The NFL Draft is tonight and the selection of players out of college will see more viewers than nearly every baseball, basketball, soccer, and hockey game in this country this year. The NFL does a great job making themselves the center of the sports world and with multiple national sports networks such as NBC Sports and Fox Sports One (don't for get the big E dogz) the NFL can't produce enough content to package and sell for multi-million dollar deals.
So here's idea for the next broadcasting package: start broadcasting training camp inter-squad scrimmages. College's have been doing this for years. It's call the Spring game. Some of them draw huge crowds, many are nationally televised. Some of them, like the one I recently attended at my favorite school Appalachian State, utilize an Offense vs Defense model where scoring is set up in a Fantasy Football style scoring system like the following:
Offense:
6-touchdown
3-field goal
2-Run of 15+ yards
2-pass of 20+ yards
1-First down
1-PAT
Defense
6-Touchdown
5-Turnover
3-three-and-out
3-Blocked kick
2-Any stopped drive that isn't a three-and-out
2-2-pt conversion after defensive TD
1-PAT after defensive TD
Post the scores on the bottom of the TV screen for viewers, post the estimated numbers of plays left. Advertise it as a way to scout your Fantasy Football team. The NFL could package the scrimmages these national sports-stations desperate for content and would love a piece of the NFL pie. They would be out of the way enough that causal NFL fans can ignore them(maybe they will be on ESPN8) but easy enough to get a hold of that the die-hards could consume hours and hours of more NFL content.
People would watch it. Networks would pay mad money to get the rights. Teams are already doing Scrimmages such as these. This seems like a no brainier.
If you don't think people would watch practices on TV then go back to the golden days of boxing. In the early days of television there were times when stations would broadcast nightly practice of the heavyweight champion preparing for his next big fight. People ate it up! Ali use to travel the country selling out large arena for practices. Yes Were Talking about Practice!
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Top 5 Favorite Star Trek Fan Shows
I'm back!
It is the holiday season and probably
at some time over the holiday season you are going to curl up of the
couch and stream some TV shows. I wanted to draw your attention to
some unbelievable online shows that fly under the radar but are
totally worth your time. For those Sci Fi fans out there here is my
list of the top 5 Star Trek fan shows worth taking the time to see.
All of these have production qualities fit for being on TV and all of
these you can watch for free on your computer. I've posted the like
for their youtube pages but they can be found in other places on the
internet and each has its own webpage with additional content.
1- Star Trek Phase II
If you watch one fan film in your
entire life make it Star Trek Phase II “World Enough in Time”.
The production quality, the fact that the set is identical to the
original blue-print, the vast number of people that work on the show
that worked on the original, makes this show an unbelievable
experience and honestly better than the original Star Trek.
2- Star Trek: Of Gods and Men
Movie
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFqAME7dx58
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFqAME7dx58
A film containing so many people
important to the Star Trek universe you loose count after 3 minutes.
This film looks and feels like something Paramount would make. The
new Star Trek movies may have borrowed some of the time travel ideas
from it too.
3- Star Trek Continues
Great fan film featuring plenty of
celebrities. The sets aren't quite as good as Phase II but still
pretty impressive.
4- Starship Farragut
Good set design and good stories.
Includes a cartoon series similar to the old Star Trek cartoon.
5- Star Trek: Intrepid
A more Scottish take on Star Trek. The
production quality is good and the stories are good.
Honorable Mention: Star Trek Hidden Frontier
Producing over 50 original episodes and
includes some unbelievable graphical modeling.The acting at times is not the best, this one really is a fan production, and it uses a lot of green screen.
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Classic football video game anyone?
If you have not hear. Due to a recent lawsuit EA sports has stopped development of its next NCAA College football game. You can learn about it here:
http://kotaku.com/a-blindside-hit-takes-down-an-ncaa-football-team-rallyi-1429336606/@tcraggs22
http://kotaku.com/no-college-football-video-game-next-year-says-ea-sport-1404530680
So to all of you wonderful football video game programmers out there now looking for work consider this: Ironman Football! A classic football game similar to this failed attempt at a football game for the PS1:
http://www.playstationmuseum.com/games/CGIMAN/
It today's world of digital download and indy games game designers going into business for themselves and making their own football game would be pretty cool. A true throwback game would be fun too. It could include classic teams like
Rochester Jeffersons
Bloomfield Rams
Goodyear Silents (yes an all deaf football team)
Even teams like:
Pottstown Firebirds
Chambersburg Cardinals
More than likely no football video game designer will ever see my idea but if you know of any, pass this idea along.
http://kotaku.com/a-blindside-hit-takes-down-an-ncaa-football-team-rallyi-1429336606/@tcraggs22
http://kotaku.com/no-college-football-video-game-next-year-says-ea-sport-1404530680
So to all of you wonderful football video game programmers out there now looking for work consider this: Ironman Football! A classic football game similar to this failed attempt at a football game for the PS1:
http://www.playstationmuseum.com/games/CGIMAN/
It today's world of digital download and indy games game designers going into business for themselves and making their own football game would be pretty cool. A true throwback game would be fun too. It could include classic teams like
Rochester Jeffersons
Bloomfield Rams
Goodyear Silents (yes an all deaf football team)
Even teams like:
Pottstown Firebirds
Chambersburg Cardinals
More than likely no football video game designer will ever see my idea but if you know of any, pass this idea along.
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
What went wrong with the XFL?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XFL
The XFL was yet another failed league for developmental
football. It had some good ideas and a good deal of money but failed after 1
season.
The XFL had some good ideas: The creative things on the
players backs, the way you could get into the huddle and go into the locker
room, it had players being interview on the side lines during games, the
extensive amount of pyrotechnics helped make games seem special. But ultimately the league failed. Here are
some of my thoughts on why the XFL was such a failure:
-the XFL advertised wild play and loose rules. The truth is
that the rules were different than that of the NFL but nearly all of the rule
changes were taken from other professional league like the CFL or the old
USFL. This marketing mistake turned off
a massive part of its potential fan base. The football/sport fan didn’t want to watch it
because it seemed too wild and crazy. The wrestling fan gave it a try and then
discovered that it really wasn’t wild and crazy like pro wrestling at all.
-The league felt they couldn’t make big enough stars out of
their football players to draw crowd. The players in the XFL were typically
portrayed as regular Joes trying to keep their dream of playing football alive.
With NFL Europe closing up shop and the XFL really playing better than the CFL
and arena football the XFL was able to cherry pick the top stars from three of
these leagues. Virtually all of the players had been star players in college and
a good number of players had NFL connects. The XFL could have marketed their players. I
think people would have come out to see Tommy Maddox. When arena football got
on NBC they were able to develop their own stars. Instead of developing star
players the XFL placed more attention on how there were pro wrestlers at the
games and there were firework (which are cool) and there are cheerleaders (which
were NOT family friendly). The league was open about how the cheerleaders,
which kept away a lot of families, were bigger stars than the football players.
-The league spent too much time trying to market the league
and not market the teams. All of the fields in the XFL looked exactly the same.
No field had a team emblem on them. The team color skims seed to run together. People
remember the crazy XFL but you have to be a real fan to remember even 3 team
names. The teams all seemed the same and
run together. I remember wanting games and not even know which team was the
home team. This hurts your ticket sells and the WWF should have known that
ticket sells are your bread and butter.
-The league was put in prime time too soon. This is a tough
point to make because NBC contributed a lot of money to the league to put it on
the air. Without NBC money the league probably never would have had a game. But
if the XFL had been this edgy thing on cable that people heard about but a lot
of people had not seen (you know like what arena football did) and it spent a
few years on cable and after a few season came to NBC it would have been much
more successful. Starting out right out of the gate on 3 networks (2 of which
were on broadcast TV) with a league were the teams all seemed to blend together
and where some of the football was really bad really over saturated the market.
You can get away with bad football during the off season on cable. Particularly
if it is so bad it is good football like people love to watch the ‘blooper’
reels of the USFL on youtube(USFL bloopers). Being on 3 networks was a receipt for TERRABLE
TV ratings.
Ultimately the XFL’s legacy is it helped a list of players
make it to the NFL and it opened the door for the AFL to get on NBC in 2003 (also part of the legacy is that VinnyMac can fail at something).
The AFL a football alternative with faster action and higher
scoring and all of those things the XFL promised but didn’t deliver on.
Friday, September 27, 2013
Major trends in Minor League Sports
The success of failure of minor league sports comes down to
funding 3 line items:
1
11 -
Cost of players
22 -
Cost of travel
33 -
Cost of venue
Can you develop a marketing plan where as a league or as a team able to balance these 3 line items with revenue form investors, sponsorships, ticket sells, concessions, merchandise, TV revenue (unlikely for minor league sports), est.
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Arena Football League (AFL)
The AFL is hands down the most successful minor league system
for professional football in the history of the United States. Around since
1987 arena football was a creative idea executed smartly although modestly over
an extended period.
The AFL was the brain child of not big investors but of Jim
Foster. Jim played college football at the University of Iowa. Following
graduation he played for and eventually helped run different minor league
football teams. An example of this is the Newton Nite Hawks (extra credit if
you have any idea were Newton is) who Jim helped organize an international tour
of Europe (video of this tour can be found on youtube and is kind of fun to
see).
Jim understood the difficulties of minor league football. A
minor league team would be luck to draw 6,000 fans. For that size large
stadiums like those used by colleges and the NFL are out of the question. Minor
league teams ended up mostly playing in high school football stadiums. The
problem with that is high school football stadiums have a negative stigma, your
are limited to the kind of promotions you can do, you can’t serve beer or alcohol
which is were minor league baseball and hockey makes its money, and high school
stadiums are often poorly maintained.
There is also a lot of expense connected to keeping a full
roster (36 guys or more) on a football team lucky to draw 6,000 fans.
Jim saw the success indoor soccer was having during the 80s
and had a revolutionary idea. He took the game of football and smushed it down
to fit in a hockey rink. That way games could be played in indoor arenas around
the country. 6,000 fans at a 60,000 seat NFL stadium look pitiful but 6,000
fans at a hockey arena looks like a happin time! Since games were done in arenas you could sell
beer and do crazy promotions and venues were used for big name concerts and
other sporting events so there was no stigma.
Instead of playing 11 per side football the league played 8
per side and had an “iron man rule” where 6 players had to play both offense
and defense. This reduced the roster size down to only 20 players per team
making pay-roll a lot easier to get.
Jim Foster did a good job in the early days securing
sponsorships and television deals and eventually big name investors.
In the early days many of the players were former DII
college players and the league had a reputation of being a place players go when
their careers weren’t going to go anywhere else. Slowly over time the caliber of
players grew and there are along list of NFL players that used the AFL as a
stepping stone.
So the league did a good job managing both personal expectation
and fan expectation and a good job managing their pay-roll.
The main problem Arena Football has had is being accepted as
“real” football. In the early days the game was very gimmicky this was okay
because the league was trying to get noticed. When the league landed a national
TV contract with NBC the game needed to become more mainstream and more like
outdoor football. The ball size was too small, the iron-man rule became
out-dated, the defense was too restricted, there was no running game, the nets
at the end of the end zones seemed silly, the lack of out-of-bounds, the
regular flying of players into the crowd, the amount of video game like crazy
plays, All of these things kept the game from being accepted by the mainstream
football fan and all of these issues could have been addressed easily.
Because of this Arena Football eventually filed for bankruptcy.
The league is still around today. They currently have a pretty nice TV deal
with CBS Sports and teams in several major markets. The AFL is still the best
option for American football players to play professionally without going to
Canada.
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Alternative Football
It is fall and it is time for America’s national Game:
Football! Not soccer, or rugby, but American Football! Interestingly enough the
countries number one sport and arguably the top grossing sport in the world
does not have a true minor league system. Baseball and hockey have very
successful and profitable minor league systems. Soccer and basketball have a
minor league system; their success is debatable. A minor league football league
seems like a no brainer.
There are options to play football professionally out side
of the NFL. There is the CFL in Canada (which is difficult for Americans
players to break into because half of each roster is Canada players) and there
is Arena football (which was so cool at the turn of the century) which uses
small roster sizes. Then there are a ton of indoor football leagues (check out
Indoor Football League or Lone Star Football League) some of the league are
stable and professionally ran some are not some teams are stable some fail to
play an entire season or ever play a player.
Since it is fall I wanted to high light some teams and
leagues that have tried or are trying to make a go at being minor league
football. We will talk about what they have done right and what they have done
wrong.
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