In 1958, the station's call sign was changed to KOFY.[2] From the 1960s through the 1980s, KOFY aired a Spanish language format.[1][9][10] In early 1986, the station was sold to James Gabbert for $2,000,000.[11][12] In March 1986, the station began airing an oldies format.[12][13][14] In late 1986, the station added nighttime operations, running 500 watts.[15][16] In 1989, the station's daytime power was increased to 50,000 watts, and its nighttime power was increased to 1,000 watts.[17][18][19] In 1991, the station returned to airing a Spanish language format.[20] In 1992, the station's nighttime power was increased to 10,000 watts.[21][22]
KTCT
In May 1997, the station adopted a sports format as "The Ticket", and its call sign was changed to KTCT.[23][24][25][3] That same month, KTCT became the new flagship radio station for the Oakland Raiders Radio Network, replacing FM station KYCY.[26] In 2003, the station was rebranded "KNBR 1050".[27] After the 2003 season, KTCT dropped the Raiders, whose games moved to KSFO beginning in 2004.[28]
On KTCT, weekday programming consists of the following blocks when not preempted by sports events. The morning shows have CBS Sports Radio with Barber, Tierney, Jacobsen; The John Feinstein Show, and The Jim Rome Show. The afternoon show is hosted by Ted Ramey and then The Tom Tolbert Show is simulcast with KNBR 680. The evening shows have Scott Ferrall's show Ferrall on the Bench,[33] followed by late-night programming from CBS Sports Radio and then NBC Sports Radio. Weekend programs include Mortgage Makeover and various CBS Sports and NBC Sports Radio programming. On Sunday mornings to fulfill required public affairs programming guidelines, speeches and presentations from the Commonwealth Club of California are carried.[34]
KNBR and KTCT are charter affiliates of CBS Sports Radio, a joint venture between CBS Radio and Cumulus, which started on January 2, 2013.[35] NBC Sports Radio has also been covered on KTCT. Through these affiliates, other games and events from MLB, NBA, NFL, PGA Tour, NASCAR, and NCAA have been broadcast.
Live sports broadcasts
Sports content has included San Francisco Giants MLB baseball, San Jose SaberCats arena football,[36]San Jose Earthquakes soccer,[37] and Stanford Football.[38] Some AM broadcasts on KNBR may be moved to KTCT due to conflicts with Giants games. Golden State Warriors basketball had also been covered until August 25, 2016, the Warriors announced they have ended their partnership with KNBR and signed with KGMZ-FM; the partnership with KNBR lasted 40 years, including 32 consecutive years.[39]