Static on 960: Calgary Loses a Sports Radio Institution

By admin — In News — July 8, 2026

   ​For many Calgarians, the first sign that something had changed wasn’t a headline or a push notification. It was silence. On Tuesday morning, listeners who tuned to Sportsnet 960 The Fan expecting the usual mix of Flames discussion, breaking news, and debate were met with static. The station that had served as Calgary’s sports soundtrack for decades had gone dark. The closure arrived as part of a broader restructuring by Rogers Sports & Media, which announced it would shut down several radio stations and media outlets across the country, including Sportsnet 960 and 660 News in Calgary. Rogers is shutting Sportsnet 960 The Fan and 660 News in Calgary as part of a national restructuring. The shutdown, announced Tuesday, affects multiple radio stations in Calgary, Vancouver, Halifax, and Kitchener. In a statement provided to FlamesNation, Rogers said: “After a thorough review of our radio stations across the country, we have made the difficult but necessary decision to close Sportsnet 960 and 660 News in Calgary. We are grateful to our listeners and to our team for their contributions to the local community.”
The cuts extend beyond Calgary. Six stations in four markets are being affected, including outlets in Vancouver, Halifax, and Kitchener. Apparently, even the Flames were caught off guard. According to CTV Calgary, the Calgary Flames were “blindsided” by the news, with the team’s vice-president of communications, Sean Kelso, saying the organization learned of the closure as the announcement became public. That detail underscores how deeply The Fan 960 had become woven into the franchise’s day-to-day identity. The station carried Flames games, hosted postgame shows, and served as a regular platform for players, coaches, executives, and fans. For many listeners, it was less a media outlet than a community gathering place. The loss lands at a curious moment for hockey in Calgary.
Interest in the Flames has been trending upward, a new arena project remains on the horizon, and the organization is trying to build momentum around a younger core. Yet the city’s primary sports-talk station has disappeared just as demand for local hockey conversation remains strong. That is what makes this story larger than a business decision. Sports radio has never simply been about scores; it is where fans process trades, argue about line combinations, celebrate playoff wins, and vent after losses. It is where generations learned the voices of Calgary hockey. For many listeners, names such as Peter Maher, Mike Richards, Rob Kerr, Peter Loubardias, and Pat Steinberg became part of the rhythm of daily life over the years. For some, those broadcasts even shaped careers. The Fan 960 was often a first classroom for aspiring journalists, broadcasters, and storytellers who learned the language of hockey through hours spent listening in cars, kitchens, and on the go. The closure marks the end of an era in Calgary media, a shift that goes beyond a single station and reaches into how fans experienced their team, their city, and their shared sports culture.  

Content Source: Yahoo News

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