1 re:PLAY Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony
Transcription
1 re:PLAY Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony
JAN09 VOL 1 NO 6 RECAP OF THE INDUSTRY NEWS AND TECH REPORTS FROM WWW.SPORTSVIDEO.ORG 1DEC08–31DEC08 Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame & league tech summit PHOTO GALLERY starts on age 4. SVGnews Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Honors Nine Industry Legends in NYC A crowd of more than 385 sports-business professionals gathered at the New York Hilton on Dec. 16 to celebrate the induction of the second annual class into the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame. Hosted by CBS Sports lead play-by-play announcer Jim Nantz, the emotional evening honored the accomplishments of nine innovators in sports broadcasting. Howard Katz, NFL SVP of broadcasting and media operations, kicked off the evening by introducing longtime friend, legendary producer/ director and inductee, Don Ohlmeyer. One of the first producers of Monday Night Football, Ohlmeyer also worked on three Olympic Games and ABC’s Wide World of Sports, owned his own production company, and ran NBC’s West Coast division, teaching the importance of storytelling at every stop along the way. Marvin Bader, who served as ABC Sports’ VP of Olympic Operations, was also inducted. He revolutionized the way Olympic broadcasts were organized from the 1960s through the 1980s, overseeing the operations of 10 Olympiads and creating the modern system of media accreditation. Two sportscasters were inducted, including Vin Scully, who has broadcast Dodger baseball games for 60 years and joins Canon’s Larry Thorpe as the second inductee who is still working professionally. WWW.SPORTSVIDEO.ORG Above: Sports networks and leagues continue to experiment with 3D sports productions, moving 3D beyond gimmick status to a real-world revenue generator. Attendees had a chance to see highlights from the Dec. 4 NFL Network 3D production courtesy of the NFL and 3ality Digital Systems as part of a panel discussion on 3D today and tomorrow. Pictured here (left to right) are: Stephen Raymond and Anthony Bailey with ESPN, Steve Schklair of 3ality Digital Systems, Jerry Steinberg of Fox Sports, Steve Hellmuth of the NBA, and Glenn Adamo of the NFL. Legendary sportscaster Curt Gowdy was also honored, becoming the fourth sportscaster to be inducted into the Hall. During his 40-year career, Gowdy worked for all of the Big Three broadcast networks and is most remembered for being behind the mic when Hank Aaron broke Babe Ruth’s home-run record and the Jets improbably won Super Bowl III, as well as being as the host of The American Sportsman. The technical/operations side of the business was represented by two inductees. Bob Seiderman, who passed away 10 years ago at the age of 50, revolutionized sports audio with new miking techniques while working at CBS and Fox Sports. He was inducted by Fox SVP of Field Operations Jerry Steinberg. Fred Aldous, Fox Sports senior audio mixer and Seiderman’s protégé and close friend, accepted the award on Seiderman’s behalf, alongside Seiderman’s 11-year-old daughter, Ashley. The second was Charlie Steinberg, former president of Sony Broadcast and head of Ampex, who was inducted for a long list of technical contributions during a career that spanned the earliest days of videotape recording to the development of HDTV. League professionals were also represented with the induction continued on page 2 re:PLAY 1 industrynews NASCAR Media Group Awards Integration Contract for HOF and New Home to CEI NASCAR Media Group has selected Communications Engineering Inc. (CEI) as the integrator for the NASCAR Hall of Fame, to open in Charlotte, NC, in December 2009. The new facility will also be the home of NASCAR Media Group’s technical operations as well as a multimedia museum experience that will give visitors a sense of NASCAR’s rich and vibrant past. “We chose CEI on the basis of a strong bid and their experience building the Newseum in Washington, DC,” says Jeff Lowe, NASCAR Media Group, managing Director, media and broadcast technologies. Technical details are still being completed, but NASCAR Media Group’s entire asset- management system, up to 40 online edit suites, and 50 TB of local storage plus a couple of hundred TBs of nearline storage are in the plans. A 3G infrastructure for 1080p production and distribution is also part of the current plan, and cable in the new facility will be pulled beginning in March. — Ken Kerschbaumer JAN09 VOL 1 NO 6 Paul Gallo Co-executive Director Marty Porter Co-executive Director Rob Payne Sponsor Development Ken Kerschbaumer Editorial Director Janice Brown RePLAY Managing Editor Carolyn Braff SVGU Managing Editor Dan Daley Audio Editor Kevin Hilton SVG Europe Editor Andrew Lippe Marketing Managerr Riva Danzig Art Director For contact information, visit www.sportsvideo.org re:Play is published monthly by the Sports Video Group, 260 Fifth Avenue, Ste. 600, New York, NY 10001 212-481-8140 • rePLAY@sportsvideo.org © 2009 Sports Video Group Printed in the U.S.A 2 re:PLAY SVGnews continued from page 1 of Val Pinchbeck, the National Football League’s VP of broadcasting. Former Commissioner of the NFL Paul Tagliabue introduced Pinchbeck’s tribute video and Pinchbeck’s sons, Val Jr. and James, accepted the award on behalf of their father. Two incomparable directors were also inducted: the late Ted Nathanson, who directed 13 of the first 26 Super Bowls and redefined Wimbledon coverage, and the late ABC Sports’ Monday Night Football director Chet Forte. For the final presentation of the evening, Ohlmeyer brought tears to every eye in the room as he recounted Forte’s accomplishments in his 25 years with ABC Sports, a career that was nearly overshadowed by personal mistakes. Nantz capped off the ceremony by presenting the Forte family with a replica of the jersey that “Chet the Jet” wore his senior year at Columbia University, when he was named college basketball’s Player of the Year. The event was sponsored by B&H, Thomson Grass Valley and Sony, with additional sponsorship coming from Genesis Networks, Harris, Linear Acoustic, Move Networks, NEP, Omneon and QuStream. Bexel, IMG Media, NewTek and Vizrt provided technical support for the ceremony. — Carolyn Braff Industry Gathers for SVG’s Third Annual League Technology Summit SVG’s third-annual League Technology Summit, held Dec. 16 at the New York Hilton Hotel, hit another home run, attracting 547 sports-technology professionals to the day-long series of panel discussions and tabletop exhibits. With a half-day Mobile Engineering Workshop kicking off the event on Monday and the evening Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame ceremony serving as a slam-dunk bookend on Tuesday night, the League Technology Summit once again provided an ample forum for the most pressing issues facing the sports-technology community. Video and audio recordings of every panel, captured on Newtek’s Tricaster, will be featured in the newly designed Members area of the SVG Website in early January. The NASCAR community fittingly put the day in gear with a discussion on the NASCAR Challenge. The behind-the-scenes panel, moderated by NASCAR Media Group Director of Internal Operations Scott Rinehart, dove into issues of personnel overlap, technical challenges, inclement weather, and the changing economy to get to the heart of what makes a NASCAR show move. Mobile trucks took center stage for the morning’s second panel, moderated by NEP Broadcasting CEO Lou Borelli. Representatives from four major mobile-productiontruck companies discussed how equipment manufacturers can better meet the needs of the changing mobile-production industry. The last panel of the morning featured some of the most talented producers and directors working in sports today. Major League Baseball International VP and Executive Producer Russell Gabay led a lively discussion on all things front-bench– related, from how preparations for a once-a-week show differ from those for an every-other-day show, to how to build a U.S.-friendly broadcast from an international feed. The panel featured NBC Sports producer Sam Flood, Fox Sports director Artie Kempner, Yes Network/Fox Sports/Turner Sports director John Moore, NESN senior coordinating director Michael Narracci, and ESPN VP of Event Operations Tim Scanlan. During an afternoon demonstration and panel discussion on 3D HD, members of the audience were treated to a presentation of highlights from the San Diego Chargers-Oakland Raiders game shot in 3D HD on the NFL Network. An edited svgSPONSORUPDATE Sports Video Group is pleased to welcome IDX, 3ality Digital and NetTensity as new corporate sponsors, and to announced that Akamai, Riedel and Motorola have renewed their corporate sponsorships…SVG is also pleased to welcome back VISTA Satellite Communications as a corporate sponsor and Inertia Unlimited as a premiere sponsor. January 2009 highlights package was presented as part of the panel discussion on the future of 3D HD production. SVG Editorial Director Ken Kerschbaumer moderated a blue-ribbon panel featuring NFL VP of Media Operations and Broadcasting Glenn Adamo, ESPN VP of Emerging Technology Anthony Bailey, NBA VP of Operations and Technology Steve Hellmuth, ESPN Coordinating Technical Manager Stephen Raymond, 3ality Digital Systems CEO Steve Schklair, and Fox Sports SVP of Field Operations Jerry Steinberg. The final discussion of the day served as a look back, as members of the NBC Olympics broadcasting team took the stage to discuss the challenges and triumphs involved in producing the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing. — Carolyn Braff SVG and UCLA To Present SportsTechLA The Sports Video Group will hold its first West Coast event, SportsTech LA, on Tuesday Jan. 20 at the University of California at Los Angeles. SportsTechLA is a special half-day networking and educational event that will showcase the Pac-10 Conference’s digital game exchange system. UCLA Video Operations Director Ken Norris, who developed the Pac-10 system, has become one of the nation’s leading gurus in digital game exchange. Using the Abilene network and a central server that he manages, Norris’s system ensures that all Pac-10 member schools are able to share game tape online, both with other member schools and with upcoming opponents from other conferences. On Jan. 20, Norris will take the sports pro attendees through a virtual and a walking tour of the system. He will also take part in a panel discussion on the system’s implementation and success. SportsTechLA begins at noon with a networking lunch in UCLA’s press room and Hall of Fame, in the J.D. Morgan Center on the Westwood campus. The program will also include panel discussions on 3D HD production and more. SportsTechLA is a free event for all SVG members. Visit www.sportsvideo.org for more information on the event and registration. SVG, Sports Networks Launch Sports-Production Safety Group To Streamline Best Practices The Sports Video Group, alongside major sports networks CBS Sports, ESPN, Fox Sports, and NBC Universal, has launched an industry initiative to improve and streamline best practices for safety-related issues, including fall protection, electrical safety, and camera platform safety. The industry effort, working together under the auspices of the Sports Production Safety Group (SPSG), made its official public debut at the Sports Video Group Engineering Workshop on Dec. 15. “The goal is to bring together previously disparate safety practices and documents from different organizations and gain consensus with respect to different safety issues,” says Ken Kerschbaumer, SVG editorial director. “We all have the same goal: to make the sports-production workplace safer.” This past summer and fall, the group formalized best practices related to Fall Prevention. In the next few months, the group will work on building online resources and training based on those practices. collegenews Broadcasters Ride Villanova’s Wavecam A set of two aerial, robotic, mobile cameras tethered to an overhead trolley, Wavecam—an indoor version of the Skycam system—enables fans, coaches and players to see the action from a whole new set of perspectives. Designed by Ed Dougherty, a visiting assistant professor of engineering at Villanova University and a member of the Emmy-winning team that designed the HD version of Skycam, the Wavecam system consists of two cameras: one that runs the length of the court, along the sideline, and one that runs the width of the court, along the baseline. continued on page 8 WWW.SPORTSVIDEO.ORG industrynews 2009 NHL Winter Classic Takes the Mound For the third outdoor regular-season game in NHL history, the league took on a unique logistical challenge by holding the Winter Classic at Chicago’s Wrigley Field, a baseball venue not shaped to easily accommodate a hockey rink. “The rink splits the pitchers’ mound from first to third,” explains NBC producer Sam Flood. The 200- by 85-foot ice rink was driven to Chicago from Mobile, AL, in preparation for the New Year’s Day contest between the Chicago Blackhawks and the Detroit Red Wings. It sat 112 feet from home plate and 288 feet from the center-field wall, so NBC could utilize many of the same camera positions used for baseball coverage. “The cover camera is the high home position for the main play-by-play camera,” Flood explains. “The end-zone cameras are essentially the first-base and third-base platforms. And then we have scoreboard cam, a high right-field position for the right end-zone camera, and the same for left field.” NBC used 25 cameras for the broad-cast, some of which were split feeds from the CBC, since the two networks shared equipment to cover the game. F&F Productions provided the mobile-unit support. NBC televised the game and Verizon streamed the contest for wireless users on its V Cast video service. — Carolyn Braff CBS Sports Taps Orad Tech to Analyze Controversial NFL Touchdown On Dec. 14, a controversial touchdown catch handed the Pittsburgh Steelers a win over the Baltimore Ravens. For CBS Sports, which broadcast the game, The NFL Today broadcast on December 21, provided a chance to make sure that the catch was, indeed, a catch. On short notice, CBS called in Orad’s Motion Video Play (MVP) graphics platform to help break down the play. “There were several questions on the play,” explains Shaun Dail, VP sales and marketing for North America at Orad. “The two questions that we wanted to resolve were did the ball cross the plane of the endzone, and secondly, did the receiver have possession.” The reverse pit-cam angle of the goal line continued on page 8 re:PLAY 3 PHOTO GALLERY More than 575 industry executives descended on the New York Hilton Hotel on Dec. 15 and Dec. 16 for two days of conferences, meetings and exhibits. 4 NBC Olympics concluded the formal panel presentations at the League Technology Summit with an overview of the massive effort required both technically and from a programming standpoint to deliver more than 3,000 hours of Olympic coverage to viewers this past summer. Pictured are (right to left): Dave Mazza, Terry Adams, Chip Adams and Dan Hogan of the NBC Olympics team. During the League Technology Summit, the mid-day session featuring leading producers and directors of sports television was one of the many highlights of the day. Pictured here (right to left) are Artie Kempner of Fox Sports, Sam Flood of NBC Sports, Tim Brosnan of ESPN, and Michael Narracci of New England Sports Network (NESN). League Summit attendees had a chance to see the latest equipment and product offerings from more than 35 SVG sponsors. Here NESN's Michael Narracci (right) and Veronica Gibeault (far right) visit with RC Gear's Andrew Heimbold (center) (Left to right) SVG Editorial Director Ken Kerschbaumer, SVG Chairman Ken Aagaard, and SVG Executive Directors Paul Gallo and Marty Porter take a quick breath during one of the few quiet moments at the end of a very busy day of conferences and exhibits and before the beginning of the Sports Broadcasting HOF ceremony. re:PLAY January 2009 The induction of ABC and NBC Sports legendary producer Don Ohlmeyer kicked off the 2008 Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame ceremony. Inductee Don Ohlmeyer (left) and CBS Sports President Sean McManus caught up during the HOF welcome reception that preceded the ceremony. PHOTO GALLERY The Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame reception gave the 2008 inductees, their families, friends, and industry associates, more than 400 attendees in all, a chance to share memories and celebrate. Geoff Mason pulled triple duty during the ceremony, introducing tribute videos to ABC Sports legend Marvin Bader and Nathanson, and also introducing former NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue. Pictured here, Geoff introduces Marvin Bader’s tribute video. Bader, who lives in Los Angeles, could not attend the ceremony but accepted via videotape. Curt Gowdy, Jr. accepted the HOF award for his late father, Curt Gowdy. During his broadcasting career Curt Gowdy called everything from Super Bowls to Rose Bowls to World Series games and classic moments like Hank Aaron breaking Babe Ruth’s home run record. The induction of the late Ted Nathanson, acclaimed and beloved NBC Sports director of Wimbledon and half of the first 26 Super Bowls, was an emotional highlight of the evening. Here Edith Nathanson, Ted’s widow, is recognized by attendees and Geoff Mason of ESPN, who introduced Ted’s tribute video. WWW.SPORTSVIDEO.ORG re:PLAY 5 PHOTO GALLERY SportsNet New York’s Curt Gowdy, Jr (left), ESPN MLB producer Tim Brosnan (center), and MLB International’s Russell Gabay had a chance to talk shop during the HOF reception. The late Val Pinchbeck, who played an integral role in making NFL football a TV powerhouse, was the second NFL executive to be inducted into the Hall, joining former commissioner Pete Rozelle. Paul Tagliabue (center) presented the HOF award to Val’s two sons, James (left) and Val, Jr. (right). For more than 60 years Vin Scully has broadcast Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers games for millions of fans. Those decades of impeccable sportscasting made Vin the fourth sportscaster to be in the Hall, joining Gowdy, Howard Cosell, and Jim McKay. Scully accepted via videotape but Michael Weisman (at podium), who worked with Vin at NBC Sports during national MLB telecasts, introduced Vin’s tribute video, narrated by Bob Costas of NBC Sports and HBO Sports. ABC Sports director Chet Forte redefined the nature of sports broadcasting by adding cameras to make sure Monday Night Football fans never missed a play or reaction. Here Don Ohlmeyer, who worked closely with Forte at ABC Sports, introduces Chet’s tribute video. Steve Hellmuth of the NBA (right) with Canon’s Larry Thorpe (center) and Sony’s Alec Shapiro (left). Thorpe was inducted into the HOF last year 6 re:PLAY Above right: Chet Forte’s daughter, Jacqueline, accepted the award on her late father’s behalf in one of the evening’s most touching moments. Following a tearful induction, Jim Nantz of CBS Sports, and host of the Hall of Fame ceremony, presented Jacqueline and her mother, Trish, with a replica jersey from Columbia University where Forte was an all-American basketball player in the late 1950s (where he beat out Wilt Chamberlin for national player of the yearhonors). Above left: Trish and Jacqueline Forte backstage following the ceremony with the Forte replica basketball jersey and award. January 2009 PHOTO GALLERY The induction of the late Bob Seiderman, an audio guru at CBS Sports and Fox Sports, responsible for innovations like micing the walls at NASCAR races, placing microphones in bases at MLB games, and the first Super Bowl in Surround Sound, was the first ever induction in the technical operations category. His award was accepted by his 11-year old daughter Ashley (pictured here) along with Jerry Steinberg (left) of Fox Sports, Andi Ganz-Seiderman, Ashley, and Fred Aldous of Fox Sports (right). Sports Broadcasting HOF Chairman Ken Aagaard took to the stage to introduce the tribute video for Charles A Steinberg. Steinberg, during his 30-plus year career at Ampex and Sony, was involved with and oversaw some of the most important developments in sports technology. They included the videotape recorder, slow-motion instant replay systems, still store graphics, and HDTV. Charlie Steinberg, former Ampex CEO and Sony President, backstage following his induction into the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame. Ted Nathanson’s children, Carla (second from left), Laura (second from right), and Michael (far right) accepted their father’s award at the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame. Edith Nathanson (center), Ted’s widow, and Geoff Mason (left) of ESPN joined the children for a photo after the presentation. WWW.SPORTSVIDEO.ORG Don Ohlmeyer (left) and Howard Katz of the NFLbackstage following Don’s induction into the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame. Jim Nantz, lead play-by-play announcer for CBS Sports, once again hosted the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame. The SVG and Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame wish to thank Jim and all of those who contributed their time and expertise to make the 2008 Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame ceremony a fitting tribute to those who have helped make the sports broadcasting industry what it is today re:PLAY 7 industrynews continued from page 3 showed that the ball did cross the plane of the end zone, but not whether the receiver had full control as it did. An isolated camera on the receiver, Santonio Holmes, showed that he clearly had possession, but the angle was not conclusive as to whether or not he had crossed the plane. Dail’s team first worked with an overview of the play, an all-22 camera shot. In that clip, Orad operators drew two lines on the field, the first showing the arc of the ball to the receiver, and the second compensating for the angle of the camera to illustrate the position of the ball at the point it reached Holmes’ hands—a few inches inside the plane of the end zone. — Carolyn Braff MLB Network Makes First Pitch on New Year’s Day To get the new MLB Network facility in Secaucus, NJ up-and-running by Jan. 1, 2009, Mark Haden, MLB Network, VP, engineering and IT, led a team through a fast-paced overhaul of the former MSNBC complex. The facility, now home to the network and MLB Productions, includes two large studios, two control rooms, and has room for additional expansion. The heart of the facility is a Thomson Grass Valley K2 server SAN system that will record incoming feeds of MLB games and related events. Approximately 25 Thomson Grass Valley Aurora HD editing systems with Aurora Browse will also be installed. The workstations, tied into an AP ENPS newsroom system for production and scripting, will allow users to tap into the SAN and access both proxy and high-res nearline storage and an archive that will be based on LTO4 drives. MLB Productions will use 13 Apple Final Cut Pro systems for long-form content creation. Before next season some additional developments, like special “Ballpark Cams” at each MLB stadium and a new system from HTN that connects each stadium to each other and the MLB Network facility via terrestrial systems will also come online. — Ken Kerschbaumer NY Jets Huddle Up With Panasonic P2 HD Format The New York Jets are the latest NFL team to embrace the Panasonic P2 HD format, using two AJ-HPX3000 native 1080p one-piece camcorders, along with P2 drives and media 8 re:PLAY collegenews continued from page 3 A 10-foot-wide trolley houses the cameras’ motors and traverses the venue on DuraTech cables suspended in the rafters. Each camera hangs down from the trolley on thin, durable fiber cables like a marionette. At the heart of the camera stabilization is a Stewart platform, a parallel manipulator platform that he first worked with in designing a flight simulator for NASA. Having the system permanently in place in a university venue allows it to be leased out for various uses—as Villanova did when Chris Matthews’ Hardball tour came through town and used the system to televise a John McCain appearance on MSNBC. Just as important, having the trolley visible but not intrusive turns it into a flying billboard, which Villanova has taken advantage of by selling the space to Nike. — Carolyn Braff ESPNU Means More College Basketball In HD During the college basketball season, ESPN will air more than 1,100 men’s games and nearly 150 women’s games, with a growing percentage in high-definition, thanks to the launch of ESPNU HD in August. The majority of ESPNU HD’s games will be shown as part of the larger conference packages on Wednesdays and Saturdays, featuring the Big East, ACC and Big 12. Lyon Video and Token Creek are ESPN’s biggest vendors to support shows for ESPNU, ESPN Regional Television and syndication properties. With production support in place, ESPN’s networks can focus on game-day production, the details of which vary depending on the broadcast network. “On ESPNU, we generally have four cameras on 90% of our games,” says Christopher Farrow, coordinating producer for ESPNU and ESPN Regional Television’s collegebasketball productions. “We give our directors the freedom to make choices with their camera angles, and oftentimes, they will move things around.” On a recent ESPNU broadcast, rather than the traditional two-high-cameras, twolow-cameras setup, the director used three handhelds, placing one under each basket and one at midcourt. The fourth camera was the traditional high view. “When you spread your cameras out like that, it makes it feel like it’s a five- or sixcamera show,” Farrow explains. “We’ve given our directors the latitude to do that. We just tell them, if you’re going to take your camera 2, the high tight camera, and move it somewhere else, make sure you run a second video line up to camera 1 as a backup.” — Carolyn Braff Fox Sports, Sony, 3ality Deliver 3D BCS Championship Game to 80 Theaters College-football fans entered the third dimension on Jan. 8 when Fox Sports, Sony Broadcast, and 3ality Digital teamed up to deliver the college-football Bowl Championship Series National Championship Game in 3D HD live to 80 theaters across the country. The game was shot using 3ality Digital’s image-capture technology and transmitted live via Cinedigm’s CineLive satellite distribution network from Dolphin Stadium in Miami to an event sponsored by Sony in the Paris Hotel and Casino’s RealD-equipped Theatre des Arts in Las Vegas, where more than 1,200 invited guests viewed the game live in 3D during the annual Consumer Electronics Show. For the broadcast, 3ality Digital used Sony HD cameras specially modified for stereoscopic production and transmission of the game. The 3ality Digital imagecapture systems integrated with existing broadcast equipment for pixel-perfect 3D imagery, and its image-processing software enabled accurate 3D image transmission through existing satellite systems, the company said. The feed was then transferred to the Cinedigm satellite network that broadcast the signal nationally to Cinedigmenabled theaters. In the theater, RealD’s 3D stereoscopic Cinema System enabled the audience to view the game in 3D. — Ken Kerschbaumer January 2009 Alpha, GamePlan Join Forces for 360º Solution For video directors in college athletic departments, choosing a hardware partner is hard enough, without having to ensure that the chosen hardware will work with existing—or new—software. With that challenge in mind, hardware integrator Alpha Video has teamed up with software provider GamePlan to offer what the companies are calling the 360º Solution, ensuring that hardware and software components of the fully integrated video system work together. “To date, there’s been a very limited number of places people can turn to get turnkey solutions to coaching-video and facility needs,” explains Jeffrey Volk, director of Alpha Video Sports & Entertainment Group. “We’ve heard from the market that what people are looking for is a platform,” adds GamePlan CEO Dave Glover. “That platform would include hardware and software that would be integrated and supported for all of the teams, sports information directors, training room, and any place else where they need to utilize technology in the athletic environment.” The 360º Solution covers all multimedia needs for an athletic department, including television production, Web and camera systems, digital signage, and coaching software. The solution makes it easier not only for sports-specific staff to do their jobs but also for the entire athletic department to work together. — Carolyn Braff CSB Trains Students for Real Work, Right Now With 26 campuses across the country, all boasting industry-standard TV equipment, the CSB School of Broadcasting prides itself on graduating students ready to begin contributing on their very first day on the job. Each of CSB School’s 26 campuses host functional TV and radio studios so, in addition to getting hands-on training, the students effectively get on-the-job training, working to program those studios. “We really train for versatility,” explains Eric Wholley, VP, marketing, for the CSB School. “We train you to fit virtually any entry-level role in any entry-level organization. We’ve got people at MLB.com, at old-fashioned radio stations, and everywhere in between.” To ensure that the gear students are learning on is up to date, CSB has a series of national arrangements with equipment and software providers. Among other elements, each station is equipped with Panasonic HD P2 field cameras, Sony studio cameras with Fujinon lenses, Avid, Final Cut Pro, and a full control room with video switcher, character generator, audio mixer, monitors, and teleprompter. — Carolyn Braff SVGeuropeROUNDUP Up Creek, No Paddle: ITV Dumps Boat Race The Boat Race, an annual clash in the UK between Oxford and Cambridge, has hit some rough water following ITV’s decision not to renew its contract for coverage. The UK commercial broadcaster has been under financial pressure over the past year and has spent its financial resources building its football offerings, so the March 29 race—the 155th meeting between the two universities—will be the last broadcast on ITV, which has held the rights since 2004. Prior to ‘04, the event had been a key part of the BBC’s sports schedule, but the organizers had wanted to increase sponsorship and commercial opportunities and so entered into discussions with ITV. ITV picked up its biggest-ever audience for the Boat Race last year, with 7.6 million, but it is an expensive and difficult event to cover, and the broadcaster is now concentrating its sports resources on football. Coverage of the 2008 race involved several facilities companies—notably, O21 Television, Camera Corps, and Omni TV—plus a lot of hardware. There were 46 cameras in total: 12 for presentation, 25 on the river bank, seven on boats and two in helicopters. Five OB vehicles were used, supported by five BT links trucks. All radio cameras were fed directly to the OB unit at the start as ASI streams using dark fiber, with everything connected by approximately 60km of cable. Power came from WWW.SPORTSVIDEO.ORG industrynews continued from page 8 and a DVCPRO HD VTR at a new postproduction facility at the Jets’ Florham Park, NJ, headquarters and training center. “Right now, we’re shooting HD content that will be archived when our new postproduction house is built in 2009,” says Rich Gentile, New York Jets senior director of broadcasting/multimedia production. “We want to have HD footage already in hand, so we’re acquiring footage from games, player appearances, and other events.” Gentile is well-acquainted with the HPX3000, having been involved in the purchase of several of the cameras for the Philadelphia Eagles Television Network, his employer prior to the Jets. “Then and now,” he says, “I selected the HPX3000 based on its master-quality HD imaging, its versatility with a range of shooting styles, whether for games, training camp, interviews, events, closed sets, and commercials, and its solid-state all-around ruggedness.” — Ken Kerschbaumer HD Need Fuels New Facility for SPEED Racing fans received an all-HD gift from SPEED in early January when the network officially fired up its new all-HD facility and studios in Charlotte, NC. The 77,000-sq.-ft. home will feature two large studios, an insert stage and an abundance of HD equipment that will make the studio portion of SPEED’s programming as sharp and shiny as all-HD field productions. The heart of the new plant is an Evertz router that allows 125 Dalet heavy client workstations and 12 Apple Final Cut systems (six for craft editing and six in a bullpen-style setup) to tap into an Omneon storage system with 40 ingest ports. The two stages measure 60 x 60 feet and 60 x 40 feet, respectively, and feature 11 Ikegami HD cameras with Fujinon lenses. They will be operated via two HD control rooms, each featuring a Sony MVS8000 production switcher, Chyron graphics and a Calrec Omega console. — Ken Kerschbaumer IMG Reorganizes Digital Media Unit IMG’s Digital Media Unit has ceased operation as a separate entity and will be realigned into other IMG business units, a move that will result in the layoff of re:PLAY 9 industrynews continued from page 9 approximately 80 Digital Media staffers. “This is in no way a retreat from the digital business,” says IMG spokesman Jim Gallagher. “It is a plan to enlarge and improve our digital offerings.” Under the transition plan, Oliver Gers, IMG’s head of Digital Media, will stay on board through January and assist with the transition. Donna North, IMG SVP and head of EMEA Digital, will leave IMG. IMG’s digital production business will be integrated into the Sports Media Production business. IMG’s digital-content-creation business will be tied to the respective content rightsholder within IMG, and the IMG Website services will still support clients, although a third-party technology partner will take over delivery of those sites. David Shield, IMG Media, SVP, director of engineering and technology, will assist in finding that partner and managing the relationship. — Ken Kerschbaumer DirecTV's NASCAR HOTPASS Goes Cold DirecTV’s NASCAR HOTPASS subscription service has gone cold, and DirecTV has decided to discontinue the service that gave NASCAR fans a chance to watch entire races from the in-car perspective and more via 10 TV channels of content. Both organizations are investigating a new free service for the 2009 season, but, at this time, it appears that DirecTV will no longer rent three production vehicles to build the product in the compound. The core of the DirecTV production was a truck that had separate production pods allowing personnel to sit and produce each channel’s in-car and audio coverage. Last year, the service made the leap to HD. — Ken Kerschbaumer Texas HS Football Gets HD Treatment The UIL Class 5A Texas high school football state championship games from Reliant Stadium in Houston on Dec. 20 were televised in high-definition on Fox Sports Southwest and Fox Sports Houston, marking the first-time ever the regional sports networks have shown a Texas high school event in HD. Reliant’s infrastructure made going HD easier than working at a smaller high school stadium. “We don’t produce the Texas high 10 re:PLAY SVGeuropeROUNDUP five twin-set generators, and more than 190 technical staffers put the broadcast together. TV coverage of the Boat Race is no longer a “crown jewels” event, so it is open for satellite and cable broadcasters to bid for the rights, but the organizers are said to be keen to keep it on a terrestrial channel to get the maximum audience possible. — Kevin Hilton World Darts Championship Scores HD Bullseye Large men in loud shirts, cheered on excessively by over-enthusiastic family and supporters, took over Alexandra Palace in north London for the World Darts Championship. Every drop of sweat, every dart hitting home, and all expressions of victory and defeat was captured in HD on Sky Sports, supported by a new highmotion camera and the first outing of what is claimed to be the biggest OB truck in Europe. This was the first time Sky has broadcast the World Darts Championship in HD, and it used a wide range of technology to capture the action. The Flight Cam 1000 is a super-slow-motion camera that records at 1,000 frames per second. It was positioned at the side of the stage to show players taking their shots and where the darts land. A spokeswoman for Sky Sports said viewers would be able to see players’ muscles moving as they let a dart fly and chalk coming out of the board as hits its mark. Facilities for the broadcast were provided by Arena Television, using OB7 as the main control scanner and VT6, which went on the road in the past few weeks. The new HD truck is thought to be the biggest of its kind in Europe, being a 17.5-meter-long articulated vehicle with a single extra-width expanding side. It houses 12 videotape machines and 12 LSMs, with two edit suites. As OB7 is roughly the same size and can accommodate up to 12 VTRs (HDCAM, DigiBeta, or LSMs), the scale of the live darts production becomes clear. VT6 is the third new vehicle that Arena has brought into operation this year, following the double-expander OB10 and OB12, a rigid-axle truck intended for events where space is limited or access restricted. — Kevin Hilton Sky Sports Demos 3D in Boxing, Football, Rugby The move towards 3D among sports broadcasters is gaining momentum in Europe, with Sky Sports showing examples of major sporting events shot stereoscopically. These events included boxer Ricky Hatton’s most recent fight, the Champions League football match between Liverpool and Marseille and New Zealand’s drubbing of England in international rugby competition. A mirror rig was used to shoot the footage, which was shown on a 3D screen using a standard Sky HD set-top box. A spokesman for Sky Sports says this showed the receivers are “future-proof” and subscribers would need only to buy a new TV set to receive 3D pictures. Production and development for the 3D tests was handled in-house by Sky. The spokesman says there is as yet no commercial deadline for fuller services using the technology. — Kevin Hilton London Gets Into Sporting Mood With Sports Broadcast Europe Conference Each sporting year gives an indication how events will be covered in the future, but 2008 provided more technological clues about directions than others. That was a major conclusion of the Sports Broadcast Europe conference, held in London on Dec. 9. The Beijing Olympics and the European Football Championships in Austria and Switzerland built on the work done in high-definition and 5.1 surround sound, but, in a keynote address exploring future developments in sports-broadcast technology, January 2009 Peter Angell, director of production and programming for Host Broadcast Services (HBS), noted the relative lack of progress in general terms. “We’re seeing a commitment to HD from consumer-electronics and professional manufacturers, but the bit missing is broadcast,” he said. “Why haven’t broadcasters taken the opportunity offered by HD more than they have?” Angell views 3D as a viable broadcast tool, but, right now, he says, it is an “out-of-home” experience, with people going to a theatre or cinema to watch an event. “3D Blu-ray will give display manufacturers a reason to make suitable products, which will bring it into the home,” he observed. “But we need the right model to monetize the technology. And no one has written the manual on 3D yet anyway.” Two people who could contribute to such a document are Duncan Humphreys, director of Can Communicate, and Andy Millns, director of Inition, who worked on the BBC’s 3D rugby test transmission. Humphreys commented that all major broadcasters were trying 3D and that the display side was getting there, with Samsung selling a screen for under £1000. He added that 3D needs a “grunt camera rig” if it is to become mainstream. industrynews continued from page 10 Portugese Sport TV Upgrades With Quantel The marriage of Front Porch Digital and SAMMA Systems has resulted in the first new product: DIVAsolo, which the companies are calling “the world’s first all-in-one path for migrating content from legacy videotape to high-density data tape.” DIVAsolo consolidates three technologies, SAMMA Solo, DIVArchive and DIVAdirector into a reliable, scalable and cost-effective system for migrating archives of all sizes…Front Porch Digital has also collaborated with Omneon to deliver an integrated system that combines the two companies’ flagship products for active storage and content management. The Omneon MediaGrid active storage system and the Front Porch Digital DIVArchive content storage management system have now been tested together and implemented with broadcasters worldwide…Panasonic has announced the availability of VariCam 3700 (AJ-HPX3700), the company’s solid-state P2 HD camcorder, and the 64GB P2 solidstate memory card (AJ-P2C064), providing expanded recording capacity for the company’s line of P2 and P2 HD camcorders and workflow products…Panasonic has also developed a wide range of scene files for its P2 HD camcorder line to expand users’ shooting capabilities. The scene files cover an array of creative “looks” that can be downloaded at www.panasonic.com/ scenefiles…Apple’s new Final Cut Pro version 6.0.5 software now incorporates support for the professional PH recording mode offered in Panasonic’s AG-HMC150 handheld AVCCAM camcorder. The enhanced PH recording mode is exclusive to the AVCCAM HMC150. Portuguese sports broadcaster Sport TV is upgrading its facilities to high-definition and has ordered a Quantel Enterprise sQ server as part of the project. Transmitting four premium channels, three over cable, DTH and IPTV in Portugal, and a further DTH service for sub-Saharan Africa, Sport TV is embarking on the first phase of a transition to native HD production. News at Sport TV is already prepared on a SD Enterprise sQ system, and the new HD installation will include a four-port sQ 800 server working with two eQ effectsediting workstations. The plan is for all HD programs and promos to be loaded into the new sQ for editing. “This is the first step of the planned migration of all our production facilities to HD, in this case made easy by the fact that we can keep the existing Quantel workflow and editing tools,” comments TV Sport Technical and Operations Director José Mourão. — Kevin Hilton audionews De La Hoya Fight Packs Audio Punch When the world watched Manny Pacquiao win by TKO in an eight-round hammering of Oscar De La Hoya on Dec. 6 in Las Vegas, they got as much of an earful as an eyeful. “The best moment of the fight for me was just before they called [the TKO],” says Greg Bellotte, who mixed the bout for SkySports from feeds coming in from host broadcaster HBO’s truck next door. “The referee came over to De La Hoya and told him he had better start defending himself or he’d call the fight [for Pacquiao]. Moments later, just after the ninth-round bell, he did exactly that. I’m not sure what they heard on HBO, but we caught it loud and clear and the director was thrilled.” The stereo mix that went to SkySports’ U.K. audience had lots of sounds, thanks to the NCP 10 production truck with a Calrec Alpha console with Bluefin. Keeping the roaring crowd and an equally loud PA out of the mix, using a combination of adroit fader moves and subtractive EQ, was a challenge. But the reward was two pairs of very distinct-sounding gloves. Bellotte had a lot of sources to work with, as many as 15, he estimates, including four Sennheiser 416 microphones hung from the lighting grid and angled in towards the ring, two more 416s on fishpoles that followed the action back to the fighters’ corners, and Sennheiser MKH70 shotguns on two handheld cameras that were on platforms even with the ring’s height. A pair of E-V 635 dynamic microphones was placed near one of the high cameras to pick up crowd FX. The referee was wearing a Sennheiser SK50 wireless lavalier package, the source of Bellotte’s inside scoop that seemed to foretell the outcome of the bout. —Dan Daley WWW.SPORTSVIDEO.ORG school games at the level of a Big 12 game,” says Fox Sports Southwest Senior Executive Producer Mike Anastassiou, “but we use seven cameras and a full complement of networked EVS servers, Chyron HyperX graphics, and a Fox Box insert.” Because the two games were played back to back at Reliant on Dec. 20, the network made use of the dual-feed capabilities of the Mobile TV Group truck. Half the truck was used for game production and half for High School Sports Live, which recapped the first game and previewed the second. — Ken Kerschbaumer SVGPRODUCTS re:PLAY 11 the Advisory Board CHAIRMAN Ken Aagaard, CBS Sports, EVP Operations and Production Services Members Adam Acone, NHL, VP, Broadcasting and Programming When it comes to technology, sports television leads the way We’re proud to represent those professionals who enrich the fan’s experience, break new barriers, and establish new standards for all forms of live television, mobile and broadband entertainment. SVG’s advocacy, communication, education and market development activities are made possible by the following sponsors: platinum sponsors Glenn Adamo, NFL VP, Media Operations and Broadcasting Peter Angell, Infront Sports and Media, Production & Programming Division Director Chuck Blazer, FIFA Marketing and TV, Director David Catzel, Industry Consultant Joe Cohen, HTN, Chairman and CEO Don Colantonio, ESPN, Senior Director, Original Entertainment-Media Packaging Preston Davis, ABC, President, Broadcast Operations and Engineering Jim DeFillipis, Fox Technology Group, SVP, Television Engineering Ed Delaney, YES, Network VP, Operations Russell Gabay, Major League Baseball International, VP and Executive Producer Jerry Gepner, L5 Media Services, President Steve Gorsuch, USTA Billie Jean King Tennis Center, Director of Broadcast Operations Steve Hellmuth, NBA, EVP Operations and Technology Ardell Hill, Media General, SVP Broadcast APPLE Operations Robert D. Jordan, New York Jets, VP Design & Construction John Kvatek, University of Central Florida Athletics Association, Director of Video Services John Leland, IMG Media, Senior Director, Video Operations Michael Meehan, NBC Sports, VP André Mendes, Special Olympics Global Information Officer Ken Norris, UCLA, Director of Video Operations PREMIER SPONSORS Alliance Digital • Calrec Audio • Glowpoint • Inertia Unlimited • Ikegami Electronics • Linear Acoustic • NewTek • Omneon Video Networks • Ross Video • RC Gear • Salzbrenner Stagetec • SES Americom • Show Partners • Studer • Wohler CORPORATE SPONSORS 3ality Digital • Abekas • Akamai • Ascent Media • Aspera • Associated Press • Audio-Technica • B&H Photo/Video • Chyron • Clyne Media • Cobalt Digital • Crawford Communications • CSB School of Broadcasting • Dale Pro Audio • Dolby Laboratories • Euphonix • Eutelsat America • Evertz • EVS • Fast Forward Video • Fischer Connectors • Fletcher Chicago • Front Porch Digital • Genesis Networks • Gepco • Gerling & Associates • HTN • IBM • IDX • Inlet Technologies • JVC • Markertek Video Supply • Miranda • Motorola • Move Networks • MRC Broadcast • MultiDyne • National City Media Finance • Nesbit Systems • NetTensity • NeuLion • Neutrik • New Pro Video Systems • •NMT • NVision • Orad • Origin Digital • Pixel Power • Polar Mobile • Quantel • QuStream • RayV • RF Central • Riedel Communications • Screen Subtitling Systems • Sennheiser • SGI • Shure • Solid State Logic • SOS Global • Swarmcast • Tandberg TV • Tekserve • Telecast Fiber Systems • VER • Vinten • Vista Satellite • WiseDV • YamahA MOBILE CORPORATE SPONSORS •A Crewing Alliance • All Mobile Video • Alliance Productions • Arctek Satellite Aerial Video Systems Productions • Corplex • CP Communications • CSP Mobile • Dome Productions • DTAGS • F&F Productions • Filmwerks Int’l • Game Creek Video • L3/Wolf Coach • Mira Mobile Television • Mobile TV Group • NCP • RTM • Token Creek • Total RF • UpLit www. sportsvideo. org Chuck Pagano, ESPN, CTO Del Parks, Sinclair Broadcast Group, VP of Engineering and Operations Patty Power, CBS College Sports Network, SVP of Operations Paul Puccio, Industry Consultant Russell Quy, IMG Media, VP and Executive Producer Scott Rinehart, NASCAR Media Group, Director of Internal Operations Mike Rokosa, NBA, VP of Engineering Bob Ross, CBS, SVP East Coast Operations Rich Routman, Collegiate Images, Director of Sales and Business Development Tom Sahara, Turner Sports, Senior Director, IT and Remote Operations Chuck Scoggins, PGA Tour Productions, VP, Operations Bruce Shapiro, Speed, Coordinating Technical Producer Jack Simmons, Fox Sports, SVP, Production Don Sperling, New York Giants Entertainment, VP, Executive Producer Jerry Steinberg, Fox Sports, SVP, Field Operations Ernie Watts, Turner Studios, Senior Director, Technical Ops, Live Events Richard Wolf, ABC, SVP, Telecommunications & Network Origination Services Dave Zur, Altitude Sports & Entertainment, VP Operations