Vancouver’s Sports Talk Resurrection: Beyond the End of Sportsnet 650

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By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

July 10, 2026

The death of Sportsnet 650 is not a disaster for real-time sports talk, the Vancouver Canucks, the Lower Mainland or the Province.

It’s an opportunity.

It presents the Vancouver Canucks with a situation to evolve from a traditional sports team, reliant on third-party broadcasters, into a fully diversified, self-sufficient, vested, sports media and entertainment organization.

For the Lower Mainland and British Columbia, it’s a real time wake up call to meet the present and future head on, resurrecting real time sports talk conversation through a different medium, through-out the Lower Mainland and British Columbia.

The abrupt void of Sportsnet 650 leaves a passionate, highly engaged sports market—anchored by the Vancouver Canucks (NHL), BC Lions (CFL), Vancouver Whitecaps (MLS), Vancouver Canadians (MiLB), and Vancouver Giants (WHL)—without a centralized, real-time audio town square.

The loss severely impacts the visibility of amateur and grassroots sports across British Columbia, which historically relied on the coverage provided by local sports networks.

Remember When…It Can Again!

Following the closure of TSN 1040 in 2021, displaced hosts successfully pivoted to digital formats, proving that the audience will follow trusted voices off the radio dial.

  • Matt Sekeres and Blake Price launched a digital-only live show via Go Goat Sports, a venture that found immediate success. This property eventually partnered with The Nation Network—the parent company of the popular digital outlet CanucksArmy—to consolidate Vancouver hockey coverage. This independent network also absorbed respected insiders like Rick Dhaliwal and Jeff Paterson, who launched the Rink Wide Vancouver podcast.
  • Similarly, national digital networks like the Locked On Podcast Network expanded rapidly to provide daily, localized team coverage across the NHL, explicitly recognizing that traditional sports outlets were underserving hockey fans in specific markets.

The Displaced Talent Pool: An Unprecedented Human Capital Advantage

The displacement of elite broadcasting talent presents an unprecedented opportunity to reconstruct Vancouver’s sports media infrastructure outside the rigid, increasingly obsolete confines of legacy telecommunications conglomerates.

To return these professionals to the medium in which they excel is key to ensuring the Lower Mainland retains its vital sports coverage across both professional and amateur levels. The path forward for displaced talent at Sportsnet 650 requires migrating to multi-platform digital models that leverage existing audience loyalty.

The sudden termination of Sportsnet 650 released a formidable roster of broadcasting talent into the open market.

Unlike traditional corporate layoffs, where skills may be redundant, the capital in sports media rests entirely within the social relationships established between the hosts and their audience.

The personalities displaced by Rogers possess the brand equity, institutional knowledge, and community trust required to immediately anchor a new independent venture.

A unified collective of former Sportsnet 650 talent could propose a real-time sports talk programming block to an existing British Columbia radio operator.

Rather than operating as salaried employees of the station—subject to the whims of corporate downsizing—the talent collective operates as an independent production house, leasing the airtime or entering a strict revenue-share agreement with the broadcaster.

Potential BC broadcast partners with the necessary infrastructure include Pattison Media (which operates 102.7 The Peak and 93.7 JR Country in Vancouver) and Stingray Group (which operates Z95.3 and 104.3 The Breeze).

There are other examples that serve as blueprints, such as the ALLCITY Network, a Free Ad-Supported Streaming TV (FAST) channel, Steve Dangle Podcast Network (SDPN).

Canucks Sports and Entertainment (CSE): In-House Podcast, Real-Time Conversation

​With the abrupt cancellation of shows hosted by Mike Halford, Jason Brough, Thomas Drance, Jamie Dodd, Satiar Shah, and Bik Nizzar, CSE is presented with a unique opportunity.

  • Rather than allowing these highly influential voices to be absorbed by third-party platforms like The Nation Network or Locked On, CSE could approach some directly to establish an official, in-house real-time daily media presence as well as a podcast.

This model is already gaining traction at the league level.

  • In late 2024, the NHL partnered with iHeartMedia to produce and distribute official podcasts, such as NHL Unscripted with Virk and Demers, demonstrating a strategic push to own the audio space rather than renting it out.

​If Canucks Sports and Entertainment launches a “Canucks Audio Network,” they can establish a daily Canucks media narrative of a dedicated sports talk format, that hypes up the games, that drives fan engagement, analyzes team performance, and sustains ticket and merchandise revenue from the airwaves:

  • An in-house network ensures that Canucks branding, sponsor integrations, and corporate messaging are woven seamlessly into the content that fans consume daily.
  • Further, Francesco Aquilini, the Chairman of CSE, has historically demonstrated a desire for being involved in the franchise’s direction and public perception.
  • An internally operated media network aligns perfectly with an ownership style that favors the team to directly monetize ad reads and sponsorships without an intermediary like Rogers taking a percentage of the revenue.

Monetization and Corporate Sponsorship

The BCLC PlayNow Integration

To facilitate either a standalone digital network or some other type of real-time sports talk partnership, corporate sponsorship must be secured to replace the internal sales infrastructure previously provided by Rogers.

Independent sports media thrives on high-trust, host-read advertising, which boasts significantly higher conversion rates than traditional radio spots.

In British Columbia, the British Columbia Lottery Corporation (BCLC) and its digital property, PlayNow.com, represent the most critical, deep-pocketed source of sports sponsorship capital. PlayNow.com is the only 100% legal, regulated sportsbook in the province, with revenues directly funding community grants, healthcare, and education.

BCLC is already deeply entrenched in the local sports ecosystem, serving as the Official Sports Betting Partner for the Vancouver Canucks, Vancouver Warriors (NLL), and Abbotsford Canucks (AHL).

Secondary Sponsorship Targets

Beyond regulated gaming, a Vancouver sports network must actively target groups that historically rely on local radio:

  • Automotive Groups: Massive regional entities like the Jim Pattison Auto Group or the Northshore Auto Mall are prime candidates for long-term sponsorships, as they require high-frequency local exposure.
  • Local Hospitality and Brewing: Independent brands like Four Winds Brewing and Greta Bar, which already partner successfully with CanucksArmy for interactive watch parties, can sponsor specific segments and host live network events, driving physical foot traffic.
  • Real Estate and Financial Services: Leveraging the older, more affluent demographic of hardcore sports listeners, independent financial advisors and real estate firms benefit immensely from the inherent trust placed in the hosts.

Some Thoughts

The abrupt closure of Sportsnet 650 by Rogers Sports & Media is a definitive, undeniable signal that the legacy model of AM sports radio is economically unviable for telecommunications giants facing declining ad revenues. And conglomerates that are involved in media, are shedding investments that are losing money, even if they have a surplus of billions of dollars to spend.

However, the demand for well crafted, engaging sports conversation in the Lower Mainland and British Columbia remains wanting.

As indicated earlier, the talent pool suddenly available in Vancouver, possesses the brand equity, institutional knowledge, and social ties in audience relationships required to dominate a modernized media landscape.

And as previously stated, the death of Sportsnet 650 is not a disaster for reaĺ-tine sports talk, the Vancouver Canucks, the Lower Mainland or the Province.

It’s an opportunity. That should be taken.

In conclusion:

My hope is that the resurrectors of Vancouver’s next real-time sports talk media, will not only rescue a vital community service but construct a more profitable, resilient, and deeply connected enterprise than AM radio or any conglomerate could ever provide, or break up.

Let’s make it happen.

Until next time, hockey fans

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Future of Canucks Media After Sportsnet 650 Shutdown

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By Andrew Phillip Chernoff | CanucksBanter

July 8, 2026

For the next few days, I will be focusing on the changes surrounding Vancouver sports broadcasting and the affects by Rogers in the altering of the sports media landscape in the Lower Mainland and in British Columbia.

Strategic Realignment in Vancouver Sports Broadcasting

As I reported on Monday in CanucksBanter, operating entirely outside the realm of on-ice deployment, a massive corporate shift occurred on July 6, 2026, when Rogers Communications announced an agreement to purchase the remaining 25% ownership stake in Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (MLSE) from Kilmer Sports Inc. for $4.35 billion, gaining 100% ownership.

While MLSE primarily controls the Toronto Maple Leafs and Toronto Raptors, this massive consolidation of Canadian sports equity by Rogers—which also owns the Toronto Blue Jays and Sportsnet—carries indirect implications for the Canucks.

  • Rogers maintains a strategic partnership with the Vancouver Canucks, holding immense power over regional and national broadcast rights.
  • As Rogers centralizes its sports media monopoly and pledges to invest in championship-caliber teams across Canada, the financial health and broadcast visibility of the Canucks’ rebuild will be intimately tied to these overarching corporate dynamics moving forward.

Rogers’ Corporate Ownership Shifts and Local News and Sports Broadcast Dynamics

On July 7, 2026, the Canadian sports media landscape experienced a seismic contraction that fundamentally altered the relationship between professional sports franchises and their local broadcast partners

Rogers simultaneously closed down News 1130 (the region’s primary AM news and traffic authority) and Sportsnet 650.

Over the last couple of decades, the economic viability of AM sports radio has been fatally undermined by evolving consumer habits and the ubiquitous availability of on-demand audio.

Things changed and supposedly the consumer has benefited, and went down a different path, putting at risk the way it was, until July 7, 2026 when time caught up.

The move reflects a critical evolution in how consumers, particularly dedicated sports fans, consume audio content.

Industry analysts note that listeners have migrated en masse from traditional, sports radio shows to highly specialized, niche podcasts.

Professional sports leagues and individual athletes have also consumed audiences by producing their own digital content, creating an environment where the outgrowth of sports radio has effectively devoured its predecessor., leaving it to only putt-putt along, while superior technology and a new audience, left it in the dust.

Now, the listeners of Sportsnet 650 and News 1130, are left wanting and wondering just what will replace it, and fill the void.

While the closure of Sportsnet 650 immediately silences daily localized sports shoulder programming—including highly rated drive-time shows—the live game broadcast rights present a complex contractual entanglement. Rogers Communications retains the exclusive regional television and radio rights for Canucks Sports & Entertainment (CSE) through the 2032-2033 National Hockey League (NHL) season.

Rogers’ divestment from local sports radio, the erosion of the Vancouver sports media platform, has now led to responding to the fallout, and how to respond to Rogers’ divestment from local sports radio, the strict limits of the existing Canucks broadcast contract, and the technological viability of the Canucks establishing an in-house media network.

Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) models utilized by the Vegas Golden Knights and the Free Ad-Supported Streaming Television (FAST) models adopted by the Dallas Stars and Anaheim Ducks—are examples of the strategic choices available to Canucks Sports & Entertainment as they navigate a highly fragmented digital media ecosystem in the Lower Mainland and British Columbia.

The July 2026 Broadcasting Paradigm Shift

The continued erosion of the traditional AM/FM broadcasting model in the face of digital media proliferation has led this week to Canada-wide cuts resulting in the elimination of 230 positions across the Rogers Sports & Media division, with 80 jobs lost directly from the radio sector, many in British Columbia’s Lower Mainland.

In Calgary, the company shuttered both 660 NewsRadio and Sportsnet 960 The Fan, the latter of which served as the official radio broadcaster for the Calgary Flames. In Eastern Canada, NewsRadio 95.7 in Halifax and 570 NewsRadio in Kitchener were also taken off the air. However, the most profound regional impact was felt in Vancouver, where Rogers simultaneously extinguished News 1130 (the region’s primary AM news and traffic authority) and Sportsnet 650.

According to internal data released by Rogers following the closures, the audience for local sports radio had dwindled to unsustainable levels.

  • From October 2025 to May 2026—a period encompassing the entirety of the NHL regular season and the opening rounds of the playoffs—Sportsnet 650 averaged a mere 2,100 listeners at any given time. Its Calgary counterpart, Sportsnet 960, performed even more poorly, averaging just 1,200 listeners during the same period. Against the high overhead costs of maintaining terrestrial broadcast towers, unionized production staff, and premium on-air talent, these audience figures cannot support the advertising revenues required to maintain profitability.
Impacted MarketStation ShutteredPrimary Programming FormatHistorical Significance
VancouverSportsnet 650 (CISL-AM)All-Sports Talk / Play-by-PlayOfficial Canucks broadcaster since 2017; region’s last sports station.
Vancouver1130 NewsRadio (CKWX-AM)All-News / Traffic / WeatherLegacy Vancouver news authority.
CalgarySportsnet 960 (CFAC-AM)All-Sports Talk / Play-by-PlayOfficial Flames broadcaster; legacy sports brand since 2001.
Calgary660 NewsRadio (CFFR-AM)All-News / Traffic / WeatherLegacy Calgary news authority.
HalifaxNewsRadio 95.7 (CJNI-FM)All-News / TalkPrimary regional news outlet for Nova Scotia.
Kitchener570 NewsRadio (CKGL-AM)All-News / TalkLocal news coverage for the Waterloo Region

The Drivers In Rogers’ Divestment From Localized Sports and News

As outlined at the top of this article, a mere day prior to the radio closures, Rogers Communications announced a monumental $4.35 billion acquisition of Kilmer Sports Inc.’s 25% stake in Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (MLSE).

Consequently, Rogers now possesses 100% ownership of MLSE, giving the telecommunications giant absolute control over the Toronto Maple Leafs (NHL), Toronto Raptors (NBA), Toronto FC (MLS), and the Toronto Argonauts (CFL).

The elimination of local sports media in Western markets was done with forethought and allows the company to maximize profitability and streamline its focus on its newly acquired, wholly-owned franchise assets in Ontario.

All the above on the heels of the end of Hockey Night in Canada. In June 2026, Sportsnet and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) jointly announced the termination of their sub-licensing agreement, officially ending the public broadcaster’s 74-year run of airing NHL games.

Moving forward, nationally televised Saturday night games will be exclusive to Rogers’ paid cable channels and its direct-to-consumer streaming platform, Sportsnet+. Furthermore, Rogers sub-licensed its Monday Night Hockey package exclusively to Amazon Prime Video, entirely removing the programming from traditional linear television.

Besides the loss of investment of localized sports and news coverage across the nation of Canada, with nothing of note on the horizon to replace it in the wake of Rogers’ actions, the consumer is left with expensive subscription models from…that’s right…Rogers.

While that may answer the question of how people will get their fix of sports coverage, local news and sports is left wanting.

Media advocacy groups, such as Friends of Canadian Media, have warned that moving culturally significant broadcasts off free television severely reduces accessibility and harms the broader public interest. For Canucks Sports & Entertainment, the realization that their national visibility is shrinking makes the establishment of a supplementary, easily accessible in-house digital network an urgent priority for long-term brand survival.

The Historical Erosion of Vancouver Sports Radio

While Vancouver sports and news radio have gone through tough times before: sports talk was dominated by TEAM 1040 (later rebranded as TSN 1040 under Bell Media’s ownership). TSN 1040 then wrestled the Vancouver Canucks’ radio rights away from legacy news station CKNW in 2006. It also served as the audio home for the BC Lions, the Vancouver Whitecaps, and the Vancouver Canadians.

In 2017, Rogers launched Sportsnet 650 explicitly as a competitor to TSN 1040. Leveraging its immense corporate capital, Rogers secured the Canucks’ regional radio rights before the new station even went to air.

The July 2026 shutdown of Sportsnet 650 instantly eliminated the entirety of Vancouver’s daily sports shoulder programming.The loss of these shows creates a massive vacuum in the daily narrative surrounding the Canucks, fundamentally altering how the fanbase interacts with the franchise.

Reaction

British Columbia Premier David Eby issued a public statement along with others, lamented the loss of the stations, asserting that journalism and local coverage are more important than corporate profits, and noting that the closures represent a significant blow to British Columbians.

NEXT

Tomorrow, I will focus on what next and the hurdles: the 2033 exclusivity agreement between the Canucks and Rogers to deliver live game broadcasts to its fan base; Canucks Sports & Entertainment constraint of being legally prohibited from taking their live broadcast product to the open market; the FM simulcast pivot and its logistical challenges; the technological infrastructure at Rogers Arena and the Canucks ability in supporting an independent digital sports network.

Until next time, hockey fans

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