The Mercury News Weekend

Sharks move audio broadcasts to all online

- Ky aurtis Pashelka cpashelka@bayareanew­sgroup.com

The San Jose Sharks have parted ways with longtime broadcast partner 98.5 K FOX- FM, announcing plans Thursday to move all audio broadcasts of their games for this and future seasons to their website and mobile app.

T he NHL team announced the ‘ Sharks Audio Network’ would debut Tuesday at 8 a.m. and feature Sharks and Barracuda- related programmin­g 24 hours a day on the Sharks+SAP Center App and at sjsharks.com.

The Sharks’ move is meant to increase content for fans and designed to expand the team’s reach throughout the Bay Area.

KFOX, a classic rock station, has been the Sharks’ radio network flagship since the 2000-01 NHL season. While

KFOX’s signal is powerful throughout much of the South Bay, it does not reach parts of the East Bay, including central Contra Costa County.

“This certainly was not a situation where we were dissatisfi­ed with KFOX. They’ve been a great partner to us,” said Scott Emmert, the Sharks’ vice president of communicat­ions. “But the reality is even the strongest signals have their limitation­s. There’s only so many 50,000 watt flame throwers out there.

“With a lot of the competitio­n that we have in the market with other profession­al teams, the reality is that some of those options are limited.”

Emmert said the possibilit­y existed to continue to have broadcasts on both terrestria­l radio and the team’s digital platforms, but the organizati­on felt it was time to consolidat­e all of its game broadcasts into one area.

“When you’re splitting the audience, it does make it tough, particular­ly when ratings come into play, when there’s market demographi­cs, when you’re trying to entice advertiser­s to support, there is a little bit of a need to centralize a lot of this content,” Emmert said. “Obviously the games have been available via streaming previously, so people have had access to that.

“We fully understand that there are lots of people out there who are attached to terrestria­l radio, and that this is going to take a little bit of time, it’s going to take a little bit of education on our part.”

Bonneville Internatio­nal owns and operates KFOX and three other Bay Area radio stations.

Brian A. Figula, director of programmin­g operations at KFOX, wrote in an emailed statement that, “All of us at 98.5 KFOX and Bonneville are big fans and supporters of the Sharks and value our history together. We are presently working with them in ways that continue what is a long term partnershi­p and that are responsive to the significan­t changes in the market.”

The team’s audio broadcasts will still feature longtime play-by-play voice Dan Rusanowsky, who will be joined by color analysts and former Sharks players Scott Hannan and Mark Smith. All Sharks games will still be televised. As of now, 53 games will be shown on NBCSCA, including the Sharks’ seasonopen­er next Thursday against the Arizona Coyotes.

Three games, the Feb. 3 and April 21 games vs. Vegas and the March 24 game vs. Los Angeles will be on NBCSN. The Sharks’ April 21 game could represent Patrick Marleau’s 1,768th career NHL game, making him the league’s alltime leader in that category.

The Sharks experiment­ed with digital- only audio broadcasts last season, as four games last February were aired on their app and website and not on KFOX.

Just before the Sharks announced their plans for digitalonl­y broadcasts early last year, the Oakland A’s trumpeted their own plans to abandon terrestria­l radio and broadcast all their games on A’s Cast using the TuneIn streaming service. But the plan didn’t go over well with fans and in July, six games into the truncated 60game season, the A’s announced that Bloomberg 960 AM (KNEW) would broadcast the remaining 54 games of the season.

“It’s going to take some time, and we fully understand that there’s probably going to be some growing pains and maybe even a few hiccups along the way,” Emmert said.

“But we were very encouraged by what we saw last year, both from a technical perspectiv­e and from the ability to do things a little bit different and interact with fans. We really think we have something to build off there and are looking forward to not only retaining the audience that we have, but continuing to grow it as we produce more and more content.”

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