OhioMediaWatch said:95.7 is a very good signal, but a bit north of the Dayton metro (it's licensed to Piqua). Still, it's good enough to alleviate 1290's nighttime signal problems in parts of the metro.
The move of news/talk/sports(talk) formats to FM is a bit of a different trend than moving sports team PBP to FM.
Most of the latter has been done by NFL teams. NFL games are mostly on Sunday afternoons, and the rest are at night, and it's an easy fit for otherwise music FMs. It also gives them a very strong platform to promote their weekday programming.
Here in Cleveland, the NFL Browns have had an FM flagship for years...most recently, it's been rock(/talk) WMMS/100.7, the market's historic rocker - give or take a few hours of talk in drive timeBefore that, the team was on classic hits/oldies WMJI/105.7.
And as in many markets, talk WTAM/1100 shares "flagship" status for the Browns with WMMS, though it's otherwise committed to the Indians and Cavaliers in season for both teams.
You don't see a lot of MLB or NBA teams on FM, though the latter is changing.
The NBA Atlanta Hawks now count an FM station as their flagship, and an odd one to boot - "99X at 97.9 FM". It's a Cumulus alt-rocker that is now heard on a pretty decent (250 watt/high stick) FM translator, with its format "homed" on the HD2 signal of another full-power station. It was once heard on the analog side of that full-power signal, hence the "99X" moniker, though it did not air the Hawks at the time.
The aforementioned Cavaliers sometimes end up on WMMS when conflicts with the Indians move them off flagship WTAM (and sometimes, vice versa, a few early season Indians games end up on WMMS as well).
Yes they are slightly different subjects, but there has to be some relation there. I don't know that one happens without the other, but it's a chicken/egg theory as to which one led to the other?