<\/a> Steve Cochran and Theo Epstein<\/p><\/div>\n
Calvin Coolidge was in the White House when Chicago Cubs<\/a> baseball began airing on WGN AM 720.<\/a> With the exception of just a few odd years, the National League franchise and the Tribune Broadcasting radio flagship have been synonymous since 1925.<\/p>\n
The Cubs are expected to announce Thursday\u00a0that they have finalized a seven-year agreement to broadcast on CBS Radio all-news WBBM AM 780,<\/a> starting with the 2015 season. Sources familiar with the deal said the Cubs could move to CBS Radio sports\/talk WSCR AM 670 if the Score loses the White Sox broadcast rights after next year.<\/p>\n
As the radio home of Bears football, WBBM Newsradio (in combo with simulcast WCFS FM 105.9) already is the top-billing station in the market, with 2013 revenues of $41.9 million, according to Miller Kaplan Arase<\/a> figures. Adding the Cubs is expected to boost the station\u2019s share of revenue and widen its first-place margin. WGN, which currently airs Cubs baseball and Blackhawks hockey, ranked third last year with $29.2 million in total revenue.<\/p>\n
Jimmy deCastro<\/p><\/div>\n
While acquiring the Cubs broadcast rights will provide WBBM Newsradio with a unique and reliable source of live, local programming for years to come, it\u2019s not at all certain the new agreement will prove profitable for CBS Radio. The deal made by former Tribune Co. chairman Sam Zell when he sold the Cubs to Tom Ricketts in 2009 has been a financial disaster for WGN, which has lost $6 million a year, according to some estimates. \u201cThe economics of the deal that we inherited did not make business sense,\u201d deCastro told me.<\/p>\n
Following what\u2019s been called an explosion of cable television and new media rights fees, sports teams across the country have been trying to squeeze more money out of their radio right-holders. \u201cBut unlike cable or digital, radio remains entirely dependent on advertising to monetize play-by-play, causing some broadcasters to just say no to deals they felt would be money-losers,\" the trade publication\u00a0Inside Radio<\/a> recently reported. That\u2019s why Tribune Broadcasting exercised an option to reopen its contract with the Cubs last fall.<\/p>\n
It may take a long time before Chicago adjusts to the idea of the Cubs not<\/em> airing on WGN, but the station already has begun to move on by revamping its weekday programming lineup.<\/a> \u201cIn the meantime, we will look back on our many decades of broadcasting Cubs baseball with nothing but fond memories,\u201d a spokesman said.<\/p>\n
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Calvin Coolidge was in the White House when Chicago Cubs baseball began airing on WGN AM 720. With the exception of just a few odd years, the National League franchise and the Tribune Broadcasting radio flagship have been synonymous since 1925. But now one of the most enduring partnerships in sports broadcasting is coming to... Continue reading