psconn
Proud Connecticut WBB Fan
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
- Messages
- 3,239
- Reaction Score
- 14,004
I need a brief rant:
I just watched the replay and between ESPN's technical difficulties and endless non-game related blather from Tiffany Greene and (heaven help me) Sue Bird, I think this was among the worst game broadcasts I can remember. That is a shame because there was a lot of good stuff happening on the court for both teams despite the score. There was the sub-plot of the bench being hammered by Geno very publicly - what would their response be? He said he might only play 5 or 6.... What would his rotation look like against buddy Tonya? Azura on defense... Sue would be great at breaking down the problems that Geno was seeing (using highlight film) and then pointing out in this game if Azura was doing anything differently. I'm sure there were similar sub-plots on the Temple side that could have given depth and context to the action.
Call me old fashioned, but these things work best when there's a play-by-play person and a color person with clear roles. In the era of High Definition, large screen TV, the play-by-play does not need to call every pass and movement BUT should describe and clarify what is happening. Very often it is not clear what a ref has called and we get no help from such "announcers" because they are not focused on the game. Fictitious example of what I want to hear - "Bent and Walker on the weave out front, looking to exploit the mismatch inside... a whistle on the play... that was Smith bumping Walker on the screen and that is now 4 fouls on Sally Smith. Walker to the line shooting 78% this season...". Color person: "This is an ongoing problem for Smith, she has fouled out three times already this season and the Owls need her on the court to control the tempo, one of Coach Cardoza's points of emphasis today. If this were a closer game, it would put Cardoza in a tough spot." etc., etc.
Two people whiling the game away verbally box-checking a bunch of bullet-list blather makes my skin crawl. Save it for time outs and half time. I don't like to turn the sound off completely, and the radio broadcast is not syched to the TV images so those aren't great options. ESPN should be embarrassed by this, but I suspect their focus is more on financial numbers than broadcast quality right now.
Rant over.
I just watched the replay and between ESPN's technical difficulties and endless non-game related blather from Tiffany Greene and (heaven help me) Sue Bird, I think this was among the worst game broadcasts I can remember. That is a shame because there was a lot of good stuff happening on the court for both teams despite the score. There was the sub-plot of the bench being hammered by Geno very publicly - what would their response be? He said he might only play 5 or 6.... What would his rotation look like against buddy Tonya? Azura on defense... Sue would be great at breaking down the problems that Geno was seeing (using highlight film) and then pointing out in this game if Azura was doing anything differently. I'm sure there were similar sub-plots on the Temple side that could have given depth and context to the action.
Call me old fashioned, but these things work best when there's a play-by-play person and a color person with clear roles. In the era of High Definition, large screen TV, the play-by-play does not need to call every pass and movement BUT should describe and clarify what is happening. Very often it is not clear what a ref has called and we get no help from such "announcers" because they are not focused on the game. Fictitious example of what I want to hear - "Bent and Walker on the weave out front, looking to exploit the mismatch inside... a whistle on the play... that was Smith bumping Walker on the screen and that is now 4 fouls on Sally Smith. Walker to the line shooting 78% this season...". Color person: "This is an ongoing problem for Smith, she has fouled out three times already this season and the Owls need her on the court to control the tempo, one of Coach Cardoza's points of emphasis today. If this were a closer game, it would put Cardoza in a tough spot." etc., etc.
Two people whiling the game away verbally box-checking a bunch of bullet-list blather makes my skin crawl. Save it for time outs and half time. I don't like to turn the sound off completely, and the radio broadcast is not syched to the TV images so those aren't great options. ESPN should be embarrassed by this, but I suspect their focus is more on financial numbers than broadcast quality right now.
Rant over.
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