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Friday, March 6, 2020

Live Radio Sports: Older Fans Less Likely To Convert To Streaming


The Oakland Athletics surprised longtime fans this offseason by ending local broadcasts of live games on traditional AM/FM radio, becoming the first MLB team to do so. Instead, the team’s games will be available via a streaming station called A’s Cast that lives within the free TuneIn internet radio app. Paid subscribers can also listen on SiriusXM satellite radio.

The A’s, who have framed their streaming-only approach as forward-thinking.

Critics of the A’s move say leaving AM/FM alienates the team’s oldest and most loyal fans, but a new Morning Consult survey shows that the oldest sports fans aren’t actually the ones listening to live sports on the radio most frequently. They are, however, the least likely to convert to streaming.

Fans ages 30-44 are the most consistent consumers of live games on terrestrial radio: 29 percent listen at least once a week and 39 percent at least once a month. Fans ages 18-29 are right behind, with 34 percent in that group listening at least once a month. By contrast, fans 65 and over are the least frequent live sports listeners on the AM and FM dials, with 10 percent listening at least once a week and 21 percent listening at least once a month.

In addition, 30 percent of fans 65 and up are listening to live sports on AM/FM radio less often than they used to, 10 times as many that are listening more often. Younger fans were much likelier than the older group to say they were listening to more terrestrial radio than in the past.


The survey of 1,517 self-identified sports fans, conducted from Feb. 27 to March 1, found 21 percent listen to live sports on traditional AM/FM radio at least once a week, and 32 percent listen at least once a month. Among those who consider themselves “avid” sports fans, 38 percent are once-a-week listeners and half listen at least once a month. The margin of error for the survey is 3 percentage points.

Overall, sports fans are split nearly down the middle on their consumption of live sports broadcasts on the radio, with 52 percent saying they sometimes catch a game.

By comparison, 34 percent of fans sometimes listen to live sports on satellite radio and 30 percent sometimes listen live via a streaming platform.



Even among fans 18-29, live sports listenership on AM/FM radio is higher than on satellite radio or online.

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