College football on radio includes theradiobroadcasting ofcollege football games, as well as pre- and post-game reports, analysis, and human-interest stories.
In 1911, more than 1,000 people gathered in downtownLawrence, Kansas, to watch a mechanical reproduction of the1911 Kansas vs. Missouri football game while it was being played. AWestern Uniontelegraph wire was set up direct fromColumbia, Missouri. A group of people then would announce the results of the previous play and used a large model of a football playing field to show the results. Those in attendance cheered as though they were watching the game live, including the school's legendaryRock Chalk, Jayhawk cheer.[1]
College football games have been broadcast since at least 1919, including the Wesleyan at New York University contest on November 18 of that year, carried byLee de Forest's experimental station,2XG in New York City.[2] The first game broadcast nationwide happened the three years later, with the1922 Princeton vs. Chicago football game.[3] The game hadGrantland Rice dubPrinceton the "Team of Destiny."
Today, virtually every college football game (at least from Division III on up; junior college,club/junior varsity squads andsprint football teams tend not to have radio coverage) is broadcast on the radio in their local market and many are broadcast nationally. Division III teams may rely onstudent-run radio stations (or, sometimes, college-ownedpublic radio stations) as their only broadcast outlet, but Division I teams generally garner enough interest to be broadcast not only on commercial radio, but on a network of stations covering a wide region. These regions vary in size and can reflect not only the geography of a fanbase[4][5] but geographies ofUS states andculture regions.[6] Other coverage includes local broadcasts of weekly coach's programs.Sports USA Radio Network,Westwood One,Compass Media Networks,ESPN Radio,Touchdown Radio, andNevada Sports Network all distribute college football broadcasts on a nationwide basis. Additionally Notre Dame and BYU have their games distributed nationally through IMG.
Radio broadcasts ofCanadian university football are not as consistent. There is generally no national radio broadcasting of university football, much in the same way that the sport is not nationally (or internationally) televised. Teams in mid-sized markets tend to be broadcast on radio, while those in the largest cities or suburbs (where the sport has to compete with much higher-profile professional sports) typically do not.
On the Internet, Division I schools tend to place audio streaming of their radio broadcasts behindpaywalls. Lower divisions and Canadian teams typically allow their affiliates and/or flagship stations to broadcast the game online without any additional fees.
(For 2020)