ESPN SportsCenter’s TebowTime programming goes No. 1 on Twitter

ESPN on Wednesday dedicated a full hour of SportsCenter to talk about Denver Broncos Quarterback Tim Tebow, and the programming caused #SCTebow to achieve the No. 1 trend ranking on Twitter.

TebowTime was the most successful effort to date by SportsCenter to tailor content to sports social media interaction, and could prove a template ESPN uses in the future to boost ratings during off-peak viewing times.

Here’s how ESPN promoted #SCTebow:

News + Highlights + Tebow RT @ Set your clocks: It’s #TebowTime at 2 p.m. ET on @ #ESPNFR http://t.co/eKNuGOBr

@SportsCenter

SportsCenter

Billed as TebowTime, the SportsCenter programming aired between 2 pm and 3 pm EST.

TebowTime marked one of the first times SportsCenter dedicated the majority of its hour-long news format to a subject that wasn’t breaking news. On July 13, SportsCenter dedicated a large block of its format to the impact of Twitter on sports.

ESPN SportCenter enjoyed cross promotion for its TebowTime sports social media blitz, including this BroncoTalk.com report

TebowTime included highlights of Tebow’s Denver Bronco and Florida Gators comebacks, live reports from the Broncos facility, Skip Bayless debating about Tebow’s merits and reports on Tebow’s impact on Fantasy Football.

Broncotalk.net played SportsCenter’s Tebow Time on its home page, and ESPN’s Front Row blog included extensive coverage of ESPN’s decision.

TebowTime was the brainchild of SportsCenter segment producer Etan Harmelech and championed by coordinating producer Gus Ramsey, producer Tom DeCorte and senior coordinating producer Michael Shiffman.

 

 

 

Pac-12 calls for Oregon Ducks and UCLA Bruins fans to do hashtag battle

The Pac-12 Conference, one of college football’s most aggressive promoters of social media, today called on Oregon Ducks and UCLA Bruins fans to  include #GoDucks and #GoBruins in their comments during tonight’s Pac-12 Football Championship Game.

The athletic conference is administrating to the hashtag battle as a means to increase fan engagement in tonight’s game between the No. 9 ranked Ducks and the un-ranked Bruins.

The Hashtag Battle Defined

Already underway, the Pac-12’s hashtag battle keeps score of the percentage of overall #GoDucks and #GoBruins tweets, and features the best Ducks and Bruins tweets in side-by-side scroll bars for the two teams.

The Ducks and Bruins are scheduled to kick off tonight at 8:30 E.S.T.

The hashtag battle could be more interesting than the game. Oregon is thirty-one and a half point favorites versus the Bruins, whose six win and six loss 2011 season is best described as mystifyingly erratic. A Rose Bowl stake goes to the winner.

Pac-12 uses simple, effective sports social media promo

The Pac-12 did a good job explaining its value-proposition to potential users in 120-characters or less.

Here’s how the Pac-12 promoted the battle on Twitter:

The battle has begun! Use #GoDucks or #GoBruins to cheer on your team. See the results of the hashtag battle: http://t.co/Rx2OZp7L

@pac12

Pac-12 Conference

Gamespaces from Twitter Streams

In creating a simple read-out of the percentage of overall #GoDucks and #GoBruins tweets, the Pac-12 has produced a rudimentary gamespace from the Twitter stream.

Within the mobile sports industry, there are more sophisticated examples of this approach. One is GiveMojo, which incorporates Twitter within its gamespace, but also allows participants to buy extra points, and features referees who assign added value to particularly good tweets. At MobileSportsReport press time, GiveMojo was not offering the Oregon versus UCLA game within its gamespace.

Testing 1,2,3

The Pac-12 is on the ball in administrating to its hashtag battle. A post by MobileSportReport’s @BroApp,  depicted below, referred to an historic UCLA game in which the 15-point underdog Bruins defeated No. 1 Ohio State in the 1976 Rose Bowl.

The MSR test tweet said,

 #GoBruins A little John Sciarra magic tonight? It’d be as big an upset.

This tweet appeared almost instantly in the Pac-12 interface.

However, a second post, under hashtag #GoDucks, commented on the point spread. This tweet was not picked up by the Pac-12. So, the Pac-12 isn’t asleep at the switch in curating its Twitter rivalry.

Here’s what the Pac-12’s presentation looks like:

A post by MobileSportReport's BroApp immediately appeared in the Pac-12 interface. It said, "#GoBruins A little John Sciarra magic tonight? It'd be as big an upset." Another post, under hashtag #GoDucks commented on the point spread. It was not picked up by the Pac-12. Kudos Pac-12. You were not asleep at the switch.

UPDATE: Check out what Fox did after the game (thanks @tariq_ahmad for the pic):

Hashtag battle between #goducks and #gobruins shown on FOX at end of game #smsports #sportsbiz http://t.co/gOTYiA8G

@tariq_ahmad

Tariq Ahmad

Bleacher Report and Turner Sports Continue to Expand Sports Apps Space

Ever wanted to follow a Div III Field Hockey playoff or have streaming news from your favorite pro team? Well there is a couple more apps that will help you do just that as web sites and news organizations continue to expand their presence in the mobile sports space.

First up is Turner Sports which has developed a mobile app called NCAA Sports for the Apple iOS and Android platforms. Designed to cover a wide spectrum of sports that often do not get wide coverage the free app will include live streaming video of over 60 NCAA championship games.

It will provide live streaming video of championships for all NCAA sports including Division II football, Divisions II and III wrestling, Divisions I, II and III field hockey, Divisions II and III men’s and women’s soccer, and Divisions II and III women’s volleyball. The app will also include in-depth regular season coverage of football and basketball.

The program permits users to drop in and out of the live broadcasts and provides the ability to chat with friends using Facebook or to post comments via Twitter.

In addition Turner has added a new mobile website on its hosted NCAA.Com space that is designed for mobile browsers user with touch screen devices such as Tablets and smartphones. The mobile website will allow fans to get live scores, schedules, news, rankings and video recaps that have been tailored for display on the mobile devices.

In a press release Mark Johnson, vice-president of Turner Sports’ NCAA Digital group said about the development that “College sports content is underserved in the mobile space right now and we’re excited to offer fans mobile products that are 100% dedicated to college sports.”

Bleacher Report moves desktop offerings to mobile app

The second app coming down the road is from Bleacher Report called b/r Team Stream App and the free app is now available for both Android and Apple iOS devices. It will cover a number of sports including NFL, College Football, MLB, NBA, NHL Soccer, Tennis and Golf.

The app is in ways a news aggregation program, Bleacher Report searches the web for news on the team you have selected and streams them to your mobile device using the app. However it will also include tweets from athletes and sportswriters.

Facebook, Twitter in Death Match Over Sports Fans’ Souls

If Facebook bought Twitter, sports fans would rejoice.

Through such a fantasy merger, there’d be only one “identification service” to worry about when you wanted to broadcast your sports opinions to the world. That would be a welcome relief from the two-headed monster that now rules the kingdom of sports smack, the beast with tweets on one side and Facebook posts on the other. The big question is whether sports fans will continue to feed both monsters, or whether one will prevail, like Highlander, to rule them all.

Winning the ID Game

Before we get too deep into bad movie cliches, it’s worthwhile to take a small step back and wonder at how quickly Facebook and Twitter have basically won the battle for user identification, or authentication. In the days of Grampa Internet, individual sites would try to get readers to “log in” or “register” with unique passwords and IDs. That led to a frustrating era, just now ending, of having to remember multiple screen names, logins and places to track conversations.

Then came Facebook and Twitter, who after a short while made the smart move of making users’ identifying features portable — meaning you could use your Facebook or Twitter screen persona to log in to web sites and blogs, instead of having to remember each site’s unique ID. Boom, game over. If you are an active sports commenter, you are probably already on Facebook and Twitter and spend little time anywhere else.

Though ESPN still requires you to have a site-specific login to comment on their story “conversation” sites, it’s easy to see where the worldwide leader is going, with constant beckonings to “tweet us your questions” to be answered on talk shows, and with an unending parade of Facebook polls and comment come-ons. It’s pretty amazing that two startups like Facebook and Twitter could completely trash the user-ID-accumulation schemes cooked up by major media properties since the web began. What might be more compelling is the coming clash between the two new titans, who each have attributes that make them more compelling to sports opinionators, depending upon the situation.

Twitter: Fast, fun and the athlete’s domain

Though by far the smaller of the two services, Twitter is the new darling of the sports world, in no small part because it has become the favorite platform for pro athletes. Unlike a website, a blog or even a Facebook page, a Twitter account needs only some short thoughts and a smartphone — two things that are front and center in the pro athlete’s world of 2011.

In its short life Twitter has changed the face of many facets of media production, including coverage of wars and revolutions. In the less-meaningful but not less-followed world of sports, Twitter has become the de facto news wire of the sporting world, with teams, athletes, fans and followers all adding to and taking away from the information stream.

For the average fan, Twitter is like a fire hose of comments and information that never slows down, and is as wide and diverse as who you choose to follow. From a commenter standpoint there is the problem of having to make your voice heard in the crowd, but by just signing up and tweeting you still have a chance to see your name or fan-tastic psuedonym flashed on the ESPN screen. The low barrier to entry and instant gratification make Twitter the first choice for a lot of new Internet sports enthusiasts.

Facebook: Best for long opinions, monetization

In terms of really building an online social presence, however, nothing beats Facebook, especially when it comes to easily finding a home for photos, videos, long opinions and opportunities to build a business. For teams, athletes, vendors and sponsors in the field, a Facebook page is a no-brainer as it gives easy access to the hundreds of millions of folks who already have a Facebook ID.

For the average sports fan Facebook is probably a lot easier to understand than Twitter, and the post/comments structure lends itself to longer “conversations” on a single topic or event. The recent integration of Facebook comments under blog posts is a step toward Facebook’s plan of social-activity domination: Simply put, the service wants to make it easy for you to record your every thought, “Like” and observation in some form that can be embedded inside a Facebook wrapper.

And by allowing integration of applications and even stores on Facebook pages, the service is equally attractive to teams, vendors and sponsors who want to extract dollars from the multitudes of fans. The commerce-friendly platform is what gives Facebook the sporting edge right now, but Twitter is gaining ground quickly, thanks to its Google-like ease of use.

Who Wins? Or do they both survive?

Right now, connected sports fans as well as athletes, teams, schools, advertisers and vendors in the sports-fan space all are most likely active on both services, depending on the time of day or situation. While much of the live commenting action has moved to Twitter thanks to its instant-publishing stream of thought, the more leisurely searches for information and interaction still take place on websites, blogs or Facebook pages, meaning that you can’t live on simply one or the other right now.

While that means there is still the headache of “do I post to Twitter or Facebook,” there remains the possibility of some future integration, perhaps by a business arrangement once both firms go public as is widely expected. Though there do exist services and techno-solutions that will replicate your Facebook posts onto Twitter and vice versa, the different styles of communication on either platform make such services an inelegant compromise at best. Will those differing styles keep the beast’s two heads alive indefinitely, or will one succeed in chewing through the other’s throat? Whichever way it goes, it will be a fun movie to watch play out over the near term future.

Will MLB’s New Deal Kill or Enhance Players’ Access to Social Media?

Just catching up on Major League Baseball’s off-season news prior to the hot stove league heating up with the arrival of the Winter Meetings and I came upon an interesting piece in Baseball Nation about a change in social media usage in baseball.

It pointed out that there is a single line in the new collective bargaining agreement that says “All players will be subject to a policy governing the use of Social Media.” That is it, no details and no policy.

I have no issue with baseball, or any sport, having a set of guidelines for the athletes to follow in regards to social media. For instance you probably do not want people Tweeting shower scenes, which has already happened in basketball. Or sending images of their junk, which has (purportedly) happened in the NFL.

The question is will MLB simply move its rules for team employees to now also cover players or will it create a new set of guidelines, one that might be designed to always put MLB in a good light?

The new players’ policy is so short it is hard to give it the title of policy, but the open-ended nature of it does give you reason to pause. Currently baseball, and for that matter most pro sports, are pretty open about the use of Facebook, Twitter and other forms of social media as a tool that its players can more directly with the fans. Outside of outlawing tweets from the free-throw line or the line of scrimmage, it’s pretty much an open game.

And rightly so. Curt Schilling has had the blog 38 Pitches for years where he posts his opinions and people can chime in. That seems almost old school (yes I know he also Tweets and uses the two for different purposes) now with the ability to follow players’ feelings and opinions in almost real time. A quick look at the web site tweeting-athletes shows the huge number of players from around the globe and around sports that are active at some level in tweeting.

Fans enjoy hearing directly from players. It may not be the most insightful sometimes, but it is often colorful and much more interesting than the canned quotes that players tend to give to live broadcasters.
I see the need for rules and a cooling off period, so that in the heat of the moment a player does not post something that he and possible his team, will regret, but I worry about leagues taking it too far.

The NFL feels no qualms about fining coaches for criticizing refs even when everybody in America has seen the replay that shows how wrong the ref was on a play. Let’s not even talk about fining people for wearing the wrong color cleats. It really is earning its title as the No Fun League. The NBA has been increasingly worried about its image over the last decade and has dictated how players will dress. However they both do seem to have an open mind on the topic of social media.

The existing rules for MLB employees and contractors can be found here– and it is pretty much what you would expect it to be: don’t pretend you are speaking for MLB, no confidential information, no using logos and property of the league and so on.

I think baseball, and all sports, need to embrace social media as an adjunct to marketing and advertising efforts. What could be better than players directly accessing fans? I guess if the players are unhappy and the team is poorly run bad things can happen, but on the whole I think the net results will be positive.

#HAILSTATE Eggs on Mississippi State Tweeters

#Hailstate appeared in one end zone during Mississippi State's grudge match with Ole Miss

Mississippi State used a Twitter hashtag in its end zone during its annual Egg Bowl game versus Ole Miss on Saturday, and the results were as good as its 31-3 victory over its cross state rivals.

The use of the #Hailstate hash tag, placed in the north end zone at the game, spurred continued Twitter activity through Nov. 28, with some fans suggesting use of #Hailstate on helmets and uniforms in future games.

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban also approved, according to a Mashable report.

“It’s a fun way to involve social media at the game, and to TV viewers it’s going to stir up some emotions between both teams,” Cuban said.

Cuban said he would consider using a similar approach at Dallas Mavericks games, but NBA licensing rules would be a significant hurdle for Cuban to clear before he could make good on that promise.

Club de Fútbol Jaguares de Chiapas' jerseys feature player's handles in the same color scheme and font as Twitter

Although we’ll believe Cuban when we see something like @the_real-dirk on the back of Dirk Nowitzki’s jersey, the use of Twitter hashtags is indeed an emerging trend at sporting events. Mississippi State’s #Hailstate comes fewer than three weeks after Mexican premiere division soccer team Club de Fútbol Jaguares de Chiapas replaced players’ names with their Twitter handles on the back of team jerseys.

In the United States, this Twitter-tactic is most likely to receive widespread use at the high-school level, where school administrators have greater latitude over what they put on playing fields. It is a solid way to indelibly etch in the minds of attendees that an active Twitter stream is available. Increased fan engagement in high-school and minor college sporting events benefits such blogging sites as BleacherReport.com and SBNation.com because they are capable of covering high school and minor college teams better than ESPN, CBS Sports, Fox Sports and others, who all have to focus on national stories to maintain interest in the major college and professional sporting events they pay hundreds of millions of dollars to broadcast.

Ironically, Mississippi State is one of the least Twitter-savvy college football programs, counting only 10,663 followers for @mstateathletics. In addition, the Twitter handle @hailstate is independently run, and has just 640 followers.  Here’s @hailstate retweeting  a far-more-widely-followed Ole Miss commentary minutes before this blog post was published on MobileSportsReport:

The endzone where your player scratched out an obscenity? RT @ Dear State, you look dumb as shit hashtagging your endzone.

@hailstate

hailstate