 |
Closed | September 8, 2019 |
Replaced by | Unanimo Deportes (in some markets) |
Coverage | |
Availability | National, through regional affiliates and satellite radio |
Links | |
Website | ESPN Deportes Radio |
ESPN Deportes Radio was an American Spanish language sports radio network created and produced by Disney-owned ESPN. Programming included call-in talk shows and commentary from hosts about a full range of sporting events, including soccer, American football, baseball and boxing.
The network had stations in 15 states in the United States (Arizona, California, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, Oklahoma, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas and Washington). It was also available terrestrially in Puerto Rico and in northern Mexico (by spillover radio signals) and was available nationally in the US on Sirius XM Radio on Channel 149.
The network shut down on September 8, 2019.
Programming
[edit]ESPN Deportes Radio featured sports news and talk in Spanish, with a special emphasis on soccer. Popular personalities on the network included Jorge Ramos, Fernando Alvarez, Hernan Pereyra, José del Valle, Kenneth Garay, Rafael Ramos Villagrana, Elmer Polanco, Armando Talavera Broderick Zerpa, Giovanni Scavia, Omar Fuentes, Jairo Moncada, Noe Vazquez, Diego Cora, Miguel Mannella, Dairon Esmoriz, Humberto Carrera, José Francisco Rivera, Oscar Restrepo, Alberto "Mono" Gambetta, David Lopez, Miguel Angel Cebreros, Dionisio Estrada, Bernardo Pilatti, Guillermo Celis, Renato Bermudez, Alvaro Riet, Omar Orlando Salazar, David Faitelson, Carlos Arratia and Luis Escobar.
ESPN Deportes as well as its English counterpart ESPN Radio were retained by Disney in the sale of ABC Radio to Citadel Broadcasting, then to Cumulus Media. The network was flagshipped at WMYM in Miami, Florida, which was not owned by Disney (it sold the station, then a Radio Disney outlet, in 2015) but had been operated by Disney for several years before that.[1]
Discontinuation of service
[edit]On June 11, 2019, ESPN announced that it would be discontinuing the ESPN Deportes Radio network on September 8, 2019, citing consumer habits within the demographic skewing towards digital platforms, the lack of a cohesive sports culture among the United States' various Spanish-speaking communities, and the cost, expense and complications of running a full-time radio network. ESPN plans to convert some of the network's programming to podcasts. 10 full-time employees and 25 part-time employees would be laid off as a result of the closures.[2][1]
Most stations became affiliates of rival Spanish-language sports network TUDN Radio and the newly launched Unanimo Deportes radio network (which is run by ESPN Deportes alumnus Lino García and also based at WMYM), while WEPN in New York City became a pass-through for the national ESPN Radio programs and local overflow not cleared by sister station WEPN-FM.[3][4]
Event broadcasts
[edit]- Soccer
- UEFA Champions League
- UEFA Europa League
- UEFA Super Cup
- Major League Soccer (Viernes de Fútbol, Soccer Sunday, playoffs and MLS Cup)
- CONCACAF Champions League
- International Champions Cup
- CONMEBOL FIFA World Cup Qualifiers
- CONCACAF FIFA World Cup Qualifiers
- FIFA World Cup European Qualifiers
- Premier League
- La Liga
- FA Cup
- Copa del Rey
- Supercopa de España
- Other
- National Basketball Association
- National Football League (Monday Night Football, Playoffs, Pro Bowl and Super Bowl)
- College Football Playoff
- Major League Baseball (Sunday Night Baseball, Saturday Game of the Week, Major League Baseball All-Star Game, postseason and World Series)
- World Baseball Classic
References
[edit]- ^ a b Fybush, Scott (June 17, 2019). "¡Adios, ESPN Deportes Radio!". NorthEast Radio Watch. Retrieved June 18, 2019.
- ^ "35 To Lose Jobs As ESPN Shuts Down Deportes Radio". Radio Ink. 2019-06-12. Retrieved 2019-06-12.
- ^ Jacobson, Adam. "For Spanish-language Sports, It's 'Unanimo'", Radio & Television Business Report. September 3, 2019. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
- ^ "Adios Deportes, Hola UNANIMO", Radio Ink. September 9, 2019. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
- ESPN Deportes lands its own ‘Dream Job’ - Mary Sutter, Variety, 18 May 2005
- ESPN Deportes Radio to Air 24/7 This Fall - Katy Bachman, Ad Week, 19 May 2005
- ESPN, MRN bringing Spanish-language NASCAR to radio - Michael Smith, Sports Business Journal, 30 October 2006
- ESPN Deportes Radio gets started - Radio and Television Business Report, 20 May 2008
External links
[edit]- ESPN Deportes Radio
- ESPN Deportes Live
- ESPN Deportes Radio on Sirius
- ESPN Deportes Radio affiliate stations
- ESPN Radio Celebrates its 25th Anniversary with Special Broadcast and Yearlong Programming - Tara Chozet, ESPN Media Zone, 21 December 2016
- ESPN media outlets
- Sirius XM Radio channels
- Sports radio networks in the United States
- Spanish radio networks
- ABC Radio Networks
- Radio stations established in 2005
- Radio stations disestablished in 2019
- Defunct radio networks in the United States
- Former subsidiaries of The Walt Disney Company
- Defunct radio stations in the United States