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102.5 The Game to broadcast from uniform unveiling

July 3, 2012

Willy Daunic and Greg Pogue, talk show hosts at Nashville’s 102.5 The Game sports radio station, will broadcast their afternoon drive show on Wednesday, July 11 where Vanderbilt Athletics plans to unveil new football uniforms for the upcoming season.

Daunic and Pogue, both longtime sports talk personalities in the Nashville market, will air their Sports Revolution Show from the Barnes & Noble at Vanderbilt, located at 2501 West End Avenue. The broadcast will be 3-7 p.m. The venue which also serves as the official Vanderbilt Bookstore.

102.5 The Game“We at 102.5 The Game are thrilled to be broadcasting live from the unveiling of Vanderbilt’s football uniforms for the upcoming season,” Daunic said. “Players and fans these days really get into the uniforms worn by their teams. There is a ton of energy around the program and we are excited to be part of the event.”

Vanderbilt Head Coach James Franklin and the Commodore football program will unveil the 2012 uniform design at Barnes & Noble starting at 6 p.m. Vanderbilt fans are encouraged to attend the free event.

Daunic, a former Vanderbilt basketball and baseball letterwinner, has been a fixture of afternoon drive time radio in Nashville since 1993. He joined 102.5 The Game earlier this year after highly successful runs with sports shows at two other stations in the market. Daunic also serves as co-host of FOX 17’s Sunday night sports show, is a studio host on the Nashville Predators Radio Network and performs many play-by-play duties for regional sports television broadcasts.

Pogue is a veteran of the Middle Tennessee sports scene, having worked extensively in radio, television and newspapers. Most recently, he served as sports editor and columnist of the Daily News Journal in Murfreesboro, and co-host of a morning sports talk show on the AM dial in Nashville. He has also hosted a television sports show in Nashville, co-hosted radio shows focused on local professional teams, and served as a former Commodores’ beat reporter at the now-defunct Nashville Banner.