from Brandon Costa of SportsVideo.org,
With more resources centralized in a single location, the league has deployed new tools and services in support of its broadcast partners (NBC in the U.S., Rogers in Canada): additional onsite production facilities, more camera angles, and added graphic enhancements (including roll-out of the league’s highly anticipated puck- and player-tracking system).
“It has been a long, collaborative process with our television partners and all of our end units,” says Dan O’Neill, VP, arena and event operations, NHL. “The collaborative nature of working with the volume of entities and giving them the platform to do their business has been great.”
Condensed Compound, Limited Crews
The hybrid production model in Edmonton has led to a minor increase in the size of the production compound since the league left Toronto to finish out the playoffs in the single venue. The side-by-side lineup of three trucks comprises NEP Broadcasting’s ND5 (NBC Sports’ top hockey truck) and Dome Productions’ Silver (handling the major part of the game broadcast for Rogers and the world feed) and Unite (serving as a production B unit).
According to O’Neill, NBC Sports and Rogers are still producing the vast majority of their productions (graphics, audio mix, even on-air talent in some cases) from their respective home broadcast centers: Stamford, CT, and Toronto, respectively). However, NBC has nine or 10 crew members onsite working socially distant in ND5; Rogers has 12 or 13 crew members in its units.
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