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Over the course of 18 months, the station migrated to 24/7 sports talk. Hill's show was canceled, and "The Wake-Up Zone" was converted to a sports-focused show, replacing Charlie Monk & Mike Donegan with Kevin Ingram and retired Titans tight end Frank Wycheck. They joined Mark Howard, who continued with the show from its previous iteration.
In addition, WKRN, Nashville’s ABC affiliate, airs another locally-produced sports show, Titans on 2, which is a weekly show that provides the coach an opportunity to talk about the team's latest match-up and looks forward to the upcoming match-up. The show also features a different Titans player every week.
The Titans Radio name was first used in the Titans first pre-season game in August 1999. Country-music formatted station WKDF, now one of WGFX's in-market sister stations, became the new flagship station in 2002. WGFX, which became a sports talk radio station in 2003, returned as the flagship for the Titans Radio Network starting with the 2010 ...
After throwing the opening touchdown in Tuesday’s 7-on-7 red zone drills, Tennessee Titans quarterback Will Levis punted the ball into a nearby lake. The punt was a result of high energy and ...
The Titans are working to replace Ran Carthon, who was fired last week after the franchise went 9-25 in his two seasons as general manager. Titans start 2nd round of GM interviews with Ed Dodds ...
That said, clubs can begin negotiating contracts with soon-to-be free agents at 11 a.m. CT Monday, giving teams a roughly two-day window to talk with agents about their clients.
The Titans were down 16–15 with 16 seconds remaining. Wycheck took a hand-off from Lorenzo Neal and then threw the ball across the field to Kevin Dyson, who then turned the ball upfield 75 yards for the game-winning touchdown. [19] The Titans would go on to make the Super Bowl that year, but would lose by a touchdown. Wycheck continued to ...
From 1989 to 1998, Keith hosted daily sports talk shows on WIVK, a Knoxville, Tennessee radio station, and he covered University of Tennessee sports in Knoxville for WIVK-FM radio and WBIR-TV television. [4] In 1996, Bud Adams, the owner of the National Football League's Houston Oilers announced he would move his team to Nashville. That same ...