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KCSP (AM)

KCSP
KCSP (AM) 610 Sports.png
City Mission, Kansas
Broadcast area Kansas City metropolitan area
Branding 610 Sports
Slogan "Our Teams. Our Town."
Frequency 610 kHz
Repeater(s) KRBZ-HD 2
First air date 1922 (as WDAF)
Format Sports
Power 5,000 watts
Class B
Facility ID 11270
Transmitter coordinates 38° 59' 03" N, 94° 37' 42" W
Callsign meaning Kansas City SPorts
Former callsigns WDAF (1922-2003)
Affiliations Fox Sports Radio
Owner Entercom
(Entercom License, LLC)
Sister stations KRBZ, KMBZ-FM, KQRC, KZPT, WDAF-FM, KMBZ, KWOD
Webcast Listen Live
Website 610sports.com

KCSP (610 AM, "610 Sports") is a sports/talk radio station located in Mission, Kansas, serving the Kansas City metropolitan area. The Entercom-owned station broadcasts on 610 kHz. Its transmitter is located in Prairie Village, Kansas, and studios are located in Mission, Kansas.

KCSP AM is a class B regional station, with a broadcasting power of 5,000 Watts in both the daytime and nighttime, using a non-directional antenna (1 tower).

Although the station had the slogan "The Football Channel" when it began in June 2003, it is currently the flagship station of MLB's Kansas City Royals, whose rights it reacquired for the Entercom radio network in 2008 which had held the rights on KMBZ before. The Kansas Jayhawks radio network also appears on KCSP, which switched from covering the Missouri Tigers to Kansas in 2006, sending the Tigers broadcasts to KMBZ.

The Kansas City Star signed on experimental station 9XAB in 1922, licensed at 833 kHz, as part of a rivalry with other newspapers in town. Popular Science magazine noted the station in its March 1922 issue for airing weather and market reports at 11:30 a.m. and 2:00 p.m., and concerts in the evening. The Star adopted the WDAF call letters May 16, 1922. WDAF bounced around various frequencies, traveling to 750, 730, 680, 820 and 810 kHz. WDAF moved to 610 kHz in 1928, splitting time with station WOQ. WDAF joined the NBC radio network before moving to 610 kHz, running both Red & Blue programs up until 1930, when they became a primary NBC Red affiliate.

WDAF increased power to 5,000 watts daytime in 1935, and 5,000 watts nighttime in 1940. In 1958, the Star sold WDAF to National Missouri TV. In 1960, Transcontinent Television took over. Taft Broadcasting bought WDAF in 1964.


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