As to WECK doing Standards and the competition it faces from WHTT.
WHTT appears to be featuring hits from the 70s quite heavily, with a surprisingly generous rotation of hits from the 60s, and a smattering of hits from the 80s. If you consider (and accept) that a person reaches "the age of music awareness" around 12, WHTT appears to be centered on 45-54.
WHTT will likely attract some 40-44 year olds with the '80s and regain the 55-60 year olds with a generous portion of hits from 1965-69.
As an example, take a song that was a hit in 1972 and apply it to a person who was 12 years old at the time; that person is now 49 years old. The Classic Hits format is targeted to persons born between 1955 and 1969. The occasional hits from the 80s appeal to younger end of the demo, born 1970 and later. The hits from the 60s appeal to those born 1949-54.
Five years from now, however, there'll be a problem. The station will be top-heavy and will have to incorporate more 80s and 90s. There's the rub. Mix wasn't a half bad format as much as it was a half-assed format. The name never succeeded in Buffalo on WBUF years ago and it didn't succeed on WHTT because listeners couldn't figure out what Mix means. WHTT went off the rails when it added too many "girlie" songs and got "middled" by WJYE on the older end, and Star which owns the "girlie song" Hot AC franchise and the younger end of the female demo.
Both Entercom and Regent offer "A Wall of Women" when it comes to advertising demos. Citadel has the Men and a fair number of lady-rockers, but nowhere near the number of Women that Entercom and Regent can deliver.
It wouldn't surprise me if Classic Hits on WHTT steals some Men from 97 Rock's back pockets, but at least those Men will stay under the same roof and Citadel will be able to package them.
WECK as a Standards station would have to concentrate on music from 1952 to 1969, (listeners born 1940 to 1957) with a smattering of acceptable pop hits from the 70s. With each year and the diversity of song styles, it's tougher to do the Standards format. Fans of Margaret Whiting and the Mills Brothers, let alone Charlie Rich just aren't around.
AM 740 does a fine job with Standards, but its rotations are all over the place. Enjoyable in some ways, but inconsistent in others.
I'll be listening to UB Bulls football today on WECK. If anything, I'd beef up the local high school sports talk and football-basketball games on WECK and give it a stronger toe-hold on local sports talk.