- Doug Karsch
-
Doug Karsch
Karsch at a Michigan football gameBorn
Champaign, Illinois[1]Show Radio: Karsch & Anderson
The Rich Rodriguez Radio Show
TV: Michigan Sports Weekly
Inside Michigan FootballStation(s) Radio show: WXYT-FM, Detroit, Michigan
Michigan Wolverines Football Network (sideline reporter)
TV shows: Syndicated on cable sports channelsTime slot 10 am – 2 pm, Monday-Friday (Karsch & Anderson) Style Sports radio Country United States Website http://www.971theticket.com Douglas Allen Karsch, III is an American talk radio show host and Michigan Wolverines sports reporter based in Detroit, Michigan.
Contents
Education and early career
Karsch graduated from Michigan State University with a degree in communications. He got his start in broadcasting at TV station WEYI in Flint as a sports reporter. He made his radio debut in 1994 on WTKA in Ann Arbor. He has hosted pre-game coverage of Michigan basketball. Nationally he has been heard on ESPN College Football Tailgate on ESPN Radio. He has also covered NASCAR and CART races.[1]
Current roles
Radio
He is the co-host of Karsch & Anderson (formerly the Big Show), a radio talk show heard weekdays on WXYT-FM FM 97.1/WXYT-AM 1270 in Detroit, Michigan. Doug also hosts The Rich Rodriguez Radio Show, a weekly syndicated Michigan Wolverines football discussion program, along with Jim Brandstatter, and varying assistant coaches and players which airs live on Thursdays during the college football season.[2]
He is also the sideline reporter during Michigan football games.[2]
Television
Karsch also hosts a weekly newsmagazine show for the Michigan Wolverines called Michigan Sports Weekly on the University's Michigan Channel, as well as Fox Sports Detroit and Big Ten Network[2][3]
He also appears as a reporter on Inside Michigan Football, seen on the same channels.
Print
In addition to working at WXYT, Karsch has given interviews regarding his opinion of various news items about the Michigan Wolverines football team, that have later been published in The Detroit Free Press.[4][5]
His radio interviews with other athletes, such as one given to him by Dontrelle Willis when he was signed to the Detroit Tigers, have been published in The Detroit Free Press.[6]
Personal
Karsch is married and has two sons and a daughter.
References
- ^ a b "Detroit's 97.1 The Ticket - Ticket Karsch & Anderson Bios". CBS Radio. http://www.971theticket.com/pages/1180039.php. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
- ^ a b c Michigan Football Broadcast Information
- ^ "Wolverine Sports Magazine Program Details". The Michigan Channel Website. http://www.michiganchannel.org/show.php?id=109.
- ^ Machota, John (2007-12-17). "Doug Karsch: Rodriguez has a lot to prove". The Detroit Free Press. http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071217/SPORTS06/312170006/1054/sports06.
- ^ "Doug Karsch: Kirk Ferentz, Urban Meyer are coaches to go after". The Detroit Free Press. 2007-12-01. http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071201/SPORTS06/71201024/1054/sports06.
- ^ "Dontrelle Willis: 'I've always been a Pistons fan'". The Detroit Free Press. http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071206/SPORTS02/312060009.
Michigan Wolverines football Venues Ann Arbor Fairgrounds (1883–1892) • Regents Field (1893–1905) • Ferry Field (1906–1926) • Michigan Stadium (1927–present)
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National championship Categories:- American sports radio personalities
- American talk radio hosts
- American television personalities
- People from Champaign, Illinois
- Michigan State University alumni
- Living people
- Michigan Wolverines football broadcasters
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