BALTIMORE With the 2018 Major League Baseball (MLB) season about to get underway, it's time for the fans to see what video upgrades are being offered for their viewing pleasure. And they'll find out after a close play at the plate, a devastating curveball or the look in a player's eyes from many angles.That advancement can be summed up in two words: Super slo-mo (SSM).
SSM is being brought to the forefront of broadcasts by MLB's three main mobile unit providers: Mobile TV Group (MTvG), Game Creek Video and NEP U.S. Mobile Units. That also means more high-speed cameras will capture the action at very high frame rates, while the various networks, regional sportsnets (RSNs) and viewers wait for safe or out calls from the MLB Network nerve center in Secaucus, N.J., the home of MLB Network, or get deeper, more concise reaction shots that underscore the passion for the national pastime.
Baseball is also important in a mobile industry where trucks are getting more expensive and providers need that steady home schedule of 81 games per year to create revenue; however, HD costs to the RSNs are leveling off, and broadcasters are contemplating hiring less expensive, non-union crews.
4K UNDERWAY
The pie in the MLB market is sliced into but three large slices, with the largest by far belonging to MTvG. The company operates about 35 units for Fox Sports and ROOT Sports at 18 MLB ballparks This includes one 4K truck, the 39 Flex, that constantly goes coast-to-coast, said Nick Garvin, COO for Englewood, Colo.-based MTvG, plus several 1080p trucks. It is currently building the 43 Flex, which will be used by ROOT Sports for Colorado Rockies home and selected away broadcasts.
[No. 43] is a 1080p-capable truck and will have four super slo-mos, Garvin said. That's the big push this year. We have four super slo-mo cameras on four trucks and two super slo-mos on two of the others. MTvG has other trucks that are 4K ready, but are not licensed as such, since the only broadcasters doing 4K baseball are Fox Sports and MLB Network, Garvin said.
MTvG works with (by far) the most RSNs of the truck companies, which encompasses the lions share of the broadcasts under the Fox umbrella. The company has worked closely with Fox Sports on truck upgrades for the 2018 MLB season.
The SSM push is happening because the Texas Rangers and the Tampa Bay Rays (units 38 Flex and 40 HDX, respectively) were the only teams that used four super slo-mo cameras last year, which were in demand by the RSNs due to an increasingly sophisticated viewership.
Two weren't enough, because the cameras are aimed at different things; so this year, we have a total of seven trucks with four SSMs, said Garvin. Cameras with the record and playback system make the whole chain, which runs at six times normal speed, which also moved MTvG to buy four new 12-channel EVSs and Grass Valley Dynos for every mobile unit. We buy about 10 every year, as well as 30-40 Sony 4300 and GVG 86 [cameras], as we're on a constant build cycle at headquarters. We build four main units a year.
Garvin also noted that the networks are working with MLB to offer viewers a more comprehensive experience. This season, we'll see the regular broadcast with bigger lenses, plus StatCast, PitchCast, etc. Even for RSNs, viewers expect the optimum experience, any place, any time.
BIG DEAL' UPGRADES
Hudson, N.H.-based Game Creek Video is one of two truck providers that contracts with the regional carriers of six MLB teams: the Boston Red Sox, New York's Yankees and Mets, Baltimore Orioles, Washington Nationals and Houston Astros.
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Garrett Sullivan, senior vice president of production and finance, said the deals with each RSN are a little different and that Game Creek assigns No. 94 in Boston for NESN; Yogi in New York for Yes Network, and Webby for SNY; Chesapeake in Baltimore and Washington for MASN; and Apollo for Fox Sports Houston.
Game Creek works with Fox Sports, as well as MLB Network's Showcase Game of the Week, which will air 26 games in 4K HDR, said Sullivan, adding that Fox will also carry a handful of 4K games.
As for what's inside the trucks, the newest, latest and greatest 4K HDR is on the Riverhawk for MLB Showcase, he said, and we've joined with AT&T/DirectTV to make it HDR capable. The only way that's delivered to the home is via DirecTV.
This year's upgrades to the Riverhawk, according to Sullivan, include 10 Sony HDC 4300s, seven Sony HDR BVME 171E monitors, Tektronix HDR scopes, HDR cross-conversion gear from Evertz, five 12-channel EVS XT 4Ks and the Grass Valley Kayenne K-frame with the crowning jewel, the 4K SSM Sony 4800.
All told, the additions will lead to a more refined broadcast. MLB is mandating that regional trucks have at least two SSM cameras, and some clients require four, Sullivan said. It's all part of telling the story of breaking bats, seams of the ball, curves breaking, a runner's cleat touching the base and the great plays.
EASIER TO RECORD
The setup with NEP, of Pittsburgh, is similar to that of Game Creek. NEP contracts with the regional carriers of six teams, including the Seattle Mariners, San Francisco Giants, Oakland A's, Los Angeles Dodgers, and Chicago's Cubs and White Sox, as well as ESPN for its Sunday, Monday and Wednesday game broadcasts.
NEP U.S. Mobile Units President Glen Levine said the company supplies 19 mobile units for baseball, with a variety of the trucks recently accentuated with various technological advances. The units mainly contain Sony and Grass Valley cameras, Calrec audio consoles, EVS servers, Grass Valley Kayenne switchers and various routers.
NEP's EN2 rolls in for the ESPN Sunday night games and is streamlined with a plug-and-










