Rock Entertainment Sports Network

Regional sports TV channel in Ohio From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Rock Entertainment Sports Network (RESN) is a broadcast television network in Ohio, United States. Based in Cleveland, it is owned by Gray Media as part of their Gray Broadcast Sports Networks division and co-managed by Rock Entertainment Group, headed by Dan Gilbert, and its programming consists primarily of local sporting events. RESN operates alongside CBS affiliate WOIO (channel 19), MyNetworkTV affiliate WUAB (channel 43) and Telemundo affiliate WTCL-LD (channel 6). It is broadcast by Canton, Ohio–licensed low-power station WOHZ-CD (channel 22) from a transmitter located northeast of Canton; in Cleveland on a subchannel of WTCL-LD, with transmitter located in Parma; in Akron on W28FG-D, a translator for both WOHZ and WTCL; in Columbus on low-power station WDEM-CD (channel 17), owned by Innovate Corp.; in Dayton on low-power station WZCD-LD (channel 32); and in Cincinnati on a subchannel of Fox affiliate WXIX-TV.

TypeSports-focused broadcast television network
CountryUnited States
Broadcast areaStatewide Ohio
Quick facts Type, Country ...
Rock Entertainment Sports Network
TypeSports-focused broadcast television network
CountryUnited States
Broadcast areaStatewide Ohio
NetworkGray Broadcast Sports Networks
StationsSee § Stations
HeadquartersCleveland, Ohio, U.S.
Ownership
OwnerGray Media
Key peopleMichael Conley, President
History
LaunchedMay 7, 1990 (1990-05-07), with the launch of W50BE (now WOHZ-CD) in Mansfield, Ohio
Links
WebsiteRESN website
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WOHZ-CD, the low-power station Gray purchased to launch RESN, was on the air in 1990 in Mansfield, Ohio, originally on channel 50. Initially offering local community programming and newscasts, this programming largely migrated to co-owned full-power WMFD-TV when that station signed on. By the 2010s, the station aired programming from varied sources, including weather information and audio simulcasts of WVNO-FM. Gray purchased the station in late 2020 and operated it as a relay for the combined multiplex of WOIO and WUAB, then fully relaying WTCL's multiplex. RESN launched on August 23, 2024, with plans to carry Cleveland Charge basketball, Cleveland Monsters hockey, Lake Erie Crushers baseball and St. Edward High School football.

History of WOHZ-CD

Originally licensed to Mansfield, Ohio, this station took to the air on May 7, 1990, as W50BE.[1][2] An extension of locally owned WVNO-FM and WRGM, W50BE was an independent station boasting a lineup of local newscasts and community programming for the Mansfield–AshlandBucyrus region,[1][3] nearly equidistant from both the Cleveland and Columbus markets.[4] After W50BE owner Mid-State Television, Inc., headed by Robert Meisse, acquired the license to WCOM-TV, that station was relaunched as WMFD-TV "TV68/50"[5] on June 1, 1992, simulcasting W50BE's programming.[6]

By the beginning of 1996, W50BE changed call signs to WOHZ-LP and was relaunched as "Z-50", offering additional local programming as a WMFD-TV extension alongside America One fare.[7] Later upgraded to a Class A station as WOHZ-CA, it also began to offer weather information and an audio simulcast of WVNO-FM[8] from a combined studio facility in Ontario, Ohio.[6] The station was licensed for digital operation on February 26, 2015, assuming the call sign WOHZ-CD.

On October 8, 2020, Mid-State Television sold WOHZ-CD to Atlanta–based Gray Television, owner of WOIO and WUAB, for $450,000.[9][10] The sale was completed on December 8, 2020.[11] Upon taking over WOHZ-CD, Gray Television changed the station's city of license to Canton, and began using it as a UHF repeater for WOIO and WUAB, increasing coverage for those stations in the southern part of the Cleveland television market.[8]

Launch of RESN

In partnership with Dan Gilbert's Rock Entertainment Group, Gray Television announced the launch of the Rock Entertainment Sports Network (RESN), an over-the-air regional sports network, on July 25, 2024.[12] RESN announced it will carry Cleveland Monsters hockey, Cleveland Charge basketball, Lake Erie Crushers minor league baseball (MILB), and St. Edward Eagles high school football, along with additional high school sports and college sports coverage.[13] (Both the Monsters and Charge are owned by Gilbert, while the Crushers are owned by former Gilbert associate Len Komoroski.[14]) In addition to originating over both WOHZ-CD and WTCL-LD (channel 6), RESN was also included over a subchannel of co-owned WXIX-TV in Cincinnati, and promised additional play-by-play of local college and professional sports teams in the future.[15]

Despite also being owned by Gilbert, the Cavaliers were not included in the initial plans for RESN due to that team's existing contract with FanDuel Sports Network Ohio, whose parent company Diamond Sports (now Main Street Sports Group) was undergoing a prolonged Chapter 11 Bankruptcy reorganization;[13] the contract runs through the 2024–25 season.[16] FanDuel, then known as Bally Sports Ohio, previously offered five Cavaliers games to Gray Television owned WUAB during the second half of the 2023–24 season[17] and the team expressed disappointment over the cable channel's lack of audience reach and financial issues.[12] Gray previously launched similar regional sports channels elsewhere including Arizona's Family Sports,[18] the Gulf Coast Sports & Entertainment Network[19] and Peachtree Sports Network,[20] but RESN represented the first such channel created as a joint venture with team ownership.[15] While the Cavaliers have not ruled out re-signing with FanDuel after the season, team officials have expressed a desire to reach viewers on multiple platforms, from linear television to over-the-top and mobile streaming to virtual reality headsets.[16]

RESN officially launched on August 23, 2024, with the inaugural broadcast being St. Edward's season opener against Pickerington North.[12][21] On October 9, 2024, RESN agreed to carry John Carroll Blue Streaks men's basketball and football games.[22] Columbus Fury volleyball matches were also added on January 2, 2025.[23]

Following the announcement of WUAB's disaffiliation from The CW on September 1, 2025,[24] Gray concurrently announced WUAB's future relaunch as a sports-oriented independent heavily featuring RESN play-by-play; WUAB has since added over-the-air simulcasts of Monsters and Charge games, along with ancillary team-produced programming.[25] WDEM-CD, a low-power station in Columbus, Ohio, began carrying RESN on their primary feed on December 4, 2024.[26] The Cincinnati feed over WXIX-DT3 was set up to substitute programming for local sports coverage[15] and was included with WXIX's addition of ten Cincinnati Reds 2025 regular season games, all simulcast with FanDuel.[27] By March 2025, RESN added WZCD-LD, a low-power station in Dayton, Ohio.[28]

On January 21, 2025, WUAB and RESN jointly announced the addition of five regular-season Cavaliers games in the second half of the 2024–25 season; WUAB and RESN will simulcast game coverage provided by FanDuel.[29] In May 2025, RESN announced an agreement to air fifteen Akron RubberDucks MILB games.[30] Michael Conley, a Rock Entertainment Group executive who oversaw RESN's launch, was named as the network's first president on August 12, 2025.[31]

Stations

RESN is currently broadcast in the Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton and Cincinnati media markets. Since November 2024, it has also been available on Spectrum Cable throughout Greater Cleveland.[32] For further information on WDEM-CD and WXIX-TV, consult those pages.

More information Station, City of license ...
Rock Entertainment Sports Network primary stations
Station City of license Channel FID ERP HAAT Transmitter
coordinates
First air date Former call signs Public license
information
WOHZ-CD Canton204189215 kW605.3 m (1,986 ft)40°53′24″N 81°16′11″WMay 7, 1990 (1990-05-07)
  • W50BE (1989–1995)
  • WOHZ-LP (1995–2005)
  • WOHZ-CA (2005–2015)
WTCL-LD Cleveland20669915 kW306.8 m (1,007 ft)41°22′45″N 81°43′11″WNovember 30, 1989 (1989-11-30)
  • W47BE (1989–1998)
  • W65DL (1998–2000)
  • WXOX-LP (2000–2012)
  • WLFM-LP (2012–2020)
  • WLFM-LD (2020–2021)
  • WTCL-LP (2021–2022)
LMS
W28FG-D Akron2818464215 kW564.2 m (1,851 ft)41°3′52.7″N 81°34′58.3″Wc.2011 (2011)N/aLMS
WZCD-LD Dayton3218744014.3 kW272.8 m (895 ft)39°43′28.6″N 84°15′17.6″Wc.2012 (2012)W42EP-D (2012–2021)LMS
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Technical information and subchannels

WOHZ-CD transmits from a tower in northeastern Canton, Ohio,[33] WTCL-LD transmits from a tower in Parma, Ohio,[34] and W28FG-D transmits from a tower in Copley Township, Ohio.[35] All three stations carry the same subchannel lineup and operate as translators of each other:

More information Channel, Res. ...
Subchannels of WTCL-LD, WOHZ-CD, and W28FG-D[36]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
6.1 1080i16:9TLMDTelemundo
19.10 1080iWOIOHDCBS (WOIO simulcast)
22.1 720pRESNRock Entertainment Sports Network
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  Simulcast of subchannels of another station

WZCD-LD transmits from a tower in southwestern Dayton, Ohio.[37] This station's signal is multiplexed:

More information Channel, Res. ...
Subchannels of WZCD-LD[38]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
32.1 720p16:9WZCD-LDRock Entertainment Sports Network
32.2 480iTelemunTelemundo
32.3 JTVJewelry TV
32.4 QVCQVC
32.5 QVC2QVC2
32.6 BUSTEDBusted
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Network map

Grade A signal contours for stations affiliated with Rock Entertainment Sports Network.

References

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