Type | Radio network |
---|---|
Country | |
Availability | AM/FM through network affiliates Sirius XM Internet streaming |
Broadcast area | North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia |
Owner | Learfield Communications, Inc. |
Affiliates | 36 (including 1 flagship) |
Official website | List of affiliates |
The Tar Heel Sports Network is a radio network in the United States dedicated to broadcasting live events and programming relating to North Carolina Tar Heels athletics. It is operated by Tar Heel Sports Properties, a property of LEARFIELD, which manages the multimedia rights for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Network's flagship station is WPTF in Raleigh, North Carolina.
The network began in the early 1960s when WSOC in Charlotte made the first attempt to create a radio network for Tar Heel men's basketball outside the Triangle. In 1965, WSOC owner Cox Broadcasting sold the network to Village Broadcasting, owner of WCHL in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. WCHL became the flagship station. Village Broadcasting gradually evolved into VilCom, and sold the network in the late 1990s.
The Network consists mainly of local radio affiliates within North Carolina, southern Virginia, and northern South Carolina. Some stations with local interest carry only football or basketball programming. For example, WAMW-FM of Washington, Indiana, the hometown of Tyler Zeller, aired men's basketball from 2009 to 2012.
The Network's play-by-play announcer for football and men's basketball games was Woody Durham from 1971 until his retirement in 2011. Jones Angell succeeded Durham as "the Voice of the Tar Heels" for both football and basketball beginning with the 2011 football season.[1]
From 1989-2005, former Carolina Panthers play-by-play announcer Mick Mixon served as the color analyst. Current analyst duties are split between Eric Montross (basketball) and Brian Simmons (football) with Lee Pace handling football sideline reporting.
UNC head coaches Mack Brown (football), Scott Forbes (baseball), Courtney Banghart (women's basketball), and Hubert Davis (men's basketball) host programs on the Network during their respective team's season.
The state's most powerful AM station, WBT in Charlotte, has been an affiliate of the network since 1971, except for 1991 to 1995 and 2006 to 2012. WBT is a 50,000-watt clear-channel station that reaches parts of 22 states at night, bringing the Tar Heels' broadcasts to most of the eastern half of North America. According to longtime WBT station manager Cullie Tarleton, putting the Tar Heels on WBT was largely the idea of longtime coach Dean Smith, who wanted to tell recruits from New England that their parents would be able to listen to the games.[2] Beginning in 2006, WFNZ served as the network's Charlotte outlet.[3] However, its weaker nighttime signal forced the Tar Heels to contract first with WRFX (2006-2011) and WNOW-FM (2011-2012) to simulcast football games that kicked off after 5 p.m., as well as all basketball games. The Tar Heels returned to WBT beginning with the 2012 football season.
In 2021, North Carolina's second-most-powerful AM station, WPTF, joined the network.[4] As part of the deal, WPTF became the network's flagship, though WCHL remains as an affiliate station.[5] WPTF had long been the flagship of rival NC State from 1968 to 2008.
List of affiliates
Current network stations
Station | Frequency | City | Format | Sports carried | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
WSPC | AM 1010 | Albemarle, North Carolina | News/talk | Football, men’s basketball | Relayed on FM via translator W297CE on 107.3MHz |
WWMY | FM 102.3 | Beech Mountain, North Carolina | country music | ||
WBHN | AM 1590 | Bryson City, North Carolina | Classic country | Relayed on FM via translator W231DQ on 94.1MHz | |
WBAG | AM 1150 | Burlington, North Carolina | Full service | Relayed on FM via translator W290CX on 105.9 MHz. | |
WCHL | AM 1360 | Chapel Hill, North Carolina | News/talk/sports/Adult Album Alternative | Flagship station. Relayed on FM via translator W250BP on 97.9 MHz. | |
WBT | AM 1110 | Charlotte, North Carolina | News/Talk/Sports | Class A clear channel | |
WBT-FM | FM 99.3 | Chester, South Carolina | News/talk/sports | Similcasts WBT (AM) | |
WPTI | FM 94.5 | Eden, North Carolina | News/talk/sports | Listed as the affiliate for Greensboro, High Point, & Winston-Salem, North Carolina. | |
WPEK | AM 880 | Fairview, North Carolina | Spirts | Daytime-only signal. Relayed on FM via translator W225CJ on 92.9 MHz at Asheville. | |
WRHD | FM 94.3 | Farmville, North Carolina | Sports | ||
WFAY | AM 1230 | Fayetteville, North Carolina | Country | ||
WIZS | AM 1450 | Henderson, North Carolina | Variety | ||
WHKP | AM 1450 | Hendersonville, North Carolina | Country/conservative talk | ||
WRNS | AM 960 | Kinston, North Carolina | Sports | ||
WEWO | AM 1460 | Laurinburg, North Carolina | Gospel | ||
WOBX-FM | FM 98.1 | Manteo, North Carolina | Sports | ||
WMNC-FM | FM 92.1 | Morganton, North Carolina | New country | ||
WSYD | AM 1300 | Mount Airy, North Carolina | Oldies | ||
WNBU | FM 94.1 | Oriental, North Carolina | Rhythmic oldies | ||
WPTF | AM 680 | Raleigh, North Carolina | News/talk/sports | Listed as the affiliate of record for Apex, Cary, Durham, & Wake Forest, North Carolina. | |
WAYN | AM 900 | Rockingham, North Carolina | Adult contemporary | Football & men’s basketball | |
WRXO | AM 1430 | Roxboro, North Carolina | Classic country | Daytime-only station | |
WKRX | FM 96.7 | Bluegrass, Carolina Beach Music | |||
WCAB | AM 590 | Rutherfordton, North Carolina | Country | ||
WSAT | AM 1280 | Salisbury, North Carolina | Oldies | ||
WFJA | FM 105.5 | Sanford, North Carolina | Classic hits | ||
WOHS | AM 1390 | Shelby, North Carolina | Oldies, Beach Music | ||
WMXF | AM 1400 | Waynesville, North Carolina | Sports | ||
WKSK | AM 580 | West Jefferson, North Carolina | Country | ||
WTXY | AM 1540 | Whiteville, North Carolina | Classic hits | ||
WMFD | AM 630 | Wilmington, North Carolina | News/talk/sports | Relayed on FM via translator W269DF on 101.7 MHz. Also relayed on HD radio over WKXB-HD3. | |
External links
References
- ↑ "Jones Angell To Call Play-By-Play For Football And Men's Basketball". GoHeels.com. June 27, 2011. Retrieved March 21, 2017.
- ↑ "Live, Local, & Legendary: WBT Radio In Charlotte". Radio Ink. October 5, 2016. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
- ↑ Betts, Jack (November 30, 2006). "They miss WBT up in Maryland". This Old State. CharlotteObserver.com. Retrieved February 1, 2022.
- ↑ "Tar Heels Tap WPTF". Radio Ink. 2021-07-28. Retrieved 2021-08-29.
- ↑ "WPTF 98.5 FM/680 AM New Flagship Station For Football, Men's Basketball". GoHeels.com. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. July 27, 2021. Retrieved March 10, 2022.