I'm struggling to understand why they would blow up a station with a 3.7 share (92.5) in order to keep the station with the 1.7 share (97.1). Since the people who want to hear the classic rock staples are already tuning in to 92.5, it makes zero sense to try to move them to 97.1.
There are going to be serious reservations about someone bringing up flipping The Eagle away from rock for the fourth time, Tom. At least for awhile. It'd be pretty easy to simulcast KZPS and KEGL for a week, explain to your audience what is going on, and then relaunch 92.5 with classic country when the clock strikes midnight. The "Lone Star" brand, obviously, fits a classic country station in DFW like a glove, so there's no time, man power or expense needed to make any changes there. Moving Lone Star from one Cedar Hill stick to another makes absolutely no sense when you look at it that way, but to consolidate the two rock stations (of which, is one too many for DFW), with somewhat similarly featured artists, in an effort to try and strike lightning with a true 70's/80's classic country station going up against a pretty vulnerable KPLX, who plays nothing I've heard from earlier than the 90's in recent years, gives it something that's always been dangerous in the world of radio. Plausibility. If the right person has the light bulb turn on, a second thought won't be given to just pushing 92.5's audience over to 97.1.
Add to all of that, the current 3.7 6+ for Lone Star could easily drop to a 1.7 in the next measurement. You just never know. Look how quickly The Eagle dropped before it flipped to Sunny. 6 months prior, it was flying high (pun intended). A couple of bad months followed and they blew it up. The Edge. Put The Eagle out of the rock format, right? Well, where's The Edge now? Radio is a funny business like that. One month you're on top of the world, the next you're stuck on the bottom of someone else's shoe.
Like others here, really, I was just flinging an idea against the wall. When it comes right down to it, I expect the status quo will remain for both rock stations at least through the end of the year.
Something has to change, though, because KEGL is becoming quite the anchor for iHeart.