'Football is king' for WQQQ's new sports show host

LAKEVILLE — A deep voice booms across the airwaves:“From the frozen tundra of Lakeville field, Corey Chapman predicts!�

The Saturday Sports Show on radio station WQQQ-103.3FM has a new voice. For the past five weeks, Chapman, who lives in Pine Plains, has been interviewing local high school coaches, reporting national sports news and, of course, giving listeners his NFL picks. Between predicting winners and spreads and offering fantasy football advice, this latter segment takes up about half the show, which runs from 8 to 10 a.m. each Saturday.

To give the segment some excitement, Chapman invites a challenger (usually chosen from the members of the football pool at The White Hart Inn, where he bartends, hosts and is a general jack-of-all-trades) to make picks with him. Whoever gets the most right, wins.

“I had my first win last week,� Chapman said, adding, “I have a list now of people who want to come on.�

This week, Steve “Steverino� Malin, 74, of Sheffield donned the headphones and challenged Chapman. Malin had pages of notes and gave Chapman a good argument when they disagreed.

“I’m unemployed and I watch a lot of TV,� Malin said of his high degree of preparedness. “When I’m not watching TV, I’m listening to the radio. And I’m a ham. That helps.�

Once winners are predicted and fantasy drafts are suggested, Chapman hangs up the headphones and moves on to his next task: struggling with the station’s computer to get the weather downloaded.

WQQQ’s broadcast is the result of the cooperation of three computers. The first is set up as a normal desktop PC; there, station employees receive e-mails, access the Internet and perform other administrative tasks. That computer also has software to edit audio files.

Files are either received via e-mail, such as the weather, or edited and then transferred to the production computer. The station’s entire audio collection is housed on this computer.

The third computer, the jukebox, selects files from the production computer and plays them on the air.

On this particular Saturday, the desktop computer was not allowing Chapman to access the e-mailed weather file.

Chapman said he could access the file from another computer, but would then have to download it, listen to it, and re-record it in his own voice.

“So I will be the weatherman today, as well,� he sighed. “Now I can put that on my resume.�

Though he graduated from the Ohio Center of Broadcasting in Cleveland, Chapman has done more stand-up comedy than radio lately. He performed in Las Vegas in 2005 and then moved back east — he grew up mostly in Amenia — and had a weekly gig at the Comedy Center in Greenwich Village. He came back to the Tri-State region to be closer to family, and began producing comedy shows at The White Hart.

“I enjoy the promoting and producing of it more than the stand-up,� he said. “But I get calls to fill 15 minutes of stand-up and I do that, just to stay creative.� He also said he is planning some comedy nights this winter at The White Hart.

Chapman said his job at WQQQ keeps him busy six days a week. In addition to his sports show and his weekday morning chats with host Thia Tarrab and newsman John Neufeld, he does production work and voiceovers.

But it’s clear his passion is the sports show.

“I used to co-host the show with Ron Lyons, who retired,� he said. “I would just make sarcastic comments as necessary.�

When WQQQ approached him about taking over the Saturday Sports Show recently, Chapman said he jumped at the chance.

He covers a wide array of local events — this week he talked to Housatonic Valley Regional High School football coach Deron Bayer about the team’s first win and their prospects for another (the team had a second victory Saturday, see sports on Page A9). He has also talked with field hockey coach Jean Saliter about her team’s struggles (for more on field hockey, see sports on Page A9). He says he hopes to set up a live remote at a high school game someday.

He also covers national sports, including NASCAR, golf, the NBA, Major League Baseball and hockey. But the bulk of his attention is devoted to the NFL.

“Football is king,� he said. “Each game actually means something. If you lose two or three in a row, you’re done for the year. In baseball, if you lose two or three it doesn’t mean anything because you’re playing 150 games.�

The Saturday Sports Show airs Saturdays from 8 to 10 a.m. on WQQQ-103.3 FM. Chapman accepts calls from listeners on air: 860-435-3333.

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