Kornheiser, a gifted writer when he wanted to be, more or less (more, actually) abandoned his duties as a sports columnist at the Post nearly a decade ago, to pursue an enlarged if superficial media presence with ESPN and Monday Night Football. He nominally remained a WaPost sports columnist. Certainly he succeeded in broadening his name recognition and well providing for his family. But it’s also fair to question how well served Washington’s sports fans were with the move. Certainly the Post’s editors recognized no conflict.

In the hours and days ahead no doubt we’ll be inundated with bloated bandwidth and belabored broadcast reminiscence related to this media personality’s perceived impact on his community. But he abandoned his community; he was as much a Washington writer this decade as a Washington bureau reporter for the Kansas City Star.

At OFB, we won’t be joining in the lovefest for TK the remainder of this week. Kornheiser didn’t merely consistently give hockey the back of his hand while working here, he actively undermined its presence with his sneering disregard for the game, the local team, and its supporters. For him, there was only one storyline on hockey, one now outdated by decades: the ’80s playoff failures by Bryan Murray’s Caps.

For the past three years, while Washington became home to the planet’s greatest hockey talent — and one of the world’s genuinely most gifted athletes — Tony Kornheiser couldn’t have cared less.

Today, we care a great deal about this buyout news. It necessarily means improved hockey coverage here. Addition by subtraction indeed.

The magnanimous Ted Leonsis never gave up trying to persuade Kornheiser about hockey’s merits and virtues. The owner had him in his box for a playoff game just last month. Details as to how that turned out can be found here.

We ridded our region, mercifully, of another oversalaried, underproducing media personality in George Michael last year. This is a healthy trend we’re seeing by local media: unlarding. Here’s hoping the Post next approaches Michael Wilbon about a buyout.

We’ll chip in.

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A Blogging Error of Postseason Inexperience

By pucksandbooks
Saturday, April 12, 2008

Seating Chart - Game 1I made a grievous mistake in judgment this week, and it adversely impacted OFB on perhaps this site’s most important day of existence. We worked closely and well with the Capitals’ media staff to try and position ourselves to continue to bring you the feeling of hockey as we feel it from within Verizon Center, but you may have heard: the Capitals this week fielded upwards of 250 requests for press credentials for Friday night. Contrast that with what Tarik yesterday reported being the coverage corps for a Caps’ game around Thanksgiving: about a dozen. In a media environment far less fashionable than Friday night’s, two of us from OFB get credentialed so that we can deliver both words and images/video here, but at week’s start, sensing a very changed hockey culture here, I informed my OFB colleagues that we might be lucky to get just one of us in the Verizon Center press box for Game 1. Turns out, even that forecast was optimistic.

To accommodate so massive a media surge, the Capitals communicated to us their need to create an overflow area for working press — in the media lounge, downstairs, well away from the madness. That may have made for a quieter work environment, but I wanted to work in the madness. Sensing an arrival of a frozen Red Sea perhaps even louder than last week, and wanting to see how red it would be with Philly in town, I wanted to survey and savor it and share my sensory experience with you.

But I also confronted a former daily-journalist-turned-blogger’s dilemma: the men and women who make a living at covering pro sports have an obvious claim to priority access that I don’t. Mr. Leonsis in his new media age vision may not agree, but I made the decision that under such extraordinary access demand burdens, and having been accommodated for two years so uniformly magnificently by the Capitals, I wanted nothing of being headache no. 251 for the club. I could watch the game from home, and blog like others. I rationalized my decision partly on this half-truth of a premise: to the extent that I viewed myself (wrongly) as being shouldered aside by professional old media, that very condition was emblematic of the coverage success I’d sought for the game I cherish in my hometown.

At 6:15 last night, shopping for my playoff game beer and pizza out in the suburbs, believing myself able to transition back to simple, traditional hockey fan with the snap of fingers away from a keyboard, I realized the seriousness of my mistaken judgment. I felt a profound ache at being away from the action, away from working at chronicling it, and it felt awful. Even beer on sale offered no salve.

I should have shoehorned myself into that rink last night, even if I had to try and blog from underneath Abe Pollin’s desk. Rather than adopt the view that this new love affair the press is having with hockey could be an impediment to my coverage calling, I should have embraced it as a fresh challenge. I made a huge mistake. This morning, I owe our readers an apology. At least the good guys got it done!

Initially I lessened my early evening ache a bit by maintaining contact with some friends in the press box via instant message. But then my diminished ache turned to anger. I learned that Friday night’s Washington Post delegation — understandably enlarged — was pork barreled in the press box’s front row with the names of Kornheiser and Wilbon. If I ever get to own a pro hockey team they won’t be allowed in my rink — Friday night was a red-tie party for HockeyWashington, and the two of them have amply demonstrated over years not only disinterest in attending such soirées but ridiculing those who do.

My anger wasn’t directed at their hopping on the hockey media bandwagon — it was that after securing so sought after a set of seats . . . they failed to show up to work the friggin game! Kornheiser may have been cavorting about a luxury box, but he certainly wasn’t working upstairs. His workspace space preserved. Ditto for his partner in the superficial, syntax-challenged, and loud. This is a family blog, and the words I associate with this act of unfathomable arrogance won’t appear here. Maybe they could title their next ESPN podcast, ‘Pardon the Absence.’

Enough about hockey-hating egomaniacs and back-room media matters.

Friday night delivered not just a pulsating, emotionally draining victory over a gritty and skilled opponent but perhaps just as importantly it obliterated any residual concern about the viability of Washington being hockey friendly when it really mattered. A Hockeytown under construction may have a completion date that may have to be bumped up.

The Comcast broadcast went live at 7:00 last night, and at 7:00:30 it was abundantly apparent that the orange-and-blackouts of the past were lodged right there, in history. I don’t quite understand how the Capitals’ sales department managed to make it so pervasively red last night.

But I have Friday night beer leftover for them.

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So Hockey Got Asked Out on a Date This Week

By pucksandbooks
Friday, January 4, 2008

Morning Cup-A-JoeSomething momentous and stupendous happened to hockey on Tuesday. By late Wednesday afternoon I was aware of an unusual mainstream media preoccupation forming a phenomenon: they were, rather uniformly, rather nationally, saying nice things about our sport. Really nice things.

Then came Wednesday’s 5:00 hour on ESPN.

I was New-Years-resolution fitnessing at a big health club then, flat screen TVs hanging overhead, the pearls of wisdom from the talking heads captioned for the sweating. At the top of hour there there’s some hip and chic and therefore unendurable split-screen of sports columnists blathering for 30 minutes. A guy named Woody from Denver, Jay from Chicago, somebody else I didn’t know, and some smarmy host red-meating the proceedings. I figured they’d quick-hit hockey ’cause of Tuesday’s novelty and move on to the important stuff, like what Tony Romo and Jessica Simpson will do together during the Cowboys’ bye week.

Instead, everyone took turns praising not just the Winter Classic but the fundamental appeals of hockey, which, they claimed, were showcased in Buffalo on Tuesday. And they couldn’t stop talking about it. They interrupted one another with accolades. They debated when and where the next outdoor game should take place. Soldier Field was mentioned, where the “revitalized Chicago Blackhawks” would skate perhaps against another Original Six club. One fella admitted that he couldn’t stick with a single college bowl game Tuesday afternoon (imagine shunning all those three- and four-loss dynamos!) because he kept getting drawn back to the Lakeside fun in a winter wonderland.

Understand that in the wallets of these Worldwide Leader in Sports personalties are laminated cards that read, “If I even know that hockey exists, I seriously hate it.”

In the middle of the hour Kornheiser and Wilbon followed, on PTI. These two of course last did coverage favors for our sport pre-expansion. But they, too, joined in the broadcast swooning over our sport. It was no gag, either. Gym exercisers to my right and left seemed to be following the dialogue like I was, but only I kept falling off equipment pedals.

At times the MoJo that moves the media in a hungry pack around a new food source is vague and intangible. It formed and fomented around hockey late Tuesday and throughout Wednesday. I don’t think as recently as 12:45 p.m. Tuesday anyone even in the NHL’s Communications or Marketing offices could have imagined the media’s love-at-first-sight sweet nothings for our game soon to ensue.

Early Thursday I Googled “Winter Classic” as a subject search, and from little more than one full page of listings spotted these headlines:

Winter Classic is a step in the right direction

Winter Classic: Outdoor Game Scores

The Perfect Snowstorm: The Winter Classic Scores

NBC Shoots, Scores with NHL Winter Classic Ratings

Winter Classic a Huge Success

NHL Winter Classic proves league can get it right (” . . . nothing short of an overwhelming success . . . “)

In truth, hockey got lucky Tuesday, on at least two fronts. The first was a slate of yawner college pigskin bowl games, the byproduct of BCS madness rendering New Years Day — once the sport’s Christmas morning — now needless, the nutritional equivalent of television Twinkies. The second front, obviously, was the weather one: raucus and Rockwellian. The Ralph on Tuesday had everything but the Budweiser Clydesdales.

Best of all, few among the millions who watched likely thought, “Ah-hah, the spoiled millionaires are discomforted for a few hours.” No, millions saw highly skilled, smiling skaters persevering through rhythm-robbing interruptions and a rapidly deteriorating playing surface, and 71,000 supporters screaming through sideways snow and sleet and gashing Great Lake winds.

I became aware that hockey had created a crush, that in this week it was being asked out on a date by the four-sport letterman who never noticed us in class; a date perhaps only for this Saturday night, but a date nonetheless.

Here’s a loser-has-to-get-a-Mike-Green-haircut wager I direct at those who think Tuesday was a lone flicker of lucky lust directed at the league: there’s a new Yankee Stadium today under construction, and it won’t be open 5 years before the Rangers skate a regular season game in it.

Why would the Yankees and BigMedia care about us again?

Because in our natural state we’re very pretty.

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Washington Capital Frequencies - An Interview with Kurt Kehl

By OrderedChaos (Mike Rucki)
Thursday, September 6, 2007

Radio Tower

The Washington Capitals recently signed on with a new radio partner, Bonneville International Corporation, to broadcast all 82 games for the 2007-08 season. As a former DJ I was curious about the deal’s details, and how it benefits the team and Caps fans. So I recently spoke with the Kurt Kehl, the Capitals’ VP of Communications & CCO, about the new Caps radio show, the advertising arrangements, Internet broadcasts, and more.

Mike: Ted Leonsis has mentioned on his blog that the stronger radio signal was a key factor in the team’s decision to switch. What else made this deal so appealing to the team?

Kurt: Here were some of the other big factors:

  • Consistent outlet for games (minimal conflict with the Nationals)
  • Financial considerations and advertising opportunities
  • WTOP promotional opportunities
  • Promo spots & advertising inventory
  • WTOPnews.com banner advertisements all season long
  • Online streaming spots in addition to spots on 3WT and WTOP

Expanding to Baltimore was important to reach out to fans there. We were considering a Baltimore sister station. But [3WT] has an incredibly wide reach with its three stations; now we no longer need a separate station. Also, unlike WTEM, [3WT] has no overnight power reduction.

[Editor's note: WTEM operates with 50,000 watts during the day, but 5,000 watts at night. 1500 AM operates at 50,000 watts continuously.]

One problem with the old deal was surfing the dial to find a game when it was bumped to another frequency. Talk Radio 3WT broadcasts on 1500 AM (DC), 107.7 FM (Warrenton, VA), and 820 AM (Frederick, MD). Will the games be simulcast on all three frequencies?

Yes. And that holds true for the games as well as the Saturday show.

What can you tell our readers about the broadcasting arrangement? Is it a “rent the airtime, keep the ad revenue” deal for the team?

Yes – we buy time and maintain ad inventory – the key point in the agreement is ad inventory for sponsorship and revenue.

Is this a pretty standard agreement in the hockey radio world, and in the sporting world in general?

It’s not an uncommon arrangement – a lot of teams buy their airtime, unless they dominate a market like the New York Yankees or the Washington Redskins.

What varies is how much you pay, and what you get for what you pay. In that regard the Caps’ deal is unique as far as the excellent advertising and promotional opportunities provided.

The key thing for us was getting additional promotional inventory on WTOP. Bonneville offered us a generous package, including “spot banks” that we can use as we like – for example, to promote particular games or events more prominently than others.

We really focused on the promotional elements to reach out to more fans. We’re grateful for the hard-core fans that already listen to the games, but the promotional opportunities are critical to attracting new fans to the team – whether they come to games, listen on the radio, or watch on television.

The press release mentioned a “weekly one-hour Capitals magazine show on Saturday nights at 6 p.m.” Can you tell us more about the style of the show?

The show will be similar to Caps Center Ice Show, but now it’s 6 p.m. every Saturday throughout the season.

Who will host the show, and when is it slated to premiere?

We haven’t selected the host yet. The plan is to debut the show before the first game, but no official date has been announced.

Will the games and/or shows be streaming via the Internet?

Yes! We haven’t finalized exactly where they’ll be available, possibly washingtoncaps.com, but the broadcasts will be available online. We hope that the online broadcasts will provide out-of-town fans a way to follow the Caps from wherever they are.

Will the Saturday Night shows be available for download/podcast?

That’s definitely our intent, though exactly how we’ll distribute them is not yet set.

Has a name for the weekly show been selected? If not, may I suggest “Saturday Night Caps”, or SNC, since everything in DC requires an acronym or abbreviation…

I like your suggestion … maybe you should offer options on OFB and have fans write in …

Thanks Kurt! You heard the man, folks: vote away, and feel free to add your own.

What should the new weekly Capitals radio show be named?
  • Add an Answer
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New Radio Deal

By Gustafsson
Thursday, August 30, 2007

As first seen in Mike Vogel’s blog and later announced by the team, the Washington Capitals have left the hockey-hating SportsTalk980 and signed a deal with Bonneville International Corporation. The Caps will be heard on Talk Radio 3WT at 107.7 FM, 1500 AM, and 820 AM. Bonneville is the parent company of WTOP, which aired the Caps some years back.Old Radio

Bonneville has shuffled many stations and frequencies in the last three years with the latest to come this September. It was announced this week that Bonneville’s partnership with the Washington Post for Washington Post Radio, WTWP, will end on September 20th.

“The new station will feature local and syndicated talk shows to replace programming provided by The Post. WWWT, dubbed “Talk Radio 3WT,” will begin airing Sept. 20. WWWT will be simulcast on the same frequencies on which Washington Post Radio now airs: 1500 AM, 107.7 FM and 820 AM.”

The press release from the Washington Capitals states that the two-year deal will call for all 82 games to be broadcast, including pre- and postgame shows. The station will also air a weekly one-hour Capitals magazine show on Saturday nights at 6 p.m as well as cross promotions on sister station WTOP (103.5 FM and 103.9 FM).

“The addition of another premier professional sports franchise on our radio station makes us the leading provider of play-by-play sports in Washington on one of the most far-reaching signals in the area,� said Bonneville D.C. senior vice president Joel Oxley. “The combination of compelling talk during the day, and play-by-play sports at night and on the weekend delivers a powerful programming lineup for 3WT.�

“We are excited to partner with Bonneville and bring our games to such powerful signals,� Capitals chairman and majority owner Ted Leonsis said. “This agreement will allow Capitals fans throughout the region to hear our games, and the promotional elements will help us reach new fans as well.�

This is excellent news for Caps’ fans, as the 1500 frequency is a whopping 50,000 watts and can be heard at a considerable distance from Verizon Center, especially at night.

Don’t expect any tears to be shed from the so-called Sports Reporters.

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Tony Talks Hockey

By Gustafsson
Sunday, May 20, 2007

As mentioned on Friday, one of our readers alerted us that Tony Kornheiser actually talked about hockey on his morning show on Washington Post Radio, WTWP.

One of our readers informed us yesterday that on his radio show Thursday morning no less than Tony Kornheiser complained of WaPost’s lack of NHL postseason coverage! Talk about the pot calling the kettle black.

Tony did complain about the WaPost’s lack of postseason coverage, but he also took wacks at the NHL’s television contract and ratings. His guest was the Capitals’ beat reporter for the Washington Post, Tarik El-Bashir.

Have a listen:

Edit: Audio link is now fixed. I usually upload by hand but tried via WordPress and had problems.

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