Enterprise Radio Network was an all-sportsradio network which operated briefly in 1981. It featured sports newscasts twice an hour,[1] and sports talk[2] during the evening and overnight.
Creation and programming
Enterprise Radio was created by Scott Rasmussen, the son of Bill Rasmussen, who was the founder of ESPN. The all sports radio network went on the air in January 1981 and lasted until September 21, 1981. The network broadcast sports reports twice an hour and did live phone in sports talk from 6 p.m. to 8 a.m. Eastern Time seven days a week.
While the station had hired over 100 reporters, announcers and producers from across the country, they failed to secure enough advertising to keep the operation afloat. The final six weeks of existence saw the staff go without pay, hoping an investor would save the network. It did not happen and the last broadcast was the overnight show with Greg Gilmartin that ended at 8 a.m. on the 21st.
The Rasmussens failed to pay[7] into State of Connecticut unemployment fund and were arrested in late 1981. (Hartford Courant) A settlement where employees received a small percentage of money owed was finalized in 1982 (Hartford Courant).
In 2010, John Birchard, who served as auto racing reporter for the network, wrote a book about Enterprise titled Jock Around the Clock - The Story of History's First All-Sports Radio Network.