As technology permits greater interactivity with fans, sports clubs and leagues have consulted sometimes far-flung supporters on everything from a team’s name to where games should be played.
Last month, the Salt Lake Screaming Eagles indoor football team based in West Valley City, Utah went further still. During its first game in the Indoor Football League, the brand new team polled fans on strategic maneuvers, letting a majority decide, for example, whether to kick or keep going on fourth down.
The Screaming Eagles lost the game, but the tactic caught notice worldwide, scoring views in 99 countries where the game was streamed for free.
We want to “give the fans a little bit more interaction, a little bit more engagement and make them feel like they are more part of their professional football team than they ever were able to be before,” IFL commissioner Mike Allshouse said.
Much of the push is aimed at fans watching the games on television or on their computer, rather than those in the stadium.
Teams are sending out a regular trickle of content on social media of just-executed plays, athlete interviews and backstage photographs of stars.
In December last year, Fox Sports 2 gave microphones to the coaches of two women’s college basketball teams that were playing each other, and broadcast their unfiltered banter during the game and in the locker room where cameras were present.
As part of its “League Pass” premium streaming service, the NBA has included one game per week in virtual reality streamed online.
“We are broadcasting in 215 countries. So we have got fans as passionate or more passionate on the other side of the world as you will find here in the United States,” NBA vice president of global media Jeff Marsilio told the Web site.
“To give the feeling — maybe not the complete experience — but the feeling of being courtside at an NBA game, it is really exciting for us.”
With the cooperation of leagues, sports media are also showing more expansive coverage of events, with National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) and Fox Sports adding two channels, each focused on a single driver for the prestigious Daytona 500 race.
For the Olympic Games in Sochi and Rio de Janeiro, digital technology giant Atos Corp developed technology for the International Olympic Committee that lets viewers watch the entire competition. The program also included access to statistics and a rewind option that let fans watch plays in slow motion.
“The two big trends today in sports are greater ubiquity and much more fan interactivity,” said Patrick Adiba, chief commercial officer for the Olympics and major events at Atos.
A much-discussed technology now being developed is holograms, which could potentially let fans watch virtual versions of a competition in a venue far away from the actual event.
“We know how to produce good-quality holograms and we know how to transmit them, but it takes too much bandwidth right now,” Adiba said.
“We cannot yet, for example, show the final of the 100 meters in 300 stadiums in real-time with hologram runners,” he added.
The coming of 5G technology could open the door to greater progress on holograms. For now, leagues are increasingly focused on latching onto the e-sports phenomenon, where competitive gamers try to outdo each other in online games.
The NBA plans to unveil an e-sports league this year, with 30 teams that parallel the real league.
The US National Hockey League is also developing an offering.
“We envision something that would augment a fan’s affinity to his team,” league commissioner Gary Bettman said.
“In an industry that’s constantly evolving, you cannot just do it on a cookie-cutter basis. If you do it the way we have always done it, we are going to fail,” he added.
Tainan TSG Hawks slugger Steven Moya, who is leading the CPBL in home runs, has withdrawn from this weekend’s All-Star Game after the unexpected death of his wife. Moya’s wife began feeling severely unwell aboard a plane that landed at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport on Friday evening. She was rushed to a hospital, but passed away, the Hawks said in a statement yesterday. The franchise is assisting Moya with funeral arrangements and hopes fans who were looking forward to seeing him at the All-Star Game can understand his decision to withdraw. According to Landseed Medical Clinic, whose staff attempted to save Moya’s wife,
The Tampa Bay Rays on Tuesday acquired Taiwanese-American outfielder Stuart Fairchild from the Atlanta Braves for cash considerations to fill the roster after All-Star second baseman Brandon Lowe was placed back on the injured list. Fairchild was designated for assignment by the Braves on Monday after hitting .216/.273/.333 in 28 games for Atlanta, with most of his work coming as a pinch runner or defensive replacement. He joins Tampa Bay as a versatile fourth outfielder option. To make room for Fairchild on the 40-man roster, the Rays transferred relief pitcher Manuel Rodriguez (forearm strain) from the 15-day injured list to the 60-day
Ukrainian coal miner Andrii’s face lit up when he talked about meeting Oleksandr Usyk. “Wow,” the 36-year-old said in English. Andrii and more than a dozen other war veterans were on hand when Usyk beat Daniel Dubois at Wembley Stadium on Saturday night to become the undisputed world heavyweight champion. It was a rematch of their 2023 bout that Andrii viewed under vastly different circumstances. “I watched this fight on the front line on my phone,” he said through an interpreter during a stop on Friday at the Ukrainian Embassy in London. “We were watching very quietly, but when he won there was loud
PENALTY MISS: ‘We practiced penalties,’ Spain coach Montse Tome said, while both her team’s spot-kicks were saved by Switzerland’s goalkeeper Livia Peng Spain ended Switzerland’s dreamy midsummer run through its home Women’s European Championship in a 2-0 win in the quarter-finals on Friday despite missing two penalty kicks. Swiss resistance was broken by the world champion’s two goals in a five-minute spell midway through the second half. Athenea Del Castillo slotted in a shot from Aitana Bonmati’s flicked assist in the 66th, just four minutes after coming off the bench, and Claudia Pina curled a shot from the edge of the penalty area in the 71st. Spain are to play France or Germany in the semi-finals in Zurich on Wednesday. The winner would face defending