I agree completely. I thought the combination of announcing and directing made last night's game vs. Villanova really hard to watch. As a former player, Meghan McKeown must have some insights to share, but she doesn't edit herself at all, so what comes out is a rambling stream of often conflicting statements. I think she'd be twice as good if she said half as much.Yeah, I simply had to turn off the volume several times during this game! I mean, what are they getting paid for the game or talking about their own lives and everything else besides the action on the court? I’m guessing Peacock won the contract for the big east this year and and maybe years to come but it’s pretty rough listening to these two.
Yes, and he has more than a trace of the Albert voice.Well, it was Kenny Albert
He learned from his dad how to call a game
(Speaking of Olympic Hockey)
Ryan RuoccoAnnouncers this season have been pretty poor. UConn deserves better than that.
I do like that one guy that says “You bet!” After almost every 3 point shot. Cracks me up every time.
Announcers this season have been pretty poor. UConn deserves better than that.
I do like that one guy that says “You bet!” After almost every 3 point shot. Cracks me up every time.
Listen to one of the men's games. The announcers are so much better (Thank you, Donny!) It's actually insulting to women's basketball. It's like they feel that women's basketball is so boring that the fans would rather listen to them jabber.
I suggested in an earlier post that the "industry" is having growing pains. Things are happening fast. Last night I watched parts of 7 women's college basketball games. (mostly keeping up with Tenn and Ole Miss) That's insane. I used to be a transportation guy. Some days you were happy to have a fanny in every seat.They certainly do jabber. That is the biggest problem in my view.
The second biggest problem is that very little of what they say is useful or interesting. It rapidly becomes annoying background noise.
It all makes sense if they have been told to never allow there to be one second of dead air. Yet we know that many of the greatest announcers are or were very comfortable allowing the game and the fans to breathe a bit.
There are exceptions. I do like Ryan and Rebecca. And surprisingly, some of the announcers doing lower level Division One games on ESPN+ aren't bad.
The thing I don't get - who is it at these networks who selects the announcers, guides them, critiques them, etc.? How do they train? Isn't there someone in charge to give them guidance? Who are they trying to emulate? Could someone please tell them that less is more?
How could those people in charge think everything is just fine?
As a contrast to the constant jabber I so enjoyed the telecast last night of the USA women's skater's Gold Medal performance as the TV announcers let the air breath. Silence is so welcome when watching a sports event w/o meaningless story telling, especially about personal issues, They identified the highlights of the performance as they happened, but other than that allowed us to appreciate what we were watching, w/o bringing up past performances that they had some connection with.They certainly do jabber. That is the biggest problem in my view.
The second biggest problem is that very little of what they say is useful or interesting. It rapidly becomes annoying background noise.
It all makes sense if they have been told to never allow there to be one second of dead air. Yet we know that many of the greatest announcers are or were very comfortable allowing the game and the fans to breathe a bit.
There are exceptions. I do like Ryan and Rebecca. And surprisingly, some of the announcers doing lower level Division One games on ESPN+ aren't bad.
The thing I don't get - who is it at these networks who selects the announcers, guides them, critiques them, etc.? How do they train? Isn't there someone in charge to give them guidance? Who are they trying to emulate? Could someone please tell them that less is more?
How could those people in charge think everything is just fine?
This has been the worst year in 32 years of watching the women play on TV for announcers. Id rather have no announcers and watch it like I was in the gym.I know that this has been discussed before, but today’s announcers were absolutely awful. Never identified the fouling players or what was the cause of a turnover. They just continued to talk about anything and everything that was not about the game action. Really, really miss SNY.
I've tried that but there seems to be a lag at least on my tv between the radio and tv. Maybe someone has a way to rectify this.Yep...listen to Bob Joyce who is excellent
Usually it's the radio transmission that is broadcast on a several seconds delay. If you have a smart TV, sometimes you can play with the pause/play button on your remote until you have the video synchronized with the radio broadcast.I've tried that but there seems to be a lag at least on my tv between the radio and tv. Maybe someone has a way to rectify this.
Ms Lipinski and Mr Wier are very good at what they do. They explain. They limit hype. Their knowledge of what they are announcing is very high level and accessible. An example of announcing from a different world: BBC announcers of Wimbledon regularly keep silent and let their audience just watch.Yes, and he has more than a trace of the Albert voice.
There are announcers who do women's basketball pretty well. Some are ruined by their color commentator and others are terrible and ruin their largely competent color commentator.
My wife was wondering if we could teach Tara Lipinski and Johnny Wier how to color commentate every sport. They are so good at what they do, some might find it repetitive but you have different events with different audiences (ice dance / pairs / singles) and after all the action is mildly repetitive. But they describe what you are watching without overwhelming it.
If you really want my complaint - it is announcers who are so busy talking that they call "out of bounds" a foul, don't know who the foul was on because they were not looking or listening, etc. Happens a lot. The one announcer I particularly like as either color commentator or game call - and the only announcer that does both, so far as I know - is Brenda VanLangen.