XESPN-AM
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
City of license | Tijuana, Mexico |
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Broadcast area | San Diego, California |
Branding | ESPN Radio 800 |
Frequency | 800 (kHz) |
Format | Sports Talk |
Callsign meaning | X ESPN |
Owner | MEC Network |
Website | ESPNRadio800.com |
XESPN-AM or ESPN Radio 800 is the local affiliate of ESPN Radio in San Diego, California and Tijuana, Mexico.
There is little local programming and no play-by-play on the station at this time. XESPN had a weekday show with Dave Palet and Jeff Doetseth, but the program was terminated in September 2005. The only known local show is an auto racing program on Sunday afternoon.
XESPN was formerly known as XEMMM-AM.
Source: SDRadio.net
Contents |
[edit] ESPN Radio
ESPN Radio is a national sports radio network based in the United States. It was launched on January 1, 1992 under the original banner of "SportsRadio ESPN." ESPN Radio is located at ESPN headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut. The network airs a regular schedule of daily and weekly programming as well as live coverage of Major League Baseball, National Basketball Association, Bowl Championship Series, and National Invitation Tournament games. As of 2006, like ESPN, ESPN Radio now has what is called ESPN Radio Insider. ESPN Radio is broadcast to subscribers of both Sirius Satellite Radio and XM Satellite Radio.
ESPN Radio currently has five company-owned stations in New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, and Pittsburgh. Most other markets have ESPN Radio affiliates, whether they be part-time or have their entire format dedicated to ESPN Radio. ESPN Radio is currently an official part of the ABC Radio network, though the Walt Disney Company is not including the ESPN Radio network or the Radio Disney network in the pending sale of ABC Radio to Citadel Broadcasting.
[edit] Network schedule
[edit] Monday–Friday
Eastern | Pacific | Program | Original Run |
---|---|---|---|
2 a.m. | 11 p.m. | AllNight with Jason Smith | (2005–present) |
6 a.m. | 3 a.m. | Mike and Mike in the Morning | (1998–present) |
10 a.m. | 7 a.m. | The Herd with Colin Cowherd | (2004–present) |
1 p.m. | 10 a.m. | The Dan Patrick Show | (1999–present) |
4 p.m. | 1 p.m. | The SportsBash | (2005–present) |
7 p.m. | 4 p.m. | The Pulse | (2006–present) |
10 p.m. | 7 p.m. | GameNight | (1992–present) |
[edit] Saturday
Eastern | Pacific | Program |
---|---|---|
1 a.m. | 10 p.m. | The V Show with Bob Valvano |
6 a.m. | 3 a.m. | Inside Golf |
7 a.m. | 4 a.m. | Saturday RaceDay |
9 a.m. | 6 a.m. | College GameDay Tailgate |
12 noon | 9 a.m. | College GameDay |
7 p.m. | 3 p.m. | College GameDay Scoreboard |
9 p.m. | 6 p.m. | GameNight |
[edit] Sunday
Eastern | Pacific | Program |
---|---|---|
1 a.m. | 10 p.m. | The V Show with Bob Valvano |
6 a.m. | 3 a.m. | RaceDay |
7 a.m. | 4 a.m. | Fantasy Focus |
9 a.m. | 6 a.m. | The Huddle |
11 a.m. | 8 a.m. | Countdown to Kickoff |
1 p.m. | 10 a.m. | NFL on ESPN Radio |
8 p.m. | 5 p.m. | GameNight |
[edit] Out-of-season shows
- GameDay
- The Baseball Show
- The Doug Karsch Show
- The Huddle
- The John Kincade Show
[edit] Game broadcasts
- BCS on ESPN Radio
- MLB on ESPN Radio
- NBA on ESPN Radio
- NIT on ESPN Radio
[edit] Daily segments
[edit] Former shows
- SportsRadio ESPN Sunday Magazine (Sundays 8 a.m-10 a.m., 1994-1998)
- ESPN The Magazine with Dan Le Batard (Sundays 7 a.m-11 a.m., 1998-2004)
- AllNight with Todd Wright (Mon.–Fri. 1 a.m.–6 a.m., 1996–2005)
- Bruno-Golic Morning Show (Mon.–Fri. 6 a.m.–10 a.m., 1995–1998)
- Pardon the Interruption (Mon.-Fri. 7 p.m.-7:30 p.m., 2001-2004)
- The Sports Brothers (Mon.–Fri. 4 p.m.–7 p.m., 2003–2005)
- The Tony Kornheiser Show (Mon.–Fri. 10 a.m.–1 p.m., 1998–2004)
- The Fabulous Sports Babe with Nanci Donnellan (Mon.–Fri. 10 a.m.–1 p.m., 1994–1997)
[edit] External links
AM radio stations in the San Diego, California region (Arbitron #17) | |
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(Arbitron #17) |
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