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Saturday, November 9, 2024
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Hughes Makes Cubs Sound Larger Than Life on Radio

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On the eve of Game 3, Pat Hughes did a little dreaming.

“Nobody has ever heard anyone say: ‘The Cubs are the world champions’ because radio had just been invented in 1908,” he said. “Games on the radio did not come along until the 1920s. And if there is a recording from 1945, when the Cubs last won the pennant, I’m not aware of it.”

Hughes, who has put in 20 years and called more than 1,700 defeats, deserves the chance to deliver the historic call. If only the Cubs would cooperate.

But as Hughes mentioned in the seventh inning Tuesday night, they have not led for a moment in the series. The Game 3 dagger came on a 3-2 pitch from closer Jeurys Familia.

“And the payoff pitch … strike three called,” Hughes said. “The ballgame is over and the New York Mets take a three-games-to-none lead in the National League Championship Series.”

Hughes’ broadcast far exceeded the quality of the home team. Working on WBBM-AM 780 with analyst Ron Coomer, Hughes painted a picture the way Jacob deGrom painted the bottom edge of the strike zone.

I always get a kick out of Hughes’ description of what everyone is wearing — including home-plate umpire Ted Barrett and his “black hat, black shoes.”

“There’s something about baseball on the radio that is still a marriage made in heaven,” Hughes told me Monday. “You would think in this age of video, baseball on radio would go by the wayside, but that’s not the case. As testimony, look at broadcast fees, sponsorship and salaries … though not necessarily mine.”

Hughes is not one to complain, but his pipes were rusty Monday, the result of insisting on an open-air booth in the Sunday night chill at Citi Field in New York — and not getting home to bed until 5 a.m.

Early Tuesday evening Hughes said, “Boy, it is nice to be back home, isn’t it?”

Analysts love working with Hughes because he sets them up like a veteran point guard.

After Dexter Fowler took a low called-third strike in the first, Hughes said: “Take a look, Ron.”

Coomer responded: “I agree with Dexter. (He’s) 6-foot-5 and this pitch is below the knees. DeGrom got a break.”

Both came to life when Kyle Schwarber lined one into the bleachers in the first.

Hughes’ call: “He hits a drive to left-center field … It’s got a chance … GONE!”

Coomer: “Can you say ‘Welcome back to Wrigley’!?”

Coomer was not the only other contributor to Tuesday’s broadcast. Television play-by-play man Len Kasper subbed for Hughes in the fifth inning.

Kasper told a story about deGrom having broken a finger on his left hand while helping a neighbor in Florida castrate a calf in 2013.

Hughes couldn’t resist a friendly jab, saying: “More of a television story than a radio story, Len.”

Kasper: “We’re trying to paint a picture here, Pat. I apologize for that … no more conversations about livestock the rest of the night, I promise.”

It turned out to be a pleasant diversion on a night in which the Cubs could relate to that calf.

To read the full article visit the Chicago Tribune where it was originally published

Braun Leaves RSU For 1430 The Buzz

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A mainstay in the Rogers State athletic department, Assistant Athletic Director of Operations, Steve Braun, will take his talents to the local sports radio scene after spending eight years working on the Hill.

“Working at my alma mater has been an amazing experience and made leaving the Hill all the more difficult,” Braun said. “It’s been an honor to be along for such an incredible journey as a member of Hillcat Athletics and a part of my life I will always hold dear. I appreciate the student-athletes, coaches, administrators and the Rogers State community for making the last eight years of my life some of the best. I am excited to start the next chapter of my life, but I truly will be Forever A Hillcat!”

Braun has accepted a position as a Sports Director/Co-Host with KTBZ AM 1430 the Buzz Tulsa, where he previously worked as a board operator and producer from 2010-12.

As the Assistant AD for Operations, Braun coordinated game operations, marketing, and helped with implementing compliance efforts.

He was a driving force behind the athletic department’s video streaming efforts, while contributing to the Hillcats’ social media presence.

Braun served as Sports Information Director from 2011 until his promotion in 2014, where he assisted in the publicity efforts and media operations for all of RSU’s sports.

To read the full article visit the Daily Progress where it was originally published

 

 

Sports Media Rights To Pass Gate Revenue In 2018

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Thanks in large part to the popularity of the NFL on television, in 2018 media rights will for the first time supplant gate revenue as the most lucrative subsector of the North American sports industry, according to a study released Monday.

In 2014, gate revenue accounted for $17.71 billion in revenue in North America while media rights was at $14.6 billion, good enough for third place among the four subsectors, behind sponsorship and ahead of merchandising, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers.

Media rights, though, are growing faster than all other sub-sectors, so they will be the biggest driver of revenue by 2018 when they bring in $19.95 billion, PwC said Monday. By then, gate revenue will be $19.72 billion, sponsorship will be $17.64 billion and merchandise will be $14.25 billion.

Between 2014-2022, broadcast networks will pay an estimated $40 billion for the rights to broadcast professional football games. Also contributing to growth is the fact that 35 percent of the deals for local TV rights to MLB, NBA and NHL games expire in the next five years so they will presumably be renewed at inflated prices, said PwC.

The entire sports market is expected to grow about 4 percent annually to $73.52 billion in 2019, according to PwC.

Credit to the Hollywood Reporter who originally published this article

Joe Buck Ready For Return As Talk Show Host

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Joe Buck is getting back into the talk-show business, with a sports-themed program that will be televised on the Audience Network beginning next month and also will be on radio stations across the country, it was announced Tuesday.

Audience Network is owned by DirecTV, which will carry the program along with AT&T U-verse. Those companies recently merged.

Buck, the St. Louisan who is the Fox’s network’s lead baseball and pro football play-by-play announcer,  had a program on HBO that lasted just three episodes before being dropped in 2010. His next step in that field will be as host of “Undeniable With Joe Buck,” starting on Nov. 18 and running on subsequent Wednesdays through Feb. 3 — albeit with a two-week break over the year-end holiday season. The show will air on radio the following days, with KMOX (1120 AM) set to carry it in St. Louis.

Promoters of the show, filmed in front of an audience, say the programs will be “a genuine and honest conversation that brings viewers up close and personal conversations with these sports legends as they share how they have risen so far above the rest, what they have learned throughout their journey thus far and what lies ahead.”

His first guest is former New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter. Other subjects on the schedule include his NFL broadcast partner, Troy Aikman, as well as hockey’s Wayne Gretzky and soccer’s Abby Wambach.

Credit to STL Today who originally published this article

ESPN Expected To Cut 350 Jobs On Wednesday

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Walt Disney Co.’s ESPN sports network, confronting rising programming costs and a loss of viewers, plans to eliminate as many as 350 positions, about 4.3 percent of its workforce, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The cuts will be announced to employees as early as Wednesday, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing the matter because it isn’t public.

The action follows Disney’s announcement in August that earnings at its cable networks won’t meet company forecasts as a result of subscriber losses and currency translation. That triggered a selloff in the shares of many media companies. Disney had the second-largest long-term commitment to sports programming at $44.2 billion behind only 21st Century Fox Inc., according to Bloomberg Intelligence. That was before signing a long-term agreement with the NBA.

 An ESPN spokesman declined to comment. The sports broadcaster, based in Bristol, Connecticut, employs 8,000 people worldwide, according to a company fact sheet.

“ESPN has historically embraced evolving technology to smartly navigate our business,” the company said in a statement last month when plans for job cuts were reported by thebiglead.com. “Any organizational changes will be announced directly to our employees if and when appropriate.”

The network, which commands the highest price per customer among basic cable channels, has lost more than 4 million subscribers in the past four years, according to researcher SNL Kagan.

Credit to Bloomberg who broke the story and originally published this article

NBA Countdown Returns; Adds Chauncey Billups

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NBA Countdown ABC’s and ESPN’s NBA pre-game show – will return for the 2015-16 NBA season, beginning with preseason coverage on Wednesday, Oct. 21, at 7:30 p.m. ET. NBA Countdown will then make its regular-season debut during ESPN’s first night of coverage, on Wednesday, Oct. 28, at 7 p.m. NBA Countdown will air throughout the season and NBA Playoffs, concluding with NBA Finals pre-game shows on ABC.

 NBA Countdown on Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays

Sage Steele returns for her third season as NBA Countdown host, joining analysts Jalen Roseand Doug Collins – also in their third seasons on the show – to form the Countdown team. The trio will generally appear on pre-game shows prior to NBA on ESPN Friday doubleheaders,Saturday Night NBA on ABC (launching Jan. 23) and NBA Sunday Showcase on ABC(beginning Jan. 31).

“Mr. Big Shot” joins Wednesday NBA Countdown team

Chauncey Billups, who joined ESPN as an analyst during the 2014-15 NBA season, will join the Wednesday edition of NBA Countdown as an analyst, alongside Jalen Rose and Doris Burke, who is in her second season on the show.

Note: NBA Countdown will emanate from ESPN’s Los Angeles Production Center across the street from the Staples Center for the fifth consecutive season.

Coach K Premieres New Season of His SiriusXM Show

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Mike Krzyzewski, head coach of the defending national champion Duke University Blue Devils and the USA Basketball Men’s National Team, will host the season premiere of his weekly SiriusXM show, Basketball and Beyond with Coach K, tonight, October 20 (6:00 pm ET) on SiriusXM College Sports Nation.

Coach K’s guests on the season debut will be Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred and Big Ten Conference Commissioner Jim Delany.

After this week’s debut and throughout the season, a new edition of Basketball and Beyond will air every Thursday (6:00 pm ET) on SiriusXM College Sports Nation, which is available nationwide on satellite radios (channel 84) and on smartphones via the SiriusXM app.  Episodes are also available to subscribers through SiriusXM On Demand.

Basketball and Beyond is entering its 11th season on SiriusXM and features Coach K and co-host Dave Sims interviewing successful people from many different walks of life, including  sports, pop culture, politics and more.  Some of the high profile guests who have joined Krzyzewski on the program over the years include NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, General Martin Dempsey, actor Rob Lowe, fellow coaching greats Bob Knight, John Madden, Pat Summitt, Joe Torre, Bill Belichick and many others.

“We are excited for another great season of Basketball and Beyond with Coach K on SiriusXM,” said Scott Greenstein, SiriusXM’s President and Chief Content Officer.  “Every year, all season long, Mike draws interesting guests and delivers insightful and entertaining radio to our listeners. This week, when he talks with two leaders of the pro and college games, will be another fine example.”

Over 40 years as a head basketball coach, 35 of them at Duke University, Coach K has built one of the most extraordinary coaching resumes in sports history.  He is the all-time winningest head coach in NCAA Men’s Division I basketball history with 1018 victories and he led Duke to its fifth NCAA Championship title last season.  Under Coach K’s tutelage, the Blue Devils have won 13 ACC Tournament championships, made 12 Final Four appearances, and have achieved the #1 national ranking in an NCAA-record 16 seasons. He was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2001.

Krzyzewski has been involved with USA Basketball as a coach on and off since 1979, when he started out as an assistant to Bob Knight.  Over that time he has helped lead the U.S. to 10 gold medals, two silver medals and two bronze medals.

92.9 The Game Continues Hawks Call-In Shows

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The Atlanta Hawks Basketball Club today announced the return of weekly segments featuring President of Basketball Operations/Head Coach Mike Budenholzer and CEO Steve Koonin on SportsRadio 92-9 The Game, the team’s official sports talk partner and flagship station.

Reigning NBA Coach of the Year Mike Budenholzer will return for his weekly “On the Court with Coach Bud” segment, presented by FanDuel, beginning Thursday, Oct. 22. The 2015-16 season will mark the segment’s third season, with the latest installment airing each Thursday at 1:22 p.m. during “The Rick and Randy Show” with hosts Rick Kamla and Randy Cross.

Also returning to the station is Hawks CEO Steve Koonin’s weekly segment, airing each Friday at 4:42 p.m. Koonin’s segment, in its second season, will air during “Dukes and Bell,” the station’s afternoon drive time show hosted by Carl Dukes and Mike Bell.

Credit to the Atlanta Hawks who originally published this article

Is Baseball on Television Too Cluttered?

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Bank of America asks, “What is your favorite baseball memory?”

(A better question is, “What is your favorite banking memory?” That’s easy — walking into a B of A in which the teller-window line isn’t 15 deep.)

Favorite baseball memory? Listening to games on a transistor radio.

Because watching games now — and many this postseason have been terrific — is an unceasing babble-filled, graphics-filled, replay-filled, commercial-filled, stress-filled slog-and-a-half.

(On a rare positive note, thank you, Fox, for no “K-Zone” and no “PitchTrax.” Man, that PitchTrax box on TBS — it’s like a Sudoku puzzle on your TV screen!)

All right then, before we get too wound up about TV baseball’s frontal attack on the senses — trust me, Couch Slouch is IN A FOUL MOOD today — let’s first address last week’s State of the Union Bat Flipping Referendum, in which red-and-blue Americans deeply examined the attitudes and mores of a divided Sports Nation.

Me? I’d prefer if the Blue JaysJose Bautista had handed the bat to the batboy while running down the first-base line — attaching a short note of apology to the pitcher for ruining his day — but if he wants to turn that piece of lumber into a flying jamboree act, I fully support him exercising his right to freedom of expression, as long as no humans, umpires or animals were harmed in the making of his magical moment.

Okay, where were we?

Announcers always drive me crazy, particularly the ex-jocks, but I’m not going to name names anymore — these fellas have families and they’re respected pillars of the community, so I don’t see the need to single out individuals at this point.

Which brings us to Pete Rose. Are you kidding me? I’d put him in the Baseball Hall of Fame before I’d put him in a broadcast booth. Charlie Hustle’s on Fox’s pregame studio show; I half-expect him to multitask — you know, express himself with some half-baked half-thought on Josh Donaldson, then autograph a couple of baseballs at $5 a pop.

Anyway, once the games begin, every pitch is bisected and dissected; they parse out every last detail of every four-seam fastball. It’s as if Tim McCarver, to ensure his legacy in retirement, left behind an incurable virus — let’s call is “McCarveringitis” — that infects every baseball telecast.

(A friend of mine recently showed me a tape he had of an “NBC Game of the Week” with Curt Gowdy and Tony Kubek from 40 years ago. What an easy listen — they didn’t say anything they didn’t have to say. The screen was clean. The game breathed. You didn’t feel like you were standing in a telephone booth with someone banging cymbals over your head every 12 seconds.)

Adding to the nonstop talk is the nonstop statistical debris.

Here was TBS’s “Stat Cast” on a running, diving catch by Cardinals center fielder Jason Heyward: “First Step: 0.32 seconds; Max Speed: 17.9 mph; Total Distance: 57 feet; Route Efficiency: 94.5 percent.”

Wow. I don’t know where to start.

Let’s start with his first step — 0.32 seconds. To put that in context, my first step toward the kitchen when I smell Toni’s mac-and-cheese is 0.26 seconds, so I don’t think Heyward’s getting a real good jump there. And “route efficiency”? That concept is only relevant driving on L.A. freeways on a Friday afternoon.

Here was MLB Network’s “Stat Cast” for Astros pitcher Dallas Keuchel: “Extension: 6.2 feet; Velocity: 91.0 mph; Perceived Velocity: 90.4 mph.” Analyst John Smoltz offered, “Obviously, the extension is going to affect the perceived velocity.”

I thought the same thing.

But the proverbial final straw for me came, of course, in the form of replay.

I was sitting down with some ice cream to watch the deciding game of the Mets-Dodgers series. The very first batter, Curtis Granderson, grounds out on a close play; the Mets challenge the call, and he is ruled safe. I mean, I haven’t even enjoyed my first scoop of Ben & Jerry’s New York Super Fudge Chunk, and there already is a replay delay.

So I turned to a “Seinfeld” rerun — occasionally they have some baseball on there.

To read more visit the Times Union where this story was originally published

The Turmoil Continues For Grantland

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The defections at Grantland continued today, as popular staff writer Rembert Browne bolted for New York, adding his name to the growing list of staffers who have left the site since the network cut ties with founder Bill Simmons.

With a staff exodus underway, a clearer picture of the site’s last year of operations has emerged. Though Simmons has only technically been out at Grantland for five months, many began to see the writing on the wall last fall, when Simmons was suspended for calling N.F.L. commissioner Roger Goodell a liar on his podcast.

Insiders at Grantland point out that in the aftermath of Simmons’s suspension, executive vice president Marie Donoghue told the staff that they “shouldn’t worry, because whether or not Bill stays at ESPN, the company is committed to Grantland.”

ESPN management says that Donoghue, who oversaw the site, made that statement because staffers were specifically asking whether they should fear for their jobs, “given Bill’s behavior.” She was trying to calm them down, ESPN brass points out, she wasn’t trying to suggest she and the network didn’t want Bill to stay.

Several key Grantland members, however, took it another way. Says one, “That was the tipping-point moment. What do you mean if Bill’s here or not? Bill is Grantland! What are you talking about? Bristol never recovered with the staff after that.”

Digging deeper into the steaming remains of the ESPN-Simmons divorce, it becomes clear that while the breakup may have been bloody, costly, and emotionally exhausting, it was also certainly worthwhile for both sides.

Over 48 tempestuous hours, in more than 15 conversations with current and former ESPN employees, current and former Grantland staffers, and current ESPN senior management, additional information has surfaced suggesting there were numerous areas of major conflict, and several more defined by personal animosity, fundamental misconceptions, and even accusations of sexism.

As ports of entry into this Byzantine world, we can look to three major stress points.

First: Simmons’s relationship with the rest of ESPN outside Grantland. There was no love lost between the two. During his last year at ESPN, many at the network believe, Simmons still respected and had warm feelings toward executives John Skipper, John Walsh, and several others at the company. It was equally evident to many that he resented the way he was treated by other executives and was largely dismissive of the way they conducted business.

A major fork in the road arose when Magic Johnson left NBA Countdown in 2013 and, Simmons’s associates believe, Bristol was spreading the story that Simmons was to blame, even as Simmons swore to co-workers that he had not put that in motion. Being blamed for Johnson’s departure enraged him, in fact. Try living in L.A. and being regarded as the guy who dumped Magic Johnson.

For ESPN’s part, the animosity was mutual. “Nobody at ESPN wanted to work with Simmons,” says a high-ranking executive. “He was loathed throughout the company. He kept up a long-running diatribe on how terrible it was to work here.”

There were also complaints that Simmons would not allow Grantland writers to contribute to ESPN.com or to the magazine—or, for a long time, to appear on any of ESPN’s TV shows. Some of that was true: The Grantland staff was intent on building the Grantland brand.

And, at least one executive complains—somewhat ironically, given his feelings toward Simmons—that Simmons seldom came to Bristol, but Simmons would tell the Grantland staff and others that it was hard for him to get to Bristol from the site’s Los Angeles headquarters, that he didn’t have the time, and that he didn’t think it necessary. He did, however, go at least once three years in a row, and traveled at least four times a year to New York, where he would meet with the network’s executives.

Nevertheless, bitterness was palpable and plentiful.

Says Donoghue: “I think Bill sometimes tries to associate whatever frustration he had at ESPN onto something with me personally, and I don’t want to play into that narrative. I was one of his biggest champions at ESPN and defended Bill many, many, times.”A senior ESPN executive adds this: “I bet you a dollar to a dime that many of your sources are men who do not like Marie Donoghue, because women are still subject, in the workplace, to a lot of prejudice and lack of acceptance. A lot of people don’t want to work for a woman, even if they say they do.”

To continue reading this article visit Vanity Fair where it was originally published