High school football is still a staple in smaller markets where radio stations have not lost their identity. At the station I supervise, we put on high school football, selected basketball games and am the official voice of a local collegiate baseball league. The local AM's do nothing because its cheaper to put a satellite feed on the air. Besides, they need board ops and God forbid you pay some kid minimum wage to do that. Our station, WTBR-FM, is different because (a) we're a 400 watt high school FM and have devised a system where we need no board ops and everything is done from the site via internet, one laptop computer, a small mixer with two headset mics and a crowd mic. Done. True, we don't need local revenue but do pull in underwriting money from clients who love the idea of local sports on the air. Our play-by-play is done by one adult and one student. The student gets the experience and the adult gets something nifty for his resume. AND we do this on FM. We also do "away" games...which is more important then you know. Again, I can understand why larger stations in larger markets don't put high school sports on the air but smaller markets know the value.