John Sterling in Yankees Broadcast Booth |
The Yankees appear to have outdone the Mets again.
The NYTimes is reporting their new radio deal, when
completed, will put them on WFAN Radio for the next 10 years for at least $15
million a year, according to an executive briefed on the negotiations but not
authorized to comment. WFAN could also
carry the New York City Football Club, an expansion Major League Soccer team
that is a partnership of the Yankees and Manchester
City of England ’s Premier League.
Read Original Posting “CBS Radio Moving Yankees Broadcast To
WFAN: Click Here
By moving to all-sports WFAN 660 AM / 101.9 FM from all-news
WCBS 880 AM after this season, the Yankees will bump the Mets from WFAN, ending
an association between the team and the station that began with the station’s
inception in 1987.
The identity of the Mets’ new radio home is almost as
uncertain as the season when they will become winners again.
“What was important for the Mets was WFAN’s signal, 660, the
best AM signal in North America, which is a big bonus for the Mets and their
network,” said Joel Hollander, a former chief executive of CBS Radio, the owner
of WFAN and WCBS-AM, the radio home of the Yankees since 2002. “That was
something the Mets liked very much.”
During a visit to a firehouse Tuesday in Midtown Manhattan,
Jeff Wilpon, the Mets’ chief operating officer, said it was “fairly accurate”
that the team was leaving WFAN, and he indicated that for a while longer, Mets
radio rights would be in limbo.
According to sports media columnist Bob Raissman at NYDaily News,the Mets were getting between $6 million and $7 million per year in their deal with WFAN, which expires at the end of this season.
WFAN will be hard-pressed to make money over the course of
the contract with a $15 million-$20 mil per-year nut to cover. Raisman writes just
ask the suits at Boston ’s
WEEI who saw their station turned upside down by a 10-year deal with the Red
Sox worth $18 million per.(Photo: The Greedy Pinstripes)
According to sports media columnist Bob Raissman at NYDaily News,the Mets were getting between $6 million and $7 million per year in their deal with WFAN, which expires at the end of this season.
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