NBC bumps up Irish coverage: Will do live pregame shows from Notre Dame Stadium

In addition to Dan Hicks taking over the play-by-play chores this year, NBC is bringing the entire gang to South Bend this year.

Here is the official rundown from NBC:

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Stamford, Conn. – August 21, 2013 – NBC Sports Group will produce a live pre-game show from Notre Dame Stadium, prior to every Notre Dame Football broadcast on NBC, during the upcoming 2013 season. NBC Sports Group’s Notre Dame Football pre-game show will debut Saturday, August 31, at 3 p.m. ET on NBC, preceding the Fighting Irish’s first game of the season against Temple. Beginning on Saturday, September 21, and prior to all remaining Notre Dame Football home games in 2013, including the annual off-site Shamrock Series game, the pre-game show will air on NBCSN.

Liam McHugh will host the show from the field at Notre Dame Stadium, and will be joined on-site by 1984 Heisman Trophy winner Doug Flutie and two-time Super Bowl champion Hines Ward.  McHugh, Flutie and Ward will also handle half-time coverage on NBC broadcasts, all of which will originate from the field.

In addition, NBC Sports Group will produce a post-game show, on NBCSN, after three Notre Dame Football broadcasts on NBC.

NBC will broadcast seven Notre Dame Football games this season, including two in primetime. NBC Sports’ 2013 Notre Dame Football schedule is highlighted by the Fighting Irish’s primetime game against USC on Saturday, October 19, at 7:30 p.m. ET.

Continuing its annual off-site Shamrock Series, Notre Dame will host the Arizona State Sun Devils at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, TX, on Saturday, October 5, at 7:30 p.m. ET. This is the fifth straight season that NBC will broadcast a Notre Dame off-site home game in primetime.

Live game coverage of Notre Dame Football on NBC begins Saturday, August 31, at 3:30 p.m. ET, when the Fighting Irish host Temple. The 2013 schedule also includes 3:30 p.m. ET games against Michigan State on Saturday, September 21; Oklahoma on Saturday, September 28; Navy on Saturday, November 2; and BYU on Saturday, November 23.

The post-game shows, where applicable, will air on NBCSN, immediately following game coverage on NBC. Post-game shows will air after Temple – Notre Dame on August 31, Oklahoma – Notre Dame on September 21, and BYU – Notre Dame on November 23.

Dan Hicks, NBC Sports Group’s longtime and critically-acclaimed golf and Olympic commentator, will lead NBC Sports’ Notre Dame Football coverage for the first time this season as its play-by-play voice. Hicks will join analyst Mike Mayock and sideline reporter Alex Flanagan for NBC’s 22nd season broadcasting Notre Dame Football home games.                                  

Following is NBC Sports Group’s 2013 Notre Dame Football schedule (all times ET):

Date Opponent Pre-Game Network Game Time Network
Saturday, Aug. 31 Temple** 3 p.m. NBC 3:30 p.m. NBC
Saturday, Sept. 21 Michigan State 3 p.m. NBCSN 3:30 p.m. NBC
Saturday, Sept. 28 Oklahoma** 3 p.m. NBCSN 3:30 p.m. NBC
Saturday, Oct. 5 Arizona State* 7 p.m. NBCSN 7:30 p.m. NBC
Saturday, Oct. 19 USC 6:30 p.m. NBCSN 7:30 p.m. NBC
Saturday, Nov 2 Navy 3 p.m. NBCSN 3:30 p.m. NBC
Saturday, Nov 23 BYU** 3 p.m. NBCSN 3:30 p.m. NBC

*Off-site Shamrock Series game from Arlington, Texas.

** Post-game show on NBCSN

NBC SPORTS LIVE EXTRA ONLINE & APP: NBC Sports Live Extra — the NBC Sports Group’s live streaming product for desktops, mobile devices, and tablets — will stream all Notre Dame Football home games.

For desktops, NBC Sports Live Extra can be accessed at NBCSports.com/liveextra. The NBC Sports Live Extra app for mobile devices and tablets is available at the App Store for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch, and on select Android handset and tablet devices within Google Play.

NBC Sports Live Extra online will feature a simulcast of the broadcast feed in full HD quality plus one additional online-only bonus camera. The video player will include picture-in-picture capability and full DVR functionality, allowing the user to pause the live video and even review plays in “slo-mo.”

Sideline reporter Alex Flanagan will provide live in-game tweets. Additionally, fans can watch in-game highlights, live coverage of the Notre Dame and visiting teams’ bands at halftime, as well as live postgame footage that will include head coach Brian Kelly’s press conference.

NBCSPORTS.com

NBCSports.com will again continue its Notre Dame football coverage though its Notre Dame Central section. Notre Dame will also be featured within NBC Sports Talk with its popular Inside The Irish blog written by Notre Dame Football insider Keith Arnold.

 

COMCAST SPORTSNET CHICAGO

Beginning this season, NBC Sports Regional Networks’ Comcast SportsNet Chicago will join forces with NBC Sports to help power NBCSports.com’s “Notre Dame Central” (http://www.nbcsports.com/college-football/notre-dame-central).  CSN Chicago will contribute a dedicated Notre Dame Football “Insider” in JJ Stankevitz (@JJStankevitz) from CSNChicago.com, who will serve as a beat reporter providing up-to-the-minute Fighting Irish news and analysis, columns, game previews/recaps, interviews and much more.

 

Fans can also follow the network’s @IrishTalkCSN Twitter handle for the latest Fighting Irish news and updates 24/7.  Also this season, CSN Chicago will provide its TV viewers with same day replays of every Notre Dame home game produced by NBC Sports beginning Saturday, August 31, along with a CSNChicago.com live stream of Head Coach Brian Kelly’s weekly press conferences.  In addition, Comcast SportsNet Chicago has also hired Tony Rice, quarterback of the 1988 National Champion Fighting Irish, to be its ND Football on-air/online contributor throughout the upcoming college football season.

 

COLLEGE FOOTBALL ON NBCSN

In addition to Notre Dame Football on NBC, NBC Sports Group will air 11 games featuring teams from the CAA and Ivy League, all on NBCSN.

 

Date Teams Time Conference Network
Saturday, Sept. 7 Delaware State at Delaware 3:30 p.m. CAA NBCSN
Saturday, Sept. 21 Lehigh at Princeton 6 p.m. IVY NBCSN
Saturday, Sept. 28 Brown at Harvard 7:30 p.m. IVY NBCSN
Saturday, Oct. 12 Lehigh at Columbia Noon IVY NBCSN
Saturday, Oct. 12 Richmond at James Madison 3:30 p.m. CAA NBCSN
Saturday, Oct. 12 Villanova at Towson 7 p.m. CAA NBCSN
Saturday, Nov.  9 James Madison at New Hampshire 12:30 p.m. CAA NBCSN
Saturday, Nov.  9 Cornell at Dartmouth 4 p.m. IVY NBCSN
Saturday, Nov. 16 Penn at Harvard Noon IVY NBCSN
Saturday, Nov. 23 Harvard at Yale Noon IVY NBCSN
Saturday, Nov. 23 James Madison at Towson 3:30 p.m. CAA NBCSN

 

 

Sports Dash: NBC Sports SN also has new show starting today; Forde, Wetzel among Yahoo! Sports writers to be featured

With the all focus on the new offerings from Fox Sports 1 and ESPN, NBC SN also has decided to jump in with a new show that looks to have some potential.

Sports Dash makes its debut at noon ET today. The hosts are Dave Briggs, who resurfaces after his previous partnership with Michelle Beadle didn’t work out so well, and Carolyn Manno.

The show is the first major production from the NBC/Yahoo! Sports partnership. And the good news about that is top Yahoo! Sports writers such as Pat Forde, Dan Wetzel, and Adrian Wojnarowski will make regular appearances. Also, Joe Posnanski, NBCSports.com’s, big writing hire, will be seen frequently on the show.

So Sports Dash will make a strong debut when it comes to writing power.

It’s an important show for NBC SN to make a statement, saying “Hey, we’re in the game too.” The network needs to build up more studio shows, especially in the evening when it isn’t airing live sports.

Sports Dash also has a digital component with Yahoo! Sports. All the details are below in the official rundown.

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STAMFORD, Conn. – August 15, 2013 – SportsDash with Yahoo! Sports, a collaborative, cross-platform extension of the strategic digital alliance between Yahoo! Sports and NBC Sports Group, debuts on NBCSN this Monday, August 19, from noon-1 p.m. ET.

NBC Sports’ Dave Briggs and Carolyn Manno will serve as the hosts for SportsDash, which will feature insights from a deep roster of NBC Sports, Yahoo! Sports and Rivals.com analysts and insiders. NBC Sports analysts expected to appear on SportsDash when the program touches on their respective sport include Rodney Harrison, Doug Flutie, Scott Pioli, Rebecca Lowe, Jimmy Roberts, Jeremy Roenick, Mary Carillo, Ato Boldin and Joe Posnanski, as well as Yahoo! Sports’ experts Pat Forde, Martin Rogers, Eric Adelson, and Graham Watson.

The new program will utilize a digital media wall that integrates real-time activity from multiple sources, such as Yahoo! Sports Trends, Facebook and Twitter, to identify the hottest topics in sports.

Manno: “Along with Yahoo! Sports, we find out what’s trending online, and we find out what people want to actually talk about as they’re clicking on it. It’s a sports show like you’ve seen before, but it has a new component because we look at what fans are talking about right now.”

Briggs: “We will look to Yahoo! Sports for the day’s hottest stories, trends and social media buzz to drive the show. I’m excited about working with their experts and reporters on SportsDash.”

SportsDash, which airs Monday through Friday, will also cover fantasy sports on a daily basis and will include analysis from experts Yahoo! Sports’ Brad Evans, Brandon Funston and Andy Behrens along with NBC Rotoworld’s Kay Adams.

Beginning in late August, a complementary, digital-only show will stream live from 1-1:15 p.m. ET on Yahoo! Sports, NBCSports.com, and will be available across mobile platforms through the NBC Sports Live Extra app. SportsDash will kick off each morning with a video report on Yahoo! Sports spotlighting the day’s hottest story.

 

 

Jason Sudeikis scores with NBC SN promo for Premier League

Since leaving Saturday Night Live, Jason Sudeikis is keeping busy as the funny guy on the sports front.

Sudeikis was just so-so as host of ESPN’s This is SportsCenter ad countdown show on Thursday night. But he nails it as a confused Texas “football” coach in a promo for the Premier League on NBC SN.

“Ties and no playoffs? My job just got a lot easier.”

What’s another billion dollars? NBC spends big money to land NASCAR; analysis of new deal

At some point, you would think the cartoonish spending for sports on TV will end. The money has to run out eventually, right?

Well, that wasn’t the case Tuesday. According to Sports Business Daily, NBC shelled out $4.4 billion for a new 10-year contract to air NASCAR on NBC and NBC Sports Network, beginning in 2015.

From Tripp Mickle and John Ourand:

That represents a significant media rights increase for NASCAR over the more than $2.28B paid by ESPN and Turner Sports combined for the same number of Sprint Cup and Nationwide races in their current 8-year agreements. This comes after NASCAR received a more than 30% increase in its earlier deal with Fox that covers the first half of its season.

Why was NBC so motivated? Of the 20 races in this package, 13 will be shown on NBC Sports Network. That’s prime live programming for a sports network that saw itself get left on the sidelines for MLB and some of the major college rights deals. Now NASCAR gives NBC SN a valuable property in the summer and fall.

NBC Sports chairman Mark Lazarus called the deal “a game changer.” Whether it leaves NBC without any change in its pocket remains to be seen, but Tuesday wasn’t a day for crunching numbers.

“Over the past two and a half years, we have set forth, since Comcast bought NBC, to renew and acquire properties,” Lazarus said. “We’ve done a significant amount of deals in that time period, but this is one that we’ve really been focused on. The fact that we are going to be working with all of those NASCAR constituencies to build content for NBC, NBC Sports Network, our regional sports networks, the quantity of content that this deal provides and the quality of content that this provides is really a game changer for us for our entire group, and we can’t wait to get started.”

As for NASCAR, why leave ESPN, which is seen in 20 million more homes than NBC SN? Well, it is following the NHL’s lead here.

At ESPN, NASCAR often trailed in the fumes from the network’s coverage of football, college and pro, the NBA, and MLB. At NBC and NBC SN, NASCAR will be the main game in town during its coverage season. The scenario has worked out well for the NHL.

Indeed, when you think about it, how weird was it to hear NASCAR president Brian France invoke hockey when discussing the new deal?

France said: “I can tell you from our discussions as we negotiated this, the integration, and I know that word is used a lot and over used probably sometimes, but the reality is that you can see what they’ve done with the NHL and other properties. They’re in a mode where they’re pulling together all their properties.  They still have a bigger emphasis on big events on network television.”

Lazarus added: “What I think we’ve demonstrated over the past several years is that when we’re able to have a property like the Olympics, the NHL,  the Premier League,  NASCAR, Formula 1, we’re able to bring an audience and surround it with content. (We do it) both on broadcast, on cable, in digital by promoting and marketing using our RSNs. We’re able to bring a level of awareness to a sport, to a property that is frankly unparalleled in the industry, and that’s what we intend to do with NASCAR.”

Starting in 2015, there will be 10 years to see if this deal works for both parties. And for NASCAR fans.

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For those who want more, here is the entire transcript to the call:

BRIAN FRANCE:  Good afternoon, everyone.  Obviously a very exciting and huge day for the sport of NASCAR, the industry of NASCAR and all of our stakeholders, and before I talk just a moment for how excited we are about the future, and I certainly want to make mention of two partners who are not going to be renewing their rights, that being TNT and Turner and ESPN.  We’ve been together one way or the other for 30 plus years, and they’ve done an outstanding job of presenting the NASCAR story week in and week out, and we’ll certainly miss them in many ways.

But this isn’t about the present, it’s about the future, and the future for us, with all of the assets of NBC and Universal and Comcast, made a very compelling point to us that we’re better together going forward with their family of networks and assets, and not to mention the fact that we’ve had a long standing and long confidence in Mark Lazarus, who spearheaded the deal on their part.  So we had a high degree of confidence that Mark brought to the table, and we’ve outlined what we think is just a terrific agreement, one that’s going to present the sport    we think it’s going to be very, very compelling on how that’s going to get done, and there’s a lot of work to be done on the NBC side, and they’re excited about just that.

But what we know is the integration of the assets that they are marshaling together, because this is going to be such an important franchise sport for them, made it to be so compelling that it was just the right choice.  So I know I speak for everybody at NASCAR, including our stakeholders, our drivers, teams, tracks and sponsors, and I’ve talked to an awful lot of them here in the last 24 hours, and there’s a real excitement about partnering with NBC and what I’ve told them, and we’re thrilled to be part of the NBC Sports family.

With that I will turn it back over to you, Greg.

GREG HUGHES:  Thank you, Brian.  Now the chairman of the NBC Sports Group, Mark Lazarus.

MARK LAZARUS:  Thanks.  I’ll simply start by saying we are back.  We are thrilled to be back.  When NBC was involved with NASCAR from 2001 to 2006, it was a very good experience for NBC, the rich history of NASCAR.  We think that the stakeholders at NASCAR, led by Brian as well as the teams, the owners, the tracks, the drivers, will all welcome us back with open arms based on previous history and experience with us, and we couldn’t be happier to have NASCAR back as a tent pole property for NBC and NBC Sports Network, as well as integrating, as Brian said, other assets into the deal.

Over the past two and a half years, we have set forth, since Comcast bought NBC, to renew and acquire properties.  We’ve done a significant amount of deals in that time period, but this is one that we’ve really been focused on, one that we have wanted to have the opportunity to be able to sit at the table when contractual opportunities came due, and the fact that we are going to be working with all of those NASCAR constituencies to build content for NBC, NBC Sports Network, our regional sports networks, the quantity of content that this deal provides and the quality of content that this provides is really a game changer for us for our entire group, and we can’t wait to get started.

GREG HUGHES:  Now let’s go to Steve Herbst, NASCAR vice president of broadcasting and production.

STEVE HERBST:  Thanks.  I just wanted to echo what Brian said earlier, just that NBC brings so much to the table for NASCAR, outstanding production quality, great promotional opportunities with all their other properties.  Some of the best championship programming you’ll see out there lives on NBC, and I think it’s the start of something really special, a very special partnership.

With today’s announcement and the FOX agreement we came to in the fall, our TV picture, our puzzle is almost complete.  We have one more package out there.  It’s a first half Nationwide package with 14 Nationwide races, along with three Cup races.  That package is being discussed.  We have ongoing negotiations, and we plan to place that very soon, and that will all move very quickly.

Finally from me I just want to say for ESPN and Turner, they are our partners through 2014.  High class organizations with great leadership with John Skipper and David Levy and others.  We’ll work closely with them through the balance of this season and next season to deliver great product to the fans.

Q.  Steve and Brian, can you give me a sense, you don’t always see a property leaving ESPN.  What is it about the NBC Universal Comcast asset that you find at least or more compelling than ESPN’s assets, which are always talked about, their many, many, many platforms?

BRIAN FRANCE:  Well, I’ll take that.  First of all, I think it’s the commitment that they’ve made in terms of how important NASCAR is going to be within the already robust properties that they have, and start with that.  And I can tell you from our discussions as we negotiated this, the integration, and I know that word is used a lot and over used probably sometimes, but the reality is that you can see what they’ve done with the NHL and other properties; they’re in a mode where they’re pulling together all their properties, and non sports properties, as well, and plus the network.  They still have a bigger emphasis on big events on network television.

So a combination of all of that, and then the trust that we have in Mark, because we’ve done business with him for many, many years, it brought it to a point where this is the right place for us to be.

Q.  My question is for Brian, following up on that.  The last time ESPN didn’t have a deal with you guys from 2001 to 2006, it seemed to affect their coverage of the races.  I know you guys weren’t as big a presence on SportsCenter.  They’re such a Goliath on the sporting landscape.  Are you worried about how you might be affected in terms of being presented on ESPN?

BRIAN FRANCE:  You know, we’re actually not, and the reason is it’s a different time now.  They have different thinking about how they want to cover sports.  John Skipper is as good as it gets in his organization, and we’ve had conversations.  Obviously you think about all those things, but the reality is they have to cover the big events that people watch every weekend, and I don’t    you never can predict the future, but we didn’t think that was something that would hold us back from making this deal, that’s for sure.

Q.  So they’ll still be invited or credentialed for races if they choose to do that in 2015 and beyond?

BRIAN FRANCE:  Well, yes, but obviously there are exclusive rights and some things we’ll have to all work through, but that’s not anything different than what naturally occurs.  So we’ll be working through that.  I have no problem that this is a different time than way back when, and I’m certain that we’ll all figure that out together.

Q.  Brian, can you talk about the balance between having races on network versus races on cable, specifically NBC Sports Network?  I don’t know if you can give us any final figure of how many races per season will be on network total and cable with the combined deals.

STEVE HERBST:  Are you asking about the NBC package or the overall package?

Q.  I know the NBC package.  I was curious if you could give us any sort of figure for the entire package, at least for 33 of the 36.

STEVE HERBST:  So the first half package obviously with FOX, we’re still discussing the mix there, so I don’t have an overall number for you.  You see the split for the second half Cup on NBC of 13 and 7, but we are not ready to talk about    13 and 7 for NBC.  But we’ll have information in due time on what the total season will look like.

MARK LAZARUS:  Let me just talk a little bit about having a balance and having both the broadcast and NBC Sports Network.  What we have found and what we have learned and what I think we’ve demonstrated over the past several years is that when we’re able to have a property, whether it’s a part of a season or an entire season or complete ownership of a property like the Olympics, like the national hockey league, like premier league, like NASCAR, like Formula 1, and we’re able to bring an audience and surround it with content, both on broadcast, on cable, in digital by promoting and marketing using our RSNs, that we’re able to bring a level of awareness to a sport, to a property that is frankly unparalleled    equal to or unparalleled in the industry, and that’s what we intend to do with NASCAR.  By having this mix, what we always do is make big events bigger, and that’s what we’ll do each Saturday and Sunday from July on starting in 2015.

Q.  Let me ask Brian, do you consider it a risk at all to go from what I would say is the more    obviously an older, more established cable network to one that’s kind of still in its infancy?

BRIAN FRANCE:  No, because if you look at what they’re doing right now, and Mark just outlined it, he’s not just talking conceptually.  They’re doing that right now with record ratings with the NHL and the integration of the Olympics, Sunday Night Football.  I mean, don’t forget, they have a robust lineup obviously without us, and we’re going to add to that in a significant way.

I can assure you from hearing from leadership throughout the Comcast system, they didn’t just want to own sports properties, they wanted to integrate within all their assets, and they’re doing it right now.  We don’t have to guess about it.  We’re looking forward to it.

Q.  I just wonder if you could talk about, it’s probably too early for this since it’s a couple years ago, but will you be bringing over some of the TNT or ESPN or NASCAR on air talent to NBC or NBC Sports, and also, how does this affect the future of the IndyCar Series on NBC and NBC Sports?

MARK LAZARUS:  Well, two questions there.  Let me start with the talent question:  First of all, all those folks are under contract to TNT and ESPN, and we’re respectful of those contracts.  It is too early.  Frankly this deal began and ended in very short order and expeditiously, so our production team is learning about it in sort of real time here, so they haven’t even spent any energy thinking about talent, though my guess is their heads are spinning and they’re thinking very hard now.  We have a couple of years on that.

But what I do promise is that when we hire talent, we do it with the thought of being relevant to the core fan but also being welcoming and open to the casual or new fan, and I think when you look around our Mount Rushmore of broadcasters, whether it’s Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth, Johnny Miller, Bob Costas and others that I’m sure that I know I’m leaving off, Dan Patrick, that we are second to none both in play by play and analysts, and we will continue that with NASCAR as we move towards the beginning of our contract.

How does it relate to IndyCar?  We think that this gives us    listen, we have IndyCar rights for NBC Sports Network.  We do not own the rights for broadcast.  Those are held by ABC and ESPN, by ABC, so we are only the cable partner there, so we are not able to do what we do with other sports by wrapping around it fully.

This will have no impact there, other than that I believe with us now being the home to the second half of the NASCAR season, the home for cable for Indy and the home to Formula 1, that we are one of the    probably the most dominant home for motorsports, and that that circulation of motorsports fans will be good for all.

Q.  Mark, I have a follow up on what you just said, which is that you’re the dominant home for motorsports.  With three racing series that are worldwide, was it NBC Sports group’s design to sort of grab the motorsports market, or is that just sort of how the properties fell?

MARK LAZARUS:  Well, you know, a design would be probably too forward thinking.  As we saw the way rights were developing over the last 24 months, we saw an opportunity, and as SPEED Channel decided to make its migration to something more multisport, we saw an opportunity to potentially fill a gap in the marketplace that might not be satisfied, and so we set forth, not knowing whether NASCAR would ever be able to us, but we set forth with the others.  We inherited the IndyCar deal.  We were able to acquire the F1 deal and that gave us the base.

But then seeing the opportunity that might exist with NASCAR, we believed that we can fill a gap in the marketplace for fans, for marketers and potentially with our cable operators and affiliates.

No one else has ever had all three of those.

Q.  Steve, I have a question for you, and I may be incorrect, but it’s my understanding NBC Sports Network is blocked in Canada, and one thing we see is a lot of complaints from Canadian fans about their ability to access NASCAR coverage, so how will you address that?

STEVE HERBST:  We have a TSN relationship that will continue, and we have broadcast TV, so our broadcast TV will reach Canada.  We have the ongoing TSN relationship, and that’s how we’ll service our Canadian fans.

Q.  Mark, what did you learn about effectively relaunching NHL hockey on TV that you can apply to NASCAR?  And my second question is for Brian:  Brian, are you getting an annual rights fee increase, and will we see any races on the new FOX Sports 1?

MARK LAZARUS:  What we learned from NHL is two things:  One, the ability to have both the broadcast element and the national cable element on NBC Sports Network allowed us to market and promote across both.  It also allowed us to build shoulder and ancillary programming around the content to consume and surround the fans that we know already like a sport or a property and give them more of that content.  And we will apply all of that to NASCAR.

We’ll also integrate our regional sports networks in that, as well.

The other part that I’ll add is what we have built with all of these tent pole properties is a team of dedicated people that work behind the scenes.  I’ve talked a little bit about our broadcasters and our talent, but when you take people that have worked either at NBC or at other places on these properties over time, and whether it’s John Miller, who does our programming, the other John Miller who does our marketing, Sam Flood, our executive producer, who understand the sport, are agnostic to whether it’s on broadcast or cable, we treat it the same no matter where it is, and the fact that they love the properties that we work on, it allows us to really put fans’ interests at heart, and that’s what we will do here.

BRIAN FRANCE:  Yes, an answer on the  — we will have both Cup and Nationwide on FOX Sports 1 at some level.

Q.  This one is for Mark:  I’m curious, why the 20 number?  Why didn’t you just go 23 and take them all?

MARK LAZARUS:  We were offered a package that had 20 in them, so we bought everything that was made available to us.  That doesn’t mean we bought everything we wanted.

Q.  And then in 2015 Speedweeks, FOX is the primary broadcaster, but are you figuring on having a lot of programming during the FOX side of the contract?

MARK LAZARUS:  We’ll be there as a news organization with the ability to cover it like other news organizations I would imagine, and some of this is still being ferreted out, that we’d have some ability to cover it as a little more than just a typical news organization.  But we’ll have shoulder programming and access, but we’ll be respectful of their rights and what they have bought, as we know they will be in our half of the season.

Q.  And then for Steve, you said that the remaining dates that are available, that you expect those to disappear pretty quick.  Is there any kind of rights battle going on, any kind of bidding war for those at this point?

STEVE HERBST:  I would just say that the rights are out there right now.  The package is there.  We expect it to move quickly, and we’ll be placing those in short order, and we’ll keep you posted.

Q.  Mark, lots of race fans are listening live right now, and the question is they know there’s a different philosophy or identity of each network.  What’s the generic philosophy of covering sports and news on sports for your network, and just a little bit more about what makes NASCAR so compelling for your network?

MARK LAZARUS:  Well, the mantra that we live by is two things:  One, we want to tell great stories, and NASCAR, what makes it so compelling is there are wonderful stories.  There are more than 40 drivers in every race.  It’s the all star game every weekend.  It’s the best athletes in the sport on the same playing surface at the same time, and it’s each and every week.  And whether that’s Saturday or Sunday, you have compelling programming, compelling stories, rivalries that get built over years and years and years.  It’s one of the rare sports where you can have multigenerational athletes competing against each other.  Every track is unique and still has its own stories.  It’s like a golf course in that way; each one has its own way of treating its athletes, and the athletes have to think differently about them, and each of the tracks are like that.

So the stories are incredibly compelling.  We believe that we take the time to develop those stories, develop the personality, make sure fans know the rivalries and why they should care about them, and that’s what we spend our time doing in all sports, and we think that NASCAR suits that production value very well.

Q.  This question is for Brian:  In 2015 when all of the new TV deals are in place, and I know there are still three races unaccounted for, but I think you can still answer this question; will the purses for the Sprint Cup Series races be higher in 2015 than they were in 2014?

BRIAN FRANCE:  Well, the purses are formulated not just off of TV revenue, obviously, and they’re formulated by a number of things.  But I anticipate that they certainly will be.  That would be my guess.

But yeah, this is obviously a lucrative    we wouldn’t have made the change if it weren’t a favorable arrangement for the industry financially, and it is, and everybody will benefit from that as every league does.

Q.  Brian, two questions:  Can you talk about the digital rights that will be a part of this?  In essence what will fans be able to    will there be essentially this version of RaceBuddy and how you envision the digital rights?  And can you talk about the tie in of NASCAR on Sunday afternoons leading into Sunday Night Football?  I would presume that’s part of the interest in all this.

BRIAN FRANCE:  Steve, I’ll let you address the digital rights on our side.

STEVE HERBST:  Yeah, we still hold rights for RaceBuddy.  NBC will have exclusive TV everywhere rights for its events and highlight rights for all of its NBC digital platforms.  Some of those are still developing and working through our digital chief Mark Jenkins, but that’s generally the snapshot there.

MARK LAZARUS:  Yeah, when you get to the fall, when you have not only our wonderful NASCAR schedule but our Sunday Night Football schedule and the beginning of our NHL season, our ability to promote across all three of those to each other we think will be beneficial to all three of those.  As we get closer and as the race schedule and the sanctions come through, we will work with NASCAR to lay out the schedule.  But we don’t anticipate any disruption in coverage for either NASCAR or the NFL due to this deal.  There’s enough latitude that we have with NBC and NBC Sports Network to make sure that doesn’t become an issue.  But we do see greatly the benefits of all of our fall properties being able to promote each other, somewhat overlapping but also to somewhat differentiated audiences, with the help of growing them all.

 

Why NBC, NHL shut out by potential viewers by airing Stanley Cup Final games on NBC Sports Network

I received an angry text from my son, Matt, on Saturday night. He is working as an overnight camp counselor in Northern Wisconsin for the summer. He also is a big Blackhawks fan.

On Saturday, Matt and his friends went to the local bowling alley to watch Game 2. One problem: the bowling alley didn’t have the game on its TVs.

Matt’s text: “Unbelievable. NBC (in Northern Wisconsin) doesn’t have the freaking game on.”

At least he didn’t use another word.

I explained to him that Game 2 was on NBC Sports Network, which the bowling alley didn’t have on its cable system. Finally after scrambling through the bars of Northern Wisconsin, and most the first period, they found a place that had the game.

Others, though, weren’t as fortunate. I have heard many complaints about Games 2 and 3 airing on NBC Sports Network as opposed to NBC.

Here’s some explanation and analysis:

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Why did NBC put those games on NBC Sports Network? The answer is simple. NBC wanted to expose viewers to its cable sports outlet.

While the move upset fans who don’t get NBC Sports Network, NBC got the desired result. Game 3 had nearly 4.01 million viewers, the second highest audience ever on NBC Sports Network (U.S./Japan Gold Medal Olympic soccer game had 4.4 million viewers), and an all-time high for hockey.

Game 2 on Saturday was close behind with just fewer than 3.964 million viewers.

However, and it’s a big however, the NHL is missing out on even higher ratings by agreeing to air the Final games on NBC Sports Network. Game 1 pulled in 6.4 million viewers on NBC.

Again, the reason is simple. NBC is available in 115 million homes. Currently, only 80 million homes receive NBC Sports Network.

That’s 35 million fewer homes who didn’t have access to NBC Sports Network for Games 2 and 3. Do the math, and it’s easy to see why the ratings were lower.

So if you’re the NHL and NBC, and you’re trying to grow hockey fan base, wouldn’t you want to be in as many homes as possible? Well, the answer is yes and no.

Yes, in the short term, the ratings would be higher for Final games on NBC. However, this is about the long term and growing NBC Sports Network.

NBC believes the main way to drive up ratings and more importantly, subscribers, is to air premium content on NBC Sports Network. Final games are premium content.

NBC Sports Network wants to grow its subscriber base from 80 million homes to nearly 100 million homes, or comparable to the distribution for ESPN. It wants potential viewers to call their cable operators and demand that the network either be added to their systems or put on a basic tier.

NBC knows it takes missing out on Stanley Cup Final games for people to make that call.

The NHL also has a vested interest in growing NBC Sports Network. The network is the main home for hockey, airing more than 100 regular season and playoff games. More subscribers means more potential hockey viewers.

And friends, cable is where this is all going when it comes to the biggest games. The BCS championship game already is on ESPN. Next year, the semifinals on Final Four Saturday will air on TBS. In 2016, TBS will begin a rotation where it gets the entire Final Four every other year. The large chunk of baseball’s postseason is on cable.

By the 2020s, it wouldn’t be a surprise if every title game in all the major sports, with the exception of the Super Bowl, is on cable.

As for this year, the remainder of the Stanley Cup Final will be on NBC, starting with Game 4 tonight. My son will be happy and so will people who don’t get NBC Sports Network.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nobody now saying hockey needs to be on ESPN; NBC SN pulls huge ratings for Chicago-Detroit series

Update: With 2.723 million viewers, Game 6 of the Chicago/Detroit series on NBC Sports Network was the most watched Semifinal game ever on cable (data available since 1994).

Game 7 figures to be bigger. Will pass along ratings when they come in.

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In my latest column for Indiana’s National Sports Journalism Center, I revisit the NHL’s decision to stick with the NBC Sports Network (formerly Versus) with its cable package opposed to going with ESPN.

Really, it couldn’t have worked out better for the NHL. From the post:

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In April, 2011, the NHL decided against going to ESPN. Not only did the league stay the course, it doubled down.  It elected to sign an exclusive 10-year deal with the NBC Sports Group.

Beginning in 2012, the pact called for NBC to air every game of the playoffs on multiple platforms, with the former Versus, since rebranded NBC Sports Network, serving as an anchor along with NBC.

“The idea was to super-serve the hockey fan,” said Sam Flood, who oversees NBC’s hockey coverage as executive producer. “That’s our Number 1 priority. (It)  is hockey seven nights a week, with the match ups and times where fans can consume them as often as possible.”

Bring it on.

The early rounds now have the feel of the NCAA basketball tournament, with fans flipping from games on NBC, NBC Sports Network, CNBC, and the NHL Network. On some days, there were four games.

Last Thursday night was a hockey gourmet feast. The New York Rangers beat Boston in overtime on CNBC, while Detroit squeezed out a tense 1-0 victory over Chicago on NBC Sports Network. It doesn’t get much better than that for fans of the old Original 6.

The big winners are the NHL and NBC. Despite the lockout, the 2013 NHL regular season on NBC Sports Network was the most-watched season on cable in nearly two decades, and up 18 percent from last season. Regular season games averaged 392,000 viewers. A new “Wednesday Night Rivalry” series proved to be extremely popular. Nearly 1 million viewers tuned for a Boston-Rangers game in late January.

The ratings then have soared for the playoffs. On NBC, Game 2 of the Boston-Rangers series pulled in a high 2.4 million viewers. On NBC Sports Network, Game 4 of Chicago-Detroit and Game 3 of Boston-Rangers both attracted 1.75 viewers.

Would the NHL have been as successful if it went to ESPN? Probably not. ESPN likely could have found multiple platforms to air all the playoff games; ESPN2, ESPNews, ESPN Classic, etc. However, the network also has a full slate of baseball and the NBA playoffs during the spring. The NHL might have gotten lost in the shuffle and relegated to second-class status.

The NHL and hockey are the showcase attraction at the NBC Sports Network. There’s something to be said for being No. 1 on the marquee. It conveys a greater sense of importance to viewers, as if to say, “Hey, this is important. Watch.”

 

 

 

Latest Costas Tonight: Paterno representatives announce lawsuit against NCAA

The Penn State saga isn’t going away anytime soon.

Bob Costas has the latest developments on Costas Tonight (NBC Sports Network, tonight after Chicago-Detroit game).

Here’s a clip released by NBC Sports Network.

Breaking sports news video. MLB, NFL, NBA, NHL highlights and more.

*****

The release from NBC Sports Network:

Representatives of former Penn State head coach Joe Paterno’s family including Paterno spokesman Dan McGinn, Former Attorney General and Pennsylvania Governor Dick Thornburgh, who wrote an independent review of the Freeh Report, and Paterno family attorney Wick Sollers, join Bob Costas, a 25-time Emmy Award-winning journalist and one of America’s preeminent interviewers, on the latest edition of Costas Tonight, a 60-minute program, airing tonight at 11 p.m. ET on NBC Sports Network, following the NHL Western Conference Semifinal Game 7 between Chicago and Detroit.

During the program, Costas re-examines the Freeh Report as it pertains to former Penn State head coach Joe Paterno. The full version of the Freeh Report is available on progress.psu.edu/the-freeh-report and the Thornburgh Report is available at paterno.com.

During Costas Tonight, which was recorded Tuesday at NBC Sports Group’s International Broadcast Center in Stamford, Conn., McGinn, Thornburgh and Sollers announce a lawsuit against the NCAA on behalf of the Paterno family and several Penn State trustees, faculty, former players and coaches.”

###

EXCERPTS FROM COSTAS’ INTERVIEW WITH MCGINN, THORNBURGH AND SOLLERS:

Sollers on the lawsuit and what it entails: “The lawsuit is being filed against the NCAA and Mark Emmert, in his individual and official capacity as the president of the NCAA, and Edward Ray, who was the chairman of the executive committee of the NCAA. It’s being filed by certain trustees, certain former players, certain former coaches, certain former faculty members, as well as the estate of Joe Paterno, to redress the NCAA’s 100 percent adoption of the Freeh Report and imposition of a binding consent decree against Penn State University. The reality is that consent decree was imposed through coercion and threats behind the scenes and there was no ability for anyone to get redress. There was no board approval, there was no transparency, and there was no consideration of this consent decree.”

Sollers on how he thinks the NCAA will respond: “The NCAA is going to fight tooth and nail to try to keep this lawsuit from going forward on legal grounds, because I do not believe they’re going to want to suffer discovery and the opportunity for the plaintiffs to gain discovery about the relationship between the NCAA and the Freeh group, and other behind-the-scenes moves to cram down this consent decree.”

McGinn on the lawsuit: “It’s designed to try to correct the record here. We know that you can’t undo all the damage that’s been done. We know that this is going to be a fight for the long term. When I speak of the damage, it’s not just to the Paterno family, the Paterno name; it is to Penn State, a great institution that has a great history and tradition in sports. It’s to the alums there, the students, the faculty, and the community. The NCAA wrecked enormous damage to this community, and this is just one way to get the record right.”

Sollers on Freeh: “Mr. Freeh has been named as someone who was a cooperating individual, actually a co-conspirator, with the NCAA in this lawsuit. There were close communications between the NCAA, as well as the Freeh Group, all through the Freeh Group investigation, and the NCAA stood on the sidelines instead of doing what they should have done with a full investigation. We have given a lot more allowance to Louis Freeh than he gave to Joe Paterno, and the people he named in his report. We don’t know his motivations for it; we just know he got it wrong. ”

Thornburgh on the Freeh Report: “The report itself is deeply flawed, and it is, in many respects, incomplete, inaccurate. In our review, we found that it relied much more on speculation and conjecture than on facts that were developed through the investigation.”

McGinn on Paterno: “Here’s what you need to know about Paterno. He was never interviewed once when he was fired. [The NCAA] had no conversation with him after 60 years of service. We engaged with Freeh and said, ‘We’d like to have the chance to respond to any charges.’ They put the report out. There was no filter. They put it out immediately. It blew up. It was like taking a blow torch to a dry set of woods.”

Thornburgh on the allegations of a cover up: “It didn’t happen. There was no attempt at a cover up. Why would Joe Paterno fear bad publicity? The whole premise is false here – that somehow there was a motive to prevent bad publicity, and that he would put his entire life, his family name forever, his program, the university he loved, it does not add up and the facts don’t support it.”

Sollers: “There’s no instance where Joe Paterno ever asked anybody not to fully investigate, not to report, not to do the right thing. We know that from conversations with the lawyers, from other key protagonists in this matter, and across the board. Joe Paterno did what he thought was right with the information he had at the time.”

McGinn: “The Paterno family never said to me to clear our names. They never said just fight for the legacy, Joe Paterno. I was with him as he was dying and he said, ‘Just get the truth. I have confidence. Make sure the truth comes out.’”

Here you go, soccer fans: NBC Sports Group set to super-serve Premier League

NBC revealed its plans for its coverage of the English Premier League, which begins with the 2013-2014 season. It looks to be quite a feast for soccer fans.

Here are the details from NBC.

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All 380 games of the 2013-14 Barclays Premier League season will be presented live on NBC Sports Group’s television and digital properties as well as other NBCUniversal channels. NBC Sports Group’s schedule, which begins on Saturday, August 17, includes live matches on NBC, NBC Sports Network, Telemundo, Mun2, the Premier League Extra Time package of overflow television channels, the NBC Sports Live Extrawebsite and app, and other NBCUniversal channels including CNBC and USA.

As previously announced in October 2012, NBCUniversal, via the NBC Sports Group, acquired the exclusive U.S. media rights to the Premier League through a multi-year agreement that begins with the 2013-14 season. Per the agreement, NBCUniversal becomes the exclusive English- and Spanish-language media rights holder to all 380 Barclays Premier League matches across all media platforms and devices in the United States.

Details of the 2013-2014 NBC Sports Group Premier League programming include:

  • All 380 matches presented live on television with studio pre- and post-game coverage;
  • All 380 matches streamed live via NBC Sports Live Extra;
  • Games not aired on a designated NBCUniversal channel will be made available to distributors via Premier League Extra Time, a package of overflow television channels available at no extra cost for each of their customers who receives NBC Sports Network;
  • Championship Sunday – May 11, 2014, when all 10 Premier League matches will be available live on a different NBCUniversal channel;
  • 76 Spanish-language telecasts, 10 on Telemundo, 66 on Mun2;
  • More than 600 hours of Premier League original programming.

NBC SPORTS LIVE EXTRA: Every Barclays Premier League match will be streamed live via NBC Sports Live Extra, the NBC Sports Group’s live streaming product for desktop, mobile and tablets and, in most cases, on the digital platforms of participating cable, satellite, telco and other video subscription services. The vast majority of Barclays Premier League matches will be streamed via “TV Everywhere,” available on an authenticated basis to subscribers of these services.

NBC Sports Live Extra provides a primary and second screen experience across mobile, tablet and desktop, delivering high quality video, match/player stats and video highlights while aggregating Premier League content from social media.

PREMIER LEAGUE EXTRA TIME: All games not aired on a designated NBCUniversal channel will be made available to distributors on Premier League Extra Time, a package of overflow television channels available at no extra cost for each of their customers who receives NBC Sports Network.

CHAMPIONSHIP SUNDAY: The biggest day on the Premier League schedule is the last day of the season when all 20 teams play at the same time. NBCUniversal will present each match of Championship Sunday live across a host of NBCU channels, including NBC, NBCSN, CNBC, USA, MSNBC, E! and more.

STUDIO AND ORIGINAL PROGRAMMING: NBC Sports Network will present more than 600 hours each year of studio and original programming surrounding Premier League. Shows include:

  • Premier League Countdown – A preview of the 2013-14 Barclays Premier League season;
  • Premier League Download – With the help of a number of high-profile celebrity supporters, comedians and journalists, Premier League Download will explore what it is that’s so intensely loved – and loathed – about England’s topflight league. Long-time supporters will enjoy the lively commentary, while new fans will learn the language of the only league that matters;
  • Premier League 36 – NBC Sports Network’s acclaimed 36 series that follows athletes for the 36 hours leading up to a game/match/race comes to the Premier League;
  • Premier League Goal Zone – A 30-minute program airing after the matches on Sunday with highlights of all the goals scored on Saturday and Sunday;
  • Game Cut-Downs – On Monday nights, NBCSN will present a two-hour show featuring cut-down versions of the Manchester United and Manchester City matches. On Tuesdays, a two-hour program will feature the Chelsea, Liverpool, Arsenal, and Tottenham matches;
  • Match of the Day – A two-hour show featuring extended highlights with the natural calls of every game on Saturday. This show is modeled after the highly-regarded BBC show of the same name. Match of the Day will re-air on Sunday mornings;
  • Match of the Day 2 – A 90-minute show featuring extended highlights with the natural calls of every game on Sunday. This show is modeled after the BBC show of the same name;
  • Match of the Week – On Sunday nights, NBCSN will re-air the best match of the weekend in its entirety;
  • Barclays Premier League World – A weekly magazine show produced by Premier League;
  • Barclays Premier League Preview – A weekly show produced by Premier League that previews the upcoming week’s matches;
  • Barclays Premier League Review – A weekly show produced by Premier League that recaps all the matches from the past week.
GAMES BY PLATFORM (Subject to Change)
NBC 20
NBCSN 154
Premier League Extra Time 184
Telemundo/Mun2 76
Other NBCU Channels 22
NBC Sports Live Extra 380

TYPICAL WEEKLY PROGRAMMING GRID (All games live; All times ET)

Saturday Sunday Monday/Midweek
7 a.m. – NBCSN 8 a.m. – NBCSN 2:30 p.m. – NBCSN
10 a.m. – NBCSN 11 a.m. – NBCSN/Telemundo
12:30 p.m. – NBC

Dorsett on Costas Tonight: Infuriates me that they would put me back out there in harm’s way

The latest edition of Costas Tonight (NBC Sports Network, 9 p.m. ET) literally tackles the elephant in the room: Player health and safety in the NFL.

Here is Tony Dorsett blasting the league, saying officials knew the concussion dangers back when he was playing.

Breaking sports news video. MLB, NFL, NBA, NHL highlights and more.

Here’s Rodney Harrison with some frank talk about his experience in the 90s. He said he was given two Advils and then went back out and played. After suffering more than 20 concussions, he is afraid for his future.

Breaking sports news video. MLB, NFL, NBA, NHL highlights and more.

The important details from NBC Sports Network:

NEW YORK – Jan. 30, 2013 – Bob Costas, a 24-time Emmy Award-winning journalist and one of America’s preeminent interviewers, welcomed NFL players and executives to Costas Tonight to discuss the current state of the NFL. Costas Tonight: State of the NFL will examine major topics including: player health and safety; the Rooney Rule; and a preview of Super Bowl XLVII.

Costas Tonight: State of the NFL, which was recorded on Tuesday, is the first show to originate from Studio 3 at NBC Sports Group’s International Broadcast Center in Stamford, Conn. It airs tomorrow night at 9 p.m. ET on NBC Sports Network.

Costas was joined in studio by NFL Hall of Famer Tony Dorsett, Arizona Cardinals WR Larry Fitzgerald, and former RB Thomas Jones, who recently revealed he will donate his brain to the Sports Legacy Institute to be studied for evidence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).

In addition to his interview with current and former players, Costas spoke with NFL executive vice president of football operations, Ray Anderson about player safety, the Rooney Rule and proposed changes to the rules of the game.

Football Night in America’s Tony Dungy and Rodney Harrison joined Costas to discuss the state of the league and look ahead to Super Bowl XLVII.

Costas also interviewed noted psychiatrist and leading expert in the field of brain science, Dr. Daniel Amen.

Additional content from the show can be see online at NBCSports.com when the show debuts.

Costas spoke with Dorsett, Fitzgerald and Jones about the current gun culture in the league and the number of players who own or carry handguns.

Ray Anderson on football being fundamentally dangerous no matter what type of changes the league makes to the rules of the game: “It is a very physical game and that is part of what the appeal is and it always has been. Players go out there with the understanding that they are going to subject themselves to some physical play. Our job is to make sure it’s not unnecessarily physical or unnecessarily dangerous play. It’s naïve to think that football will have its appeal if all the physicality is taken out.”

Anderson on minority hiring and the Rooney Rule: “We were not pleased with the results. I believe there is some tweaking of the Rooney Rule that we need to look into. We need to do more appropriate development and training, so that our pipeline for African-American coaches, in particular, is more robust. The Rooney Rule has a place, we have a real need for it, we have to do better. The results this time around were a disappointment and we have some work to do.”

Tony Dungy on the Rooney Rule and none of the open positions in the NFL going to minorities: “I think the system is broken. Not just looking at it from a minority standpoint, but I can tell you from head coaching standpoint. What we are doing now is not working. Twenty-one head coaching changes in the last three years. In 2009, there were 11 new head coaches hired and only two of them made it through three years. So we are not picking the best candidates. I think the owners are feeling the pressure to hire that rock star candidate and they are under pressure to move very, very quickly.”

Fitzgerald on whether he thinks he lost his only opportunity to win a Super Bowl: “No, I’m always optimistic. We play every single season and our goal is always the same, which is to hoist that Lombardi Trophy. Every year I step on that field I feel like I have the opportunity to go out there and do it against all odds. I always feel that way and that is never going to change.”

Fitzgerald’s Super Bowl pick: “I think the Ravens are going to win the football game …the Ravens are battle tested. Year in and year out they are knocking on the door, and they are extremely well coached… I think the Ravens are going to come out victorious.”

Fitzgerald on his upcoming season for the Arizona Cardinals: “There’s always questions leading into a season. We have a fresh new coaching staff. I know coach (Bruce) Arians is bringing in a great staff, and I’m looking forward to what he’s bringing to the table.”

Jones on donating his brain to be studied: “The game is something that we love; it’s the number one sport in the country. But, it doesn’t take away from the fact that we are human beings. To see all these guys take their lives because of CTE and the concussion situation that’s been a big issue, it doesn’t mean I can’t do something in support of research to help kids or players after me. This is the part of the game that people don’t want to address.”

Jones on whether he would have preferred his Bears defensive teammates to have legally hit Peyton Manning in the Super Bowl: “I would rather the teammate legally splatter him. Why? Because, number one, it’s a mentality. Now he’s going to worry about getting hit the next time and he may throw an interception.  He may overthrow the ball, he may under throw it. The game is 75% mental, as well, so it’s an intimidation factor. The aggression can also cause players not to play up to their level because they are scared of being knocked out. We come up together we worked as hard as we could to make it to this level of football so you’re not trying to end someone’s career. But in between those white lines, nobody’s safe. I think every player can say that.”

Fitzgerald on Washington Redskins head coach Mike Shanahan not benching Robert Griffin III: “That’s part of the decision process that the head coach has to make, but as a player, you never want to come out of the game. Regardless of what the situation is, you understand your teammates are counting on you. You put in a lot of time and preparation to go out there and perform at the highest ability. You know injuries are going to happen. You know that’s just part of the game and you got to push through. I understand why RGIII didn’t want to come out of the game, or any other player.”

Dr. Amen on a study he did on 135 players: “Even people who reported no concussions at all had significant trauma in their brain.”

Amen on the NFL’s improved response to the concussion issue since Roger Goodell was named commissioner of the NFL: “No question… In front of Congress he (Goodell) said that the league was studying the issue. Two months later, they completely changed their position, in larger part because of their own study. Now there are concussion posters in every major locker room in the NFL. I have seen a shift and I have been very pleased about the shift.”

Dorsett on Dr. Amen’s interview: “I’m glad to see that the NFL, the owners in particular, have owned up to the (fact) that there is a concussion problem.”

Dorsett on his last concussion:  “One of the last concussions that I had; it was against the Philadelphia Eagles, Ray Ellis. I didn’t see him and it was like a freight train hitting a Volkswagen, he blew me up. And yet, I go to the sideline and they go in at halftime, they check my eyes, but they throw me back out on the field. As a football player that’s the culture we grew up in. I was taught and the way I always felt was that if I can walk I’m going to play. But if I knew some of the things that I know now, I would have had a different attitude about all that. But the owners knew about that.”

Costas: “So you think they (owners) did know then even when you were playing? You think they knew?”

Dorsett: “Absolutely. And that infuriates me that they would put me back out there in harm’s way.”

Rodney Harrison on his post-NFL career and fears about his injuries long term: “I’m 40 years old. I’m scared to death what may happen to me 10-15 years from now.”