North has become so irrelevant in sports radio, he's not mentioned once in an extensive article in today's Daily Herald by Ted Cox
Best of times leads to worst of times at all-sports stations
By Ted Cox TV/Radio critic Posted Friday, April 28, 2006
It was a winter of discontent for all-sports radio stations.
Both WMVP 1000-AM and WSCR 670-AM saw their audiences fall off in the three-month winter ratings book released this week by Arbitron.
WMVP went from a 2.1 percent share of the overall audience 12 and older in the fall to a 1.3 share, while the Score dropped from a 1.8 to 1.2.
The fall ratings were record highs at both stations, driven by talk of the White Sox and the resurgent Bears and by the actual games of the world-champion Sox on WMVP, as well as the syndicated baseball playoffs on the ESPN Radio flagship.
The winter ratings, by contrast, were the lowest since spring ’04 at WMVP and since spring ’02 at the Score. That’s a particularly painful memory for the Score because the spring ’02 ratings book was the first time WMVP beat it in the ratings.
I’ve written before that the months of January, February and March are usually tough on the all-sports stations, what with the Blackhawks in a decades-long funk and Michael Jordan long gone from the Bulls. Yet both stations managed to combat that in recent years — until now.
Year to year, WMVP was down from a 1.7 in last winter, when the Score posted its last win with a 1.8 share.
“There was nothing going on,” said Score program director Mitch Rosen. “For this format, it was a very slow three months.”
Rosen pointed to the Fighting Illini as a hot topic a year ago, as well as the resurgent Bulls. This year, the Illini didn’t create the same sensation, and the Bulls were dead for much of the winter before charging into the playoffs at the end.
The news was little better in both stations’ target demographic among men aged 25 to 54, although it gave WMVP clear bragging rights. The Score went from a 4.6 share of that demo in the fall to 2.5 in the winter, while WMVP slipped “only” from 4.5 to 3.2.
“It is a bad book for sports radio,” admitted Jeff Schwartz, Rosen’s counterpart at WMVP. But “I am by far and away the tallest midget.”
In the 25-49 men demo in “radio prime time,” weekdays from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m., WMVP pulled a 4.2 share to the Score’s 2.8.
“I lost miniature, they lost halves,” Schwartz added.
WMVP won middays by declining from a 3.5 in the fall to 3.0 in men 25-54, giving Marc Silverman and Carmen DeFalco something to crow about, comparatively, as the Score plummeted from 5.3 to 2.5.
WMVP also got good results from syndicated ESPN Radio hosts Mike Greenberg and Mike Golic in the morning, as they finished third among men 25-49, behind only Spanish-language WOJO 105.1-FM and Jonathon Brandmeier on WLUP 97.9-FM.
Yet even Dan McNeil’s afternoon show suffered, surrendering first place in the 25-54 demo as it dropped from a 6.3 in the fall to a seventh-place 4.2 in the winter. In their second book in afternoon drive, the Score’s Dan Bernstein and Terry Boers posted a 2.8. Overall, McNeil, John Jurkovic and Harry Teinowitz had a 1.7 share to 1.3 for Boers and Bernsy.
So, the question becomes, was this a yellow-flag slowdown during a dry period, or is there reason to push the panic button at either station? I’d stick with the former. McNeil’s show still sounds lively, as does Boers & Bernsy now that they’re joined by Steve Stone in the studio on Mondays.
Silvy and Carmen probably earned a little extra play on their “short leash.” At the Score in middays, Mike Murphy is now in his element in baseball season, while Mike Mulligan sounded good this week preparing for the Bears’ draft alongside Doug Buffone and talking Bulls with Brian Hanley.
I’d expect them to stay the course for the moment, but radio is a brutal business, and CBS Radio has been particularly itchy about making moves, even if Rosen has kept things stable at the Score since becoming program director.
The all-sports format, like all-news, relies on outside events, rather than consistent programming, to drive ratings. So there’s nothing wrong with all-sports radio that, say, a city World Series wouldn’t cure.
In the air
Remotely interesting: NBC Sports again doubles up with NHL Stanley Cup playoff coverage with games at 2 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday on WMAQ Channel 5. … OLN, which is padding its sports programming, including the NHL, will be changing its name to Versus in September.
“Costas Now” with host Bob Costas returns with a close examination of Barry Bonds’ pursuit of Babe Ruth — and, of course, steroids — at 9 p.m. Tuesday on HBO. … Spike runs “Up for Grabs,” the documentary about the battle for Bonds’ 73rd home-run ball in 2002, at 10 p.m. Tuesday.
Get-will wishes to Jim Corno of Comcast SportsNet Chicago in his recovery from prostate cancer.
End of the dial: Speaking of a city series, Milt Rosenberg of “Extension 720” chats with Bernard Weisberger, author of the new 1906 World Series book “When Chicago Ruled Baseball,” after Monday night’s Cubs game on WGN 720-AM.
John Russell Ghrist talks with Naperville baseball researcher Ray Nemec as part of “Midwest Ballroom” at 5 p.m. Saturday on WDCB 90.9-FM.
— Ted Cox
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