"Hey, That Guy Doing Stats is Good!"
This coming Saturday is going to feel
pretty strange. For the first time since I moved to Georgia in 1994, I
will not be working the CBS
Sports broadcast of a Bulldog
home football game. I have fallen victim to the fact that there is a new
generation of "young folk" who travel, at their own expense,
as part of the production crew every week. These young people fill the
spots that I would normally be working in. This is much like what I did
when I lived in Ohio and Washington, DC In order to make more money and
see some great games, I would travel to work games if they were reachable
by car. For many of the "younger" people, this is how they hope
to break into a full time job. Perhaps the best example of this was John
Kollmansperger of Virginia. He
started out as a runner for CBS Sports back in the mid 1980's. Before you
knew it, he was a full time member of the Sandy
Grossman-Bob Stenner led CBS
Sports "A-Team" supporting Pat
Summerall and John
Madden. He still works as a consultant
to CBS Sports.
But does this mean I will not be working at the game? Not at all. In the
past, if someone could not get work for the network broadcasting the game,
they would not be working the game at all. This has all changed with expanded
and new media. I will be working for the CSTV/CBS
College Football pre-game show
on Saturday. This past Saturday I worked as a statistician for Comcast
Sports South for their tape-delayed
coverage of the Troy-Georgia game (thanks to Claude
Felton, the sports communications
director at UGA giving them my contact information). The expansion of extended
and new media means a greater demand for skilled people to provide these
positions. The problem is often that there are not enough qualified people
to fill the jobs.
Computers have not replaced the need for human knowledge in sports.
Photograph Copyright 2007 by Christopher Byrne, All Rights Reserved.
They said that the introduction of computers into sports broadcasts would
kill the need for human statisticians in sports broadcasts. Nothing could
be further from the truth. The computers cannot identify trends and other
related anomalies and get them to the announcers and graphics truck fast
enough. Human's are still needed to interpret the data,. The skills are
not the fact that someone can just look at data and crunch numbers. The
skills are in understanding which numbers are most important for on-air
broadcast, and that the fans would be interested in. The idea is to be
able to "sell" something to the producer and then getting the
internal satisfaction of seeing it get on the air. No one watching knows
that it was you that came up with the "story", but you do which
is in many ways much more satisfying. Unfortunately, what happens
a lot is that the broadcasters will get students in these positions who
have not worked in televised sports at all, and it is very hard to get
the information needed when it is needed, or get done what is needed to
be done. For example, I worked an UGA Volleyball match earlier this fall
for Fox Sports Network.
I had to leave my position in the "booth" to give on the spot
training to the student working as the "red hat" (the time out
coordinator) on how to call for and manage time outs. I also had to tell
the "O-Stats" (official stats) person to put a headset on and
what to give the people in the truck.
Undoubtedly, these "younger folk" will get better as they work
more and more events. Until then, I will hear what I heard in the background
while wearing my headsets last Saturday afternoon: "Hey,
that guy doing stats is good! Where did we get him?"
t is the little things like that that make the job fun and allow me to
keep getting paid to see some great Athletic events. It provides a change
of pace from my real life job, and it is something where you know immediately
if you are doing a good job or not. I know I will never be as good as the
great Marty Aronoff,
stats man to the stars who seems to have worked every event since before
television was invented. At 68 years old, he still works 250 events a year.
But I have my little niche which is fun and demanding in a different kind
of way that the normal day-today routine.
A Sad Footnote
In writing this story, I found out that in April of 2006, John
Aronoff, son of Marty Aronoff,
died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. I worked with John at the Mizlou
Sports News Network back in the early 1990's. My heartfelt thoughts and
prayers go out to Marty and his family on their loss.