Sports_Byline_USA

Sports Byline USA

Sports Byline USA

American sports radio network


Sports Byline USA is an international sports radio network based in the United States. Sports Byline USA is also the name of the flagship program on the network. It was the first national sports talk show and was launched on October 24, 1988.[1] Sports Byline USA is located in San Francisco, California. Nationally, the network claims programming is heard on 200 satellite radio stations, was on Sirius Satellite Radio channel 122, and on CRN Digital Talk Radio Networks channel 2. The station is also available on several international stations and is the main sports programming of the American Forces Network which broadcasts on 500 radio stations in 177 countries. Sports Byline USA is no longer on Sirius XM 122 which is now CNBC, but its sister program, Sports Overnight America is on Sirius XM 203.[2]

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Broadcast network

Sports Byline programming, which is the main sports news provider for the American Forces Network[3] and also broadcasts on these platforms:

Background

In 1988, when Willie Mays toured to promote his new book Say Hey: the Autobiography of Willie Mays,[10][11] Mays was Ron Barr's first guest for the first hour of the first broadcast of Sports Byline USA[12]

Barr used his knowledge as a sports anchor for KIRO-TV in Seattle and former NBC affiliate KRON-TV in San Francisco.,[13] his connections as a sportscaster for the Washington Huskies, the Seattle SuperSonics, the Boston Celtics and the Stanford Cardinal[14] and his journalism background, reporting for the Washington Post, to build an affiliate satellite network of radio stations across the country that were part of the Sports Byline launch. He also connected with the American Forces Network, to provide their main sports programming content.

In 2020, there are over 35 talk show hosts on the 24/7 network, which still maintains its original concept: to [15] give sports fans across the nation[16][17] the chance to call in and talk to their favorite athletes. The network's hosts take listener calls on major issues in the sports world.[18]

Leadership

Sports Byline USA's staff includes Chairman/Host, Ron Barr, President Darren Peck[19] and its limited partnership group. Included in the group are 20-time Wimbledon Champion Billie Jean King, former NFL running back Darrin Nelson, super sports attorney Leigh Steinberg and other successful business professionals. Bill Walsh, the Hall of Fame and 3-time Super Bowl winning coach, was on the Sports Byline USA Partnership Advisory Board of Directors.

Spotlights

American Football Network

Sports Byline USA had signed on to be the radio distributor[20] of broadcasts of the All American Football League, with the games being produced by Touchdown Radio Productions. The AAFL suspended operations in March 2008, one month prior to its launch, and has yet to begin play as of 2011.

Ron Barr On Location

Barr's close relationship with the American Forces Network includes traveling to be with the American troops in Iraq[21] and Afghanistan, with live interviews of sports celebrities like Tom Brady, Warren Moon, Anthony Muñoz, Adonal Foyle and Bill Romanowski and coaches Phil Jackson, Marv Levy and Brian Billick to lift the spirits of American Forces deployed there.[22]

Library of Congress Collection

In January 2013, the U.S. Library of Congress acquired more than 4,000 recordings of interviews by Ron Barr broadcast between 1988 and 2003. The recordings are digitized[23] at the Library's Packard Campus in Culpeper, Virginia. The collection[24] includes a wide range of players, coaches, and more, including Bill Russell (baseball), John Wooden, George Steinbrenner[25] and Earl Lloyd the Alexandria, Virginia native who in 1950 became the first African-American to play in the National Basketball Association. The collection includes a large archive of audio interviews with Negro league baseball players[26]

Sports Byline: a US Post Office for Special Postal Cancellation

On April 23, 2019 Sail Sport Talk at Sports Byline became a post office for the USPS Building Bridges Special Postal Cancellation. SF Postmaster Abraham P. Cooper signs celebrity wall under Tom Slingsby's signature

On April 23, 2020, the United States Postal Service designated Sports Byline as a Building Bridges Pier 39 Postal Station for the USPS Building Bridges Special Postal Cancellation Series. The Ceremony took place live on Sail Sport Talk with Karen Earle Lile and Rick Tittle as co-hosts and Winston Bumpus, receiving the first inking of the cancellation on behalf of the Lady Washington from Postmaster Abraham Cooper.[27]

Sail Sport Talk with Karen Lile is a Talk Show partnered with Sports Byline and placed inside Tittilating Sports[28] to engage mainstream sports fans with the international world of sailing.[29] It began April 4, 2019 and continues to the present.[30][31][32]

Tittlating Sports with Rick Tittle Rick Tittle made the switch to radio with Sports Byline USA in 1999, beginning as a producer and production director, before starting his Titillating Sports show in 2003. Rick’s humorous and thoughtful approach to sports talk lends itself to all sports,[33] as Rick lets the callers drive the topics of the day. Rick Tittle's show, which live broadcasts 3 hours, five days a week, also features partnerships with other hosts, such as A.I. Expert Neil Sahota[34]

Programs and hosts

Sports Byline represents a diversity of sports in its 24/7 programming.

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Sales representation

On June 30, 2009, Sports Byline USA signed an advertising sales representation agreement with Focus 360 LLC. Focus 360's Chief Executive Officer, Phil Brown, said that the National Focus network and syndication division will sell Sports Byline USA to advertisers on a stand-alone basis as well as in conjunction with National Baseball Network, another major sports network represented by National Focus.


References

  1. Cannady, Sheryl (28 Feb 2014). "Library Presents a Discussion of Golden Moments in Sports". Library of Congress. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  2. "Stitcher Live Stream of 24/7 Sports Byline USA". Archived from the original on 2020-10-06. Retrieved 2020-11-26.
  3. Watts, Meredith (26 Apr 2001). "Say Hey, Coast to Coast". The New York Times. Retrieved 3 Jan 2021.
  4. Mays, Willie (1988). Sey Hey: The Autobiography of Willie Mays (First ed.). Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0671632922.
  5. "Sports Byline USA broadcast with Willie Mays: Story is told in the audio interview". Library of Congress. Library of Congress. Retrieved 3 Jan 2021.
  6. "Stanford 125: The 1970s". News. Stanford University. 22 Oct 2019. Retrieved 28 Dec 2020.
  7. Goldfisher, Allistair (29 May 1998). "Sports Byline USA to air syndicated show on KBPA". Silicon Valley Business Journal. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  8. Pergament, Alan (10 Oct 1992). "WWKB Radio Bringing Big-Time Sports to Buffalo". Newspaper. The Buffalo News. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  9. "Sports Byline and Ron Barr". Castle Country Radio. Eastern Utah Broadcasting Company. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  10. Fong-Torres, Ben (30 Dec 2015). "KNBR's Larry Krueger: You can go home again". Newspaper. San Francisco Chronicle. SF Gate. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  11. Fong-Torres, Ben (July 20, 2012). "Sports talk - from S.F. to the world". Newspaper. San Francisco Chronicle. SF Gate. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  12. "TFN, The Football Network, Creates I-AA Post-Season All Star Game". Newspaper. Chattanoogan. Chattanoogan. 16 Apr 2016. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  13. 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division (15 Jul 2009). "'Sports Byline' Radio Show comes to Mosul". Newspaper. Defense Visual Information Distribution Service. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. Fong-Torres, BEn (23 Aug 2009). "Sports Byline USA' brings jocks to Iraq". Newspaper. San Francisco Chronicle. SF Gate. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  15. "Sports Byline Collection Items at LOC". Library of Congres. Library of Congress. Retrieved 9 Dec 2020.
  16. "Sports Byline Collection". Library of Congress. Library of Congress. Retrieved 9 Dec 2020.
  17. Steinberg, Dan (13 Mar 2014). "Elgin Baylor on growing up in Washington". Newspaper. The Washington Post. The Washington Post. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  18. Harlsell, Mark (18 Jan 2013). "Library Acquires Archive of Historic Sports Recordings". Library of Congress Gazette. 24. No 2: 1, 4, 5. Retrieved 9 Dec 2020.
  19. Ruiz, Augustine (22 April 2019). "USPS Building Bridges Special Postal Cancellation - Commemorating 30th Birthday of Lady Washington Tall Ship". California News. United States Postal Service. Retrieved 14 Dec 2020.
  20. Leonard, Jake (11 April 2020). "Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network: Titillating Sports with Rick Tittle". Heartland Media Group of Central Illinois LLC. Heartland News Feed. Retrieved 24 Nov 2020.
  21. "Special Olympics Continues to Deliver Sports, Health and More". Special Olympics. Special Olympics. Jan 2020. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  22. "A.I. Expert Neil Sahota Launches New Show April 23 On Sports Byline USA Radio Network". Newspaper. TMC Net News. TMC Net. 22 April 2020. Retrieved 10 Dec 2020.
  23. "Official Website Programing List". Sports Byline USA. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
  24. Bloom, Leopold (25 August 2011). "Rick Tittle Interviewed for AN". Athletics Nation. Vox Media. Retrieved 27 Dec 2020.

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