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Big East Basketball Gets Red Zone Style Coverage On FS1

“Front Office Sports reports that the conference is unveiling an NFL RedZone-style broadcast for its games on Tuesday, Nov. 9.”

Russ Heltman

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Courtesy: Big East Conference

College basketball season tips off this week, and the Big East Conference has plans in place to make sure its fans can watch every big moment.

Front Office Sports reports that the conference is unveiling an NFL RedZone-style broadcast for its games on Tuesday, Nov. 9. Big East senior associate commissioner of broadcasting Rick Gentile told FOS all about the new project.

“It really is an opportunity to maximize the production value that we’ll use,” Gentile said to Front Office Sports. “There’s all sorts of things that we can do to make this really kind of fun.”

The whole experiment is going out on FOX’s family of networks, with the whip-around broadcast airing on FS1. The plan is to follow all seven games on Tuesday night right from tip-off and zoom in on each one specifically when the action gets tight.

“This jumps off the page as the perfect time to try it,” Gentile said. “[We] said, can we really pull this off? And everybody sort of said, ‘Yeah, let’s go for it.’”

Gentile has worked on projects like this before while at CBS and one of the FOX minds behind the project worked at NFL Network when the league started RedZone.

“To coordinate all of this, it’s a complicated process,” Gentile said to FOS. But “it’s been done, it can be done.”

Gentile is hoping to work out the kinks on opening night and turn the broadcast idea into a seamless staple for Big East basketball.

“I think it can be more interesting to watch this seven-game, four-hour block than watching what could be noncompetitive opening night games,” he said in the interview.

Fans across most of the major sports world have called for a version of RedZone to grace their sports viewing circuit. Now, the Big East is trying to take that plunge for the first time.

Sports TV News

Alex Rodriguez: You Used To Be Able To Hang Out With Reporters And Know It Was Off the Record

“I would say that back then it was a little bit more of a camaraderie.”

Jordan Bondurant

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The way that MLB players interact with reporters has evolved and changed significantly over the years in Alex Rodriguez’s eyes.

In a media availability Tuesday ahead of the season premiere of the KayRod Cast, ESPN’s alternate feed of select games slated for Sunday Night Baseball featuring Rodriguez and Yankees play-by-play man Michael Kay, A-Rod was asked for his biggest surprises as the media coverage has transitioned over the years.

“I would say that back then it was a little bit more of a camaraderie,” Rodriguez said. “You could actually go to a bar and have drinks with reporters, believe it or not, and talk about, you know — and everything was pretty much off the record.”

In today’s game, Rodriguez said you won’t find it being the case where reporters and players are friends away from their respective jobs.

“That ship has left, right? I think it’s just a lot more Twitter, get out there first. Fact check later, but shoot first,” he said. “As a result, I think it’s made players and everybody a little bit more aware.”

“I think in a long-worded answer, I think relationships that go back many years, I think, win in the long run, that trust,” A-Rod added.

The second season of the KayRod Cast starts on Sunday at 7 p.m. featuring the defending N.L. champion Philadelphia Phillies and the Texas Rangers.

Kay and Rodriguez will be live from ESPN’s Seaport District Studios in New York City. There are eight total editions of the KayRod Cast scheduled for the 2023 season.

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Sports TV News

Elite 8 Sees Ratings Drop

“Much of the pandemonium, given the number of upsets in this year’s tournament, unsurprisingly impacted viewership as things advanced.”

Jordan Bondurant

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With the last two number one seeds bowing out of the 2023 NCAA tournament by the end of the Sweet 16, viewership for the Elite 8 expectedly dropped.

Over 11 million tuned in for the Miami/Texas regional final on CBS. Viewership for the two versus four seed matchup was down 17% compared to the Elite 8 game in the same window last year (UNC/Saint Peter’s). The broadcast was also the lowest rated and least-watched Elite 8 game in that window in seven years.

San Diego State/Creighton in the early game on Sunday drew 8.34 million viewers, which was down 12% year over year.

Almost 8 million watched UConn cruise past Gonzaga on TBS late Saturday night, while Florida Atlantic’s historic upset over Kansas State had a little more than 7 million watch. The Owls’ win over the Wildcats was only down 1% when looking at the numbers from the same window in 2022 (Villanova/Houston).

Much of the pandemonium, given the number of upsets in this year’s tournament, unsurprisingly impacted viewership as things advanced.

But the Final Four and the national championship are often the three most-watched college basketball games of the year, so there should be no shortage of eyeballs glued to Houston this weekend.

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Hawk Harrelson: ‘I Didn’t Retire, I Got Retired’

“I got fired is what it all boils down to.”

Jordan Bondurant

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Former Chicago White Sox broadcaster Hawk Harrelson opened up about his departure from the team in 2018. In an appearance Tuesday on the Foul Territory podcast, Harrelson said his whole farewell that season was forced.

“I didn’t retire,” Harrelson said talking to former White Sox catcher AJ Pierzynski and co-host Scott Braun. “I got retired.”

“I got fired is what it all boils down to,” he added.

Harrelson, who was the 2020 Ford C. Frick Award winner given by the Baseball Hall of Fame, said he stand behind the claim that he was shown the door.

“I’m sure that they will deny that. But it’s what led up to that and everything else, that’s interesting,” Harrelson said.

The White Sox hired Jason Benetti in 2016 as Harrelson’s fill-in. Benetti continues to call games on NBC Sports Chicago full-time.

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