Thursday, May 15, 2008

Another Random Rant

On NFL last night, the analyst team spent a good ten minutes of their twenty minute segment talking about the apocalyptic (or insignificant?) ramifications of the infamous SPYGATE case. Midway through their crucially important analysis, the cast played an audio clip from Tom Brady, sharing his comments about the investigation:
(I was watching on an analogue TV, so this is very paraphrased)

"This is not that big of a deal to me or any of the players. I feel that ESPN has spun this issue way out of proportion; it's getting to the point now where ESPN is spending about as much time covering sports as MTV is covering music"

I was personally very surprised that ESPN would allow such brand bashing material on the air; it was fresh to hear a voice challenging the system. Of course, however, Trey Wingo was there to back the network as soon as the audio clip had finished:

"The first question that [the radio network] asked Brady was if he had seen any of the ESPN coverage and he said that he hadn't"

That seemed fair for Wingo to put Brady's perspective in context, but before the end of NFL Live's spygate segment, Wingo went off on a pretty half hearted quasi rant that inspired this post, saying something along the lines of:

"ESPN didn't accuse the Patriots of cheating, ESPN didn't take the tapes from them after the Jets game, the NFL did. So if you have a beef, Tom Brady, take it up with the League, not ESPN."

Immediately after Trey finished that sentence, network programming irony seemed to back Brady when Wingo's sidekicks began to lead into the next 'sports story' about some retired athlete's most recent performance on Dancing With The Stars.

Trey, I understand that ESPN is just the messenger, but as a monopolistic television network, ESPN does control how its messages are delivered. The truth is that ESPN has become very watered down; for every time an analyst takes the time to break down film and reveal something meaningful, there are twice as many squirrels on waterskies as there were before ESPN joined the Disney family. Is it wrong that I prefer Bob Knight boldly talking basketball instead of cracking superficial jokes about how bad his bracket is or what he shot on the golf course last week? I'm tired of ESPN cutting away from the Cavs game to tell the viewers what is playing on their family of networks. I'm tired of announcers taking time away from the game to talk about things more people can relate to.

The truth is, Trey, that while you may not personally be responsible for forcing the Patriots organization to deal with the plethora of media attention that they are receiving now, the ESPN network has given the issue much more coverage than it needs. Was the punishment just? Should congress get involved? Take two minutes to update the viewers on what is happening and let them fight it out in bars and message boards. Don't cut time from game highlights to rattle off opinions that normal people can come up with themselves.

Currently, basketball and hockey are in the middle of the playoffs, interleague play is about to start in baseball, and OTAs are starting all over the NFL, so (while it may be so in the college football world) it is inexcusable to play the "there's nothing else to cover" card. Brady didn't have to watch any of the ESPN coverage to comment on it. He knows that the network is milking the issue for all that it is worth because that's what ESPN does.

Please, CSTV or someone, grow enough so that people who want to watch sports coverage for coverage on the games have an alternate station to turn to.

In closing, and in order to relate this article to Irish football, when asked to comment on spygate, Weis declined to comment, justifying his decision by explaining that "the issue does not involve Notre Dame," which in my opinion, is the way ESPN should approach the issue. Tell us if the Pats get punished, let us know if they are under federal investigation, but don't spend time on it to the point that it cuts into real sports coverage.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

dont you dare talk about trey wingo like that, the man has suffered enough due to his surname

i did think that on the day the media saw the walsh tapes, they had mark schlerexyzghth and chris carter in the studio talking about how this angle of film would greatly enhance their play in the second half of a game, but then the league comes out to say that the pats never used the tapes in game and will take no further action

as a player who has been illegally taped in a sporting event which ruined a 35-0 season (8th grade basketball) it is garbage to think that putting personel with cameras around the stadium and on opposing coaches is a "misinterpretation"

Pops said...

My junior football season, an up an coming conference rival was making waves with their new no huddle offense; their opponents' defenses struggled to get set before the offense snapped the ball. So what did my team do? We sent two of our coaches to their games the week before they played us and when we played, we buried them because we new what they were going to run before they ran it.
In retrospect, that mid-season game turned out to be quite meaningless as the team referenced eventually had to forfeit 9 of their games when it was found that they were playing a 22 year old, but the point is that if you use hand signals, it is probably wise to change them up every once and awhile. Even without cameras, it is quite possible to learn another team's signs.
High school memories aside, I appreciate your basketball story, JY, because it provides another opinion from a fan who cares about the subject. In fact, when Mike Golic spent a few minutes on his talk show discussing how his team in the NFL always changed their signals before every game, I enjoyed it because it provided some fresh insight.
My beef is with the extended coverage of the spygate story because it takes time away from other headlines more directly related to the sports games. I personally would much rather have sportscenter recap lacrosse tournament action or show a little more of the baseball highlights than eat up time by having analysts break down a subject that doesn't need that much analysis. I still feel that these types of opinions are best left for message boards, talk shows, and sports bars.