To: longhorn2004
Yes, Craig Way has been the play-by-play voice of the Longhorns for 14 years.
Yes, Craig Way has an afternoon radio program, “The Sports Buffet”, on KVET-AM “1300 The Zone”, the station that had been broadcasting Texas Longhorn sports.
Yes, if Craig Way remains on that program, he will be broadcasting the Longhorn games on the “competition”. Austin Radio Network said the “on-air staff” for broadcasting the games would remain the same for the upcoming season. We don't know what will happen after the season ends.
You seem concerned about the low power (3,200 watts) of 104.9 “The Horn”.
I have four comments about that:
1. I receive 104.9 MHz better on a cheap old clock radio than I do on my stereo receiver with an outdoor antenna. You might try different radios to see if one picks it up better than the others.
2. The “Austin Radio Network”, the network that will be broadcasting the Longhorn games, is made up of several stations in the Austin area. 104.9 “The Horn” will be the flagship station but they will be simulcasting Longhorn sports on all of these stations:
Texas Athletics sports broadcast stations:
KOKE-FM 99.3 FM
Texas Football
Texas Basketball-Men
KOKE-FM 98.5 FM
Texas Football
Texas Basketball-Men
KTAE-AM 1490
Texas Football
Texas Basketball-Men
KTXX-FM 104.9 FM
Texas Football
Texas Basketball-Men
Texas Basketball-Women
Texas Baseball
Texas Softball
"Featured Game" coverage for any or all of the other UT sports.
KTXX-HD4 - 105.3 FM
Texas Football
KLGO-AM 1260
Texas Football
FIESTA 97.1 FM (KTXX-HD2)
Spanish language Longhorn Football
KZNX-AM 1530
Spanish language Longhorn Football
You might want to try all of those stations to see which one comes in the best in your area. It might change for the winter or at night.
3. As a “last resort” it looks like you will be able to listen to the Texas Longhorn games on the Internet because of this:
Longhorn IMG Radio Network broadcasts for football, men's basketball and coaches shows are available statewide on more than 30 radio stations. Texas games also will be streamed live world-wide (without cost) to Longhorns fans on TexasSports.com and on a separate digital streaming platform that is being developed in collaboration with ARN. The platform will feature live and archived content.
4. As a “final last resort”, I have listened to stations outside of our area (examples: San Antonio or Dallas) when I could not pick up the Austin station because of weather or low power night fading (if they were only broadcasting the game on AM in Austin, which was very rare not to also be on FM).
If you do experiment with the different stations, it would be interesting to know which one came in the best in your area.