Archives for 2011

Football Friday’s Afterthoughts


Dodgers to have Asian flavor after $1.2bn offer?

The embattled Los Angeles Dodgers owners have been reportedly offered $1.2 billion for the team by a consortium of Chinese investors led by investor Bill Burke, according to the Los Angeles Times. The Dodgers are currently in bankruptcy protection and are being run by an executive who was appointed by Major League Baseball. In addition the owners, Frank and Jamie McCourt are involved in a bitter divorce that centers on, among other issues, who actually owns the team. The two had been using the ball club to finance an extravagant lifestyle and are now mired in debt and have been seeking a variety of outside sources to help meet payroll and other expenses. When Nintendo started the process of buying the Seattle Mariners about a decade ago there was a great deal of resistance and I expect more of the same for this, if it materializes.

Can Sports Teams do more to take advantage of Fan Check-ins?

Do you use location based services to check into places with your smartphone? Obviously you know you are not alone as millions of others vie to be Mayor of such and such and makes you wonder how these people have lives if they are logging into the local pub at twice the rate you are. But anyway Jason Peck has a nice piece on his blog about the technology and proposes that sports teams could take much more advantage of this mobile feature. He points out that the teams have a huge captive audience at games and could leverage this via mobile technology much better than they are currently doing. He links to several interesting papers on the topics and shows which MLB ball parks lead in check-ins. Not surprising that the San Francisco Giants at AT&T lead the way.

Is your NFL draft lineup set?

Thank heavens that preseason football is over (I know, Seattle and Oakland play tonight but..) and now the real work begins. By that I mean drafting your fantasy football team. As a persistent bottom dweller in my league I am not going to offer any advice on players but I do recommend The Big Lead’s excellent Jason Lisk’s look at the skill positions for some insight into players. He also is in the process of doing short evaluations of all of the teams. He is not doing comprehensive ones but often focuses on a single player or area, such as the Ram’s quarterbacking situation, and how it could be expected to change based on historical analysis. Always a good read.

Will Samsung bring Note to US Market?

Samsung is continuing to expand into the mobile computing space with a new product as well as updating its existing tablet, according to Computerworld. The more interesting of the two looks to be the Galaxy Note, a handheld device that enables users to write directly on the screen using its 5.3-inch display and it also serves as a smartphone. The second is a replacement for the Galaxy Tab that it introduced a year ago. The latest version, named Tab 7.7 which sports a sleeker look and a better display. However at this time it is unclear if Samsung will be offering either item in the US. The Tab 7.7 is expected to be priced around $800, significantly higher than rival products and the next wave of tablets are expected to be even lower.

NCAA/Turner Alliance to expand its Football Presence

The alliance between NCAA and Turner Sports will be showing increased activity this Fall

With the start of college football just days away the NCAA and its partner Turner Sports have stepped up with a range of programs for fans and followers of NCAA football including a 30 minute preview show every week.

The show will be hosted by Vince Cellini and SEC college analyst Dave Archer and will cover not only the Football Bowl Subdivision but also the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), Division II and Division III, which should make for a very busy 30 minutes.

The move is just one of many as the two partners start to move forward in a joint effort to expand the NCAA’s on-line and broadcast presence. Last year the NCAA singed a pair of deals with Turner Sports, one of which included CBS as well.

The first deal called for a 14-year television, Internet and wireless rights agreement with CBS Sports and Turner Broadcasting. It gave the two the rights to present the Division I Men’s Basketball Championship beginning in 2011 and continuing through 2024 for more than $10.8 billion. This includes all the games being broadcast live, over a combination of four networks-CBS, TBS, TNT and truTV.

Included in the deal are joint marketing effort between the NCAA , CBS Sports and Turner Broadcasting. At the time this was labeled the start of a new partnership and so it was as a second deal was cut soon after.

The second deal was just between Turner and the NCAA and it called for Turner create and mange NCAA Digital and which also covers 14 years. No terms of this deal were made available. NCAA Digital will cover all 88 NCAA championships and is designed to heighten awareness and interest in them, including running NCAA.com, the primary web site for all of the championships.

Included in the Fall football push will a number of expected features including a live scoreboard, power rankings and game recaps. There will be live statistics from ongoing games and a Heisman Watch as well as the ability to call up video highlights and watch features produced for the site.

It will be interesting to see how this impacts ESPN who currently is the unchallenged king of on-line and broadcast sports. I expect that will raise the bar for much of the channels analyst, much as the Baseball Network seems to have done, in my opinion. However the 30 minute show has a tough hill to climb to surpass the very popular ESPN College Gameday program.

Mobile Devices Catching on with Wider Audience

The makeup of the owners of tablets and eReaders is undergoing a major change in the United States, according to the latest report from nielsonwire. Just a year ago it was dominated by young males but that is quickly changing as the technology is finding acceptance on a much broader scale.

Among other things that the survey found was that women went from 47% of eReader users in Q3 2010 to 61% in Q2 2011, however the growth in tablets was slower, moving from 39% to 41% in the same time frame.

Also an older crowd is moving it this market as well. Tablet users in the combined 45-55 year old and 55+ space grew from 23% in Q3 2010 to 37% market share in Q2 20111 while in the eReader space it grew from 40% to 51% in the same time frame.

Not surprisingly the two categories, eReaders and Tablets, are used for much different purposes, according to an earlier survey by Neilson. Tablets find a great deal of acceptance as device used to accompany watching television, while not surprisingly eReaders are most often found used as a bedside book.

It will be very interesting to see how this market continues to grow, both in customer base and usage, but also in product offerings. While Hewlett-Packard departed this space that made its tablet offering an instant sensation, selling out. While in part this was driven by the opportunity to get a bargain, I think that it also shows the pent up demand for lower cost devices, tablets in particular.

While lower cost ones are starting to hit the market, with Pandigital’s just introduced lineup just weeks ago being one of the first, I think offerings in this space could have issues with quality, and since that will be hard to uphold with a lower price point, it could be a while until one catches on with customers. Pandigital’s Nova did not fare well in the first review I read.

“In-running” future of sports betting, newspaper says

Imagine a Super Bowl Sunday in the near future. You are sitting in the stands with 70,000 or more hardcore fans. Your team’s star wide receiver goes into the slot. On your smartphone, a betting proposition comes up. Do you take three-to-one odds that there will be a completion to your team’s stud?

The technology is already available to make that experience a reality, and the future of the $2.76 billion legal sports betting industry in the United States may depend it becoming a reality, according to a Sunday August 28 report in the Las Vegas Review-Journal

Already, smartphones are being used in Nevada to make the sports experience better for fans. Cantor Fitzgerald, a Wall Street investment firm that was devastated by the 9-11 attacks, has taken over the sports books of The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, The Palm and a host of other casinos. It uses the same technology it uses manage Wall Street hedge funds to provide “in-running” betting services to customers with smart phones, offering proposition betting throughout the game. The only reason “in-running” is not offered to your smart phone, unless you are in the State of Nevada, is because state and federal laws prohibit it. Global Positioning Systems are used to detect whether consumers are attempting “in-running” bets, and someone straddling the state line between California and Nevada, Utah and Nevada, Arizona and Nevada and Oregon and Nevada, can literally see their bet go through or be declined depending on whether they move six meters inside the State of Nevada or move into a state where the practice is banned.

Las Vegas-based American Wagering, which already produces BlackBerry, Android and iPhone betting applications is currently developing similar technology for iPad and Android tablet, the Review-Journal said. And U.K.-based William Hill recently shelled out $53 million to acquire American Wagering and Club Cal Neva Satellite Race and Sports Division, bringing a company known for pushing for reform in gaming regulations to the United States sports gambling scene.

Write your Congressman.

Sports Media Pages Load Too Slow, Researcher Says

Technology performance company Gomez Benchmarks said Friday Aug. 26 that only one in 12 sports media websites can load pages in five seconds or less, disappointing millions of sports fans every time they use their smartphones to get news and buzz.

A division of Compuware Corporation, Gomez Benchmarks measured four carrier/device combinations — AT&T/iPhone, Sprint/HTC Hero, T-Mobile/HTC Dream and Verizon/Droid — against 12 popular sports media websites. While the website of the WWE averaged an acceptable 4.5 seconds per page, such media outlets as ESPN.com, NFL.com and CBS Sports.com were way too slow to satisfy sports fans.

See how your favorite fan sites did:

NHL.com — 8.3 seconds average response time

NBA.com — 10.68 second average response time   

NASCAR.com — 13.16 second average response time

 NBC Sports — 14.04 second average response time

ESPN.com — 14.06 second average response time

MLB.com – 14.33 second average response time

NFL.com — 14.93 second average response time

CBS Sports — 15.41 second average response time

About.com Sports — 20.11 second average response time

 

 

Can We Just Kill the Tim Tebow News for a bit?

Is a third string QB really worth a daily update?

There seems to be one story that is dominating the preseason NFL news this year. It is not the question of if Green Bay can repeat, if the Eagles will play in the Superbowl, or will an NFC West team make the playoffs again with a losing record. No it revolves around a backup quarterback and where he will end up in the depth charts.

Poor Tim Tebow, everybody seems to be kicking him, and he does not even appear to be down. Highly successful and highly praised in college, things are different now that he is in the NFL and the drumbeat of negativity seems to be picking up as he prepares to start his second season in Denver.

His problems started before he was drafted, as most fans know, with industry experts claiming that he had a poor throwing motion, took too long to throw, could not really walk on water, the whole nine yards. They boldly predicted that he would be a mid second to third round draft choice and quickly moved to a running back position.

Josh McDaniels, then head coach for the Denver Broncos boldly proved everyone wrong, at least in regards to draft position, by taking Tebow in the first round. The draft position, his obvious display of his beliefs, his autobiography, his ESPN documentary, the rumor that the Broncos were going to move Orton so he could start etc… all seems to have created a backlash against him.

Maybe I should have waited a few years.

It seems that on a daily basis someone is saying that he cannot make it, that he is failing, and taking great joy in it. The latest is Boomer Esiason, former NFL quarterback who bluntly said that Tebow is not an NFL quarterback, “he can’t play, he can’t throw.” Even the comedy site The Onion has gotten in on the fun, saying that Jesus Christ claims that Tebow is not ready to start in the NFL.

I say, so what? There is no doubt in my mind that he brought some of this on himself, but you look at press stories on him in school were almost all positive, and now the opposite. I neither like nor dislike Tebow. Until he starts for the Broncos and beats a team I am rooting for, or possibly the point spread, I really do not care. Is it really that important to breathlessly talk about every preseason pass? I can barely stand to watch preseason games, and now I am inundated with this crap? Get a life for goodness sake.

I know that this is the NFL silly season, when real storylines are few and far between but I have heard more about him that the Colt’s quarterback situation, the 49ers quarterback situation, the Seahawks quarterback situation etc.. all of which seems to be a a bit more important in the overall scheme of things. There have been plenty of NFL QBs that failed with all of the tools-JaMarcus Russell anyone?-and ones that threw funny, were too short etc.. that succeeded. So lets just wait and see.