Archives for November 2011

ESPN VP on Live Penn State Coverage: ‘We Missed the Story’

Along with other media types, Mobile Sports Report thought that ESPN’s live coverage of the turmoil surrounding the firing of Penn State football coach Joe Paterno Wednesday night was below par for the worldwide leader in sports. Thursday ESPN executive vice president Norby Williamson agreed in part, saying that he’d like “a do-over” and that ESPN “missed the story” by not having the right kind of live coverage on the spot.

In a podcast released Thursday on ESPN’s website Williamson, the network’s executive vice president for production, discussed ESPN’s coverage of events Wednesday night. While he offered praise for ESPN’s “perspective” and its large roster of learned commentators, Williamson at several points admits that ESPN fumbled its coverage, especially by failing to provide live coverage when the activities were at fever pitch.

“We were a little remiss of our live coverage, on the ground,” Williamson says on the podcast, right around the 4:00 mark of the taping. Though ESPN had camera crews on site, including front-line talent Tom Rinaldi, Williamson said that ESPN got caught out of position and in the turmoil with students sometimes turning hostile toward news crews, were unable to move into the proper position for a live shot.

“We were a little late with that,” Williamson says, referring to the live coverage of the hottest parts of the so-called riot. “That [the live coverage] is the one thing I’d like a do-over on.”

Due to the swarming crowds — and the potential for actual harm to ESPN’s crew — the network was unable to get its cameras to where the action was, Williamson said. “Where you were is where you were,” says Williamson. “We could’ve done a better job of positioning.”

After praising competitor CNN for being better positioned, Williamson goes on to compliment the ESPN reporters on the scene for getting good interviews in the crowd, even though live on air via phone, reporter Tom Ferrey told anchors Stuart Scott and Steve Levy that he left the action after getting hit in the leg by a rock. Williamson closes his review (around the 7:30 mark) by saying simply — like we saw — that ESPN dropped the ball.

“I think we missed the story for a window there, of being live on the ground when the student insurrection happened,” Williamson says.

Penn State Parody Gets Huge Sports Social Media Bump for The Onion

Image from The Onion's Sports Media Asks Molestation Victims What This Means For Joe Paterno's Legacy

A parody by Onion Sports Network about the Penn State rape scandal ignited on Twitter shortly after publication, generating over 1,152 tweets and 12,000 Facebook likes in its first hour of publication. Called Sports Media Asks Molestation Victims What This Means For Joe Paterno’s Legacy, the article underscores that quality content can and will be identified instantly by the sports social media community, even when every media outlet, blogger and tweeter is concentrating on the same thing.

One reason Onion Sports Network’s article is taking off is because it is so different from the cacophony of coverage going on everywhere else. It provides catharsis to a tragic, widening story that will likely to be the biggest sports scandal in our lifetime. True to Onion Sports Network’s form, it is also quality content.

Sports Media Asks Molestation Victims What This Means For Joe Paterno’s Legacy is satire, where fictional quotes from USA Today writer Steve Wieberg Sports Illustrated writer Stewart Mandel, and ESPN senior writer Ivan Maisel recount asking alleged rape victims of former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky whether they were concerned if the scandal would affect Joe Paterno’s legacy.

 

Twitter is Hammering ESPN on Penn State ‘Riots’ Coverage

Calling it a riot may be premature, but the events taking place in College Station State College Wednesday night following Joe Paterno’s ouster as Penn State head coach are happening largely in the dark, thanks to some serious news misjudgements by the “worldwide leader in sports,” ESPN.

Though ESPN apparently has a reporter live in the area, for several hours following the Paterno firing ESPN had no video or even still pictures from the scenes of the controversy — the massing crowds of students on College Avenue, or a smaller crowd outside Paterno’s house.

Conversely, on the ground Twitter reports were breaking news left and right, with CBS columnist Gregg Doyal using his @greggdoyelcbs to be among the first to report news trucks being overturned. And the school paper’s blog, @psufootblog, was the first outlet we saw to report Paterno’s brief public statements to the crowd outside his house. Other tweeters posted pictures of the crowd and of the overturned trucks, at least an hour before ESPN got any still images on TV.

ESPN recovered a bit later on, with some taped interviews by reporter Tom Farrey, including one with a brave student who said, on tape, that he supported the decision and that Joe Pa had to go. There was also an interview with another student who seemed a bit possessed with anger; but throughout the crisis, ESPN’s live cameras were nowhere to be found.

ESPN’s Poynter Review team issued a report Wednesday night saying the network missed the boat when the Paterno story broke. It appears that ESPN continued to be unready for more news at Penn State like Wednesday’s firing, which was predicted by many other media types. We’ll leave it to Jason Whitlock to deliver the coda on ESPN’s coverage:

No live feed, Matich in studio, Mi Son Lee on the scene = ESPN caught w/pants down tonight.

@WhitlockJason

Jason Whitlock

And it looks like CBS Sports was on the scene with more material (HT to Bleacher Report for the heads up)

UPDATE: Here’s the Daily Collegian video from outside Paterno’s house:

Frookie Speaks Out: “Yahoo! Sports: If You Can’t Stand the Heat Stay Off the Internet”

John Evan Frook, aka Frookie, is senior editor for MobileSportsReport

Apparently, sports social media is too much for one Yahoo Sports contributor to stand, and Yahoo Sports editors are clueless when it comes to timing.

In a column titled Where Did the “Classy” Sports Fans Go?, Yahoo Sports contributor Elden Hardesty today writes about going online after Sunday’s Baltimore Ravens versus Pittsburgh Steelers game on Nov. 6 and being shocked by online discussions encountered on ESPN, NFL.com and Yahoo! Sports.

“Hatred and the lack of class seems to have no boundaries and is becoming a disturbing trend on the discussion boards,” Hardesty writes.

Hardesty complains that people posting to online forums after the Ravens beat the Steelers on national television in a three-point squeaker bitched too much about the officiating. In addition, Hardesty took offense that some people participating in forums reveled in helmet-to-helmet contact likely to produce three separate fines from the National Football League office.

“It looks like a majority of the people who go online to discuss a game now only go there to slam everyone else, guess it makes them feel more like a man,” Hardesty writes. “The only thing worse than a sore loser is a sore winner and it appears both have taken control of the sports discussion boards.”

Hardesty’s outrage is simply misplaced. Sports social media is akin to sports radio of the 1980s, except it is unfiltered by producers. There are no bleeps and no 10-second delays. And NFL football is a world of passionate patriotism for a specific team. If you go on the websites of such major sports providers as ESPN, NFL.com and Yahoo! Sports right after an NFL game, you are going to find jingoism, sour grapes, and blood lust. This is the NFL, where early in life the average sports fan swears allegiance to a team and spends the rest of that lifetime living and dying with that team’s successes and setbacks.  As they have been for greater than a decade now, online forums are where the tribes gather after a war. After a war, there are no cool heads. That’s not outrageous. That’s reality.

And, as the column’s title suggests, Hardesty wonders where classy fans went, the answer is nowhere. They are still in the corporate suites, top-deck seats, at bars, in front of televisions at home or at work. The difference is that a growing number of them have mobile devices, and use them to find the people with whom they’d most want to interact. Some of them use handles like RayLewisSucks, BensADouche or Steelersin2012, and others don’t. They all have something to say, and most of them say it. Just don’t expect them to say what you want, or you’re going to be disappointed.

Hardesty is really not to blame. He had no back up. If Hardesty proposes there ought to be a place where bitching about officiating or expressing blood lust isn’t allowed, he should consider working with some of the better sports social media applications already on the market. Those apps allow you to easily pick and choose with whom you participate. For Yahoo! editors to pass the column off to the general public without getting Hardesty to insert analysis of sports social media applications for mobile devices is just piss poor editing. Sure, Hardesty’s column appeared on Yahoo!’s contributor network, and contributor networks are simply a place for a media outlet to get a few more eyeballs. But allowing decent writers like Hardesty to publish without enough quality control to recognize the boom in mobile sports applications is more than myopic. It is downright blind, relegating Yahoo! to the lowly status of content farm.

And here is the kicker. And not that idiot Ravens’ player Joe Flacco, who benefited from poor officiating and ought to have been knocked out by Steeler’s James Harrison’s helmet before he got a chance to engineer a last-minute, 92-yard drive that defeated the Steelers on Sunday night. Flacco is a quarterback. Here’s the real kicker:

The timing by Yahoo! Sports editors in posting Hardesty’s column was awful. Hardesty’s column appeared second in Google search results on the same day news that Joe Paterno would resign as head coach of Penn State broke as a national news story.  The Penn State story, including Tweets by Joe Paterno’s son amid questions whether his father would resign, was a story that took sports social media to new levels. If Ravens-Steelers commentary was profane and loud, as Hardesty asserts, Penn State commentary was four times more profane, and four times louder.  Hardesty’s uninformed column appearing on a day when the biggest college football story of its kind advanced in one of its most significant ways, underscores that sports content producers are going to need to watch every gate they keep, or appear embarrassingly out of touch with a rapidly changing sporting world.

Jersey Voters Overwhelmingly Support Sports Betting

LeRoy's Sports Book in Las Vegas has a mobile sports betting application ready to go if Federal laws are relaxed

New Jersey voters overwhelmingly supported sports betting at Atlantic City Casinos and state racetracks, paving the way for a legal challenge to Federal restrictions against legal sports betting on mobile devices.

According to a Philadelphia Media Network report, the ballot initiative passed by greater than a two-to-one ratio. Republican Gov. Chris Christie says the initiative provides him ammunition to challenge the Unlawful Gambling Enforcement Act, passed by Congress in 2006, which prohibits all states except those that already allowed sports wagering to implement sports betting systems.

“With this referendum, we have an opportunity that gives the state more solid footing to challenge the federal ban on sports wagering outside of a few select places,” Christie said before he voted in favor of Public Question 1, according to Philadelphia Media Network.

The move is significant because reform to the Unlawful Gambling Enforcement Act and The Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, passed by Congress in 1992, are needed in order to allow legal sports betting on mobile devices across the United States. Today, because of Federal law, an estimated $380 billion annually in illegal sports betting is conducted in the United States annually, according to National Gambling Impact Study Commission. Much of that is conducted through the online portals of offshore casinos, which are widely known to provide poor customer service and slow payouts.

New law would prove a boom for mobile device application developers. To date, Cantor Gaming, which operates the race and sports books of such Las Vegas casino powerhouses as the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, the Tropicana Las Vegas, the Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas and The Palazzo, and American Wagering, which operates a chain of race and sports books called Leroy’s, have released sports wagering applications that work in the state of Nevada. In addition, leading sports social media application developer PlayUp USA has similar capabilities through sister companies in international markets. Numerous other mobile sports application developers are also preparing sports wagering applications.

Research firm Gartner Group estimated that global mobile gaming revenues reached $5.6 billion in 2010, and predicted the market would grow to $11.4 billion dollars by 2014.

Need to see if your team is Bowl Bound? There is an App for that.

ESPN updates Bowl tracking App

ESPN has updated its ESPN Bowl Bound application, and the 2011 edition sports new features as well as the established features such as providing news, video and the ever important tweets about favorite teams.

One key new feature, which works with users of the Watch ESPN mobile app, gives fans the option to stream live games on their mobile devices. Some of the new features are simply tweaking the program such as adding refresh to the scoreboard and being able to set up video alerts to key games.

A key feature for fans that looks to really appeal to a range of fans, particularly those that do not live near the teams they root for is the Bowl Bound Team Clubhouse. The Clubhouse is a customizable feature that allows fans to add their favorite team as well as its logo and colors. It includes team Twitter feeds specifically tailored for the fans school and has a Conversation feature that enables a user to chat with similar fans and trash talk rivals.
The Clubhouse includes 240 FBS and FCS team clubhouses and has a host of information about the teams including rosters, schedules, stats and a flow of news and video t keep fans up to date.

The program has a host of other features, some also available in other ESPN programs. Weekly schedules and scores for instance. Other features include weekly projections for all 35 bowl games, aggregated Twitter feed from ESPN’s college football people, weekly team rankings and poll results.

In addition you can follow ESPN’s Bowl news at @ESPN_BowlBound on Twitter. Currently the app is only available of the iOS 4.0 or later environment, or to the uninitiated Apple’s iPad, iPod touch and iPhone.

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