IBC
With more than 300 Warner Bros. Discovery staff, including production staff, experts and reporters on-site across the UEFA Champions League Final to Roland Garros and Le Mans and more, the WBD were tasked with delivering over 70 hours of live content.
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Over that weekend, a staggering 370 live feed and
production control rooms (PCR) recordings were booked while WBD had 70
concurrent events planned for its digital platforms. PCRs were open across
Europe including London, Paris, Oslo, Stockholm, Copenhagen, the Netherlands,
Warsaw, Madrid, Milan and Munich.
For tennis fans all attention was on the men’s and
women’s finals from Stade Roland Garros in Paris. WBD took the host feed from
Host Broadcast Services (HBS) in Paris in partnership with the Fédération
Française de Tennis and was working with Gravity Media on site as facilities
partner.
France TV and Amazon shared domestic rights while
WBD have the rights for various territories including the UK, Germany, Ireland
and Italy. EMG was among the facilities company providing broadcast services to
HBS.
The Cube, WBD’s centrepiece virtual studio, has
undergone significant enhancements following the conclusion of the Australian
Open. This includes upgrades to the disguise servers resulting in a substantial
boost in computational power. Additionally, Roland Garros marked the
introduction to tennis majors of the broadcaster’s 3D virtual studio, which was
launched during the Giro D’Italia.
“Considering the numerous European markets using
green studios, we have designed an environment featuring multiple studio
locations and stand-up positions, catering to the requirements of all our
markets,” explained Alex Dinnin, Director of Graphics and Innovation. “The remarkable advantage of this setup is that any
developments implemented within The Cube can seamlessly be transferred to our
other markets.”
The new 3D studio means there are a lot of new
locations for the presenters and viewers to explore. Dinnin said: “There’s
always a new location you find that was never originally thought of as a
presentation area, all contained within WBD’s purpose-built virtual tennis
environment. Working with Nazia Zaman [WBD’s Unreal expert] the area is fully
operational with screens and area dividers to keep the coverage fresh and
engaging, rather than being confined to one presentation location.”
A dedicated HawkEye analysist on-site at
Roland-Garros in Paris worked with producer Arnold Montgault in the Cube studio
at Stockley Park. Explained Dinnin, “Between them, they identify the
opportunities and key moments to harness HawkEye analysis to help tell the
story of what’s happening on court for the viewer.
“The data was then sent from Paris to London and
can be integrated into our live broadcast. This plays out through our augmented
reality technology, which included two full size tennis court within the Cube
studio, and the data can appear on-screen through live graphics added by our
Cube operator.”
Behind the Scenes: French Open 2023
Tennis – Scaling production
WBD is employing a mix of on-site and remote
production and operates four of its own PCRs in London and Paris to offer full
coverage of the show courts Philippe-Chatrier, Suzanne Lenglen, plus the
Roland-Garros Extra multi-court feed.
In total, WBD had access to all 16 host broadcast
feeds plus two press conference room feeds meaning every match can be viewed
live or on-demand on discovery+ and the Eurosport App or Eurosport.com, plus
wall-to-wall linear coverage on Eurosport’s linear channels and WBD’s
free-to-air channels in certain markets.
In addition, WBD had producers based on-site, led
by Aurelia Mounier, at Roland-Garros as well as RF cameras that go behind the scenes
of the grounds to bring viewers every angle from the tournament.
WBD produced live coverage of Roland-Garros in 20
languages for 50 markets across Europe (excluding France). It received the host
feed in Paris and overlaid commentary remotely. Additionally, linear and
digital highlights plus social clips were produced in English, German, Italian,
Spanish, Dutch, Polish, Romanian and with ambient sound.
Local studio shows provided daily introductions and
post-match analysis in the UK (the Cube analysis show anchored by Tim Henman
and Barbara Schett), France (producing WBD’s on-site ‘In the Alleys’ intro show
hosted by Alize Lim, Laura Robson, John McEnroe, Chris Evert, Alex Corretja and
Mats Wilander), Germany (Matchball Becker with Boris Becker), and Spain
(Pasando Bolas).
Eurosport offered 4K coverage in Austria, Germany,
Ireland, Poland, Portugal, Spain, the UK, Romania, Slovenia, Latvia, Czech
Republic, Hungary, Bulgaria, Slovakia, Macedonia and Serbia.
Unlike for coverage of the UCI Track Champions League last December WBD didn’t have any metaverse activations
during Roland-Garros.
The next stop for WBD’s tennis Slam coverage is
Wimbledon in just a few weeks’ time.
Also over the weekend, The UEFA
Champions League reached its climax on Saturday 10th June with the final
between Manchester City and Inter Milan broadcast live on BT Sport from the
Atatürk Olympic Stadium in Istanbul for UK viewers.
Coverage of the iconic 24h of Le Mans featured
increased RF coverage from 15-onboard cameras and analysis from nine-time race
winner Tom Kristensen.
The picturesque high valley alpine resort of
Lenzerheide provided the backdrop for the next round of the UCI Mountain Bike
World Cup with fans of downhill racing set to be able to watch their heroes on
two-wheels for the first time this season. Live coverage will be delivered by
over 20 cameras, accompanied by First Person View drones.
Fans of two-wheeled motorcycling were able to watch
the latest speedway event from Teterow in Germany with 16 pit cameras (eight
streamed at one time); four on-board cameras including two bike cameras, one
start marshal camera and one race director camera, in addition to RF and ISO
cameras. Each Speedway GP winner in Teterow was also be equipped with a live
camera to provide unique first-person views of the podium ceremony following
each race.
Scott Young, SVP, Content and Production, Warner
Bros. Discovery, said in a release, “The complexity of simultaneously
broadcasting multiple events across numerous channels and platforms in 20
languages to millions of fans in 50 markets across Europe alone is
unprecedented and only Warner Bros. Discovery has the capacity to make this happen
at this scale.”
From 18th July, TNT Sports becomes the new name for
BT Sport. TNT Sports will present the same exclusive live sport including the
Premier League, UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, Premiership Rugby,
MotoGP, UFC, Boxing and WWE.
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