Rock Chalk Rebuild, Part 2: A Pro's Guide to Kansas Athletics' New Video-Production InfrastructureRoss, Evertz, Daktronics backbone unifies next-gen control rooms, truck, stadium displaysBy Brandon Costa, Director of Digital Wednesday, November 19, 2025 - 1:13 pm
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When the University of Kansas reopened David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium this summer, it grabbed the spotlight as one of the newest power-conference college football venues in the country. Behind that on-field spectacle, however, sits one of the most ambitious collegiate broadcast-technology integrations in recent memory: a multi-phase rebuild of every control room and production system operated by Kansas Athletics' video-production arm, Rock Chalk Video.
The rebuild of David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium is the centerpiece of the University of Kansas's Gateway District, massive, multi-year development project. (Photos: Kansas Athletics)
Since 2023, Kansas Athletics - led by Rock Chalk Video and longtime integration partner Alpha - rebuilt the entirety of its video-production ecosystem. The work spanned Allen Fieldhouse, the university's 53-ft. production truck, and the new football control room.
For Mike Lickert, associate athletic director, Rock Chalk Video, the reality of the upgrade began with an honest audit of aging systems. Whether good or bad, we had multiple aging control rooms. Some of the glass we were using was 25 years old, he says. We updated two control rooms in Allen Fieldhouse: one that runs the videoboard for men's and women's basketball; the other, right next to it, is for ESPN+. We are able to do things in our shows now that we weren't able to do before.
MORE: Rock Chalk Rebuild, Part 1: Kansas Athletics Brings New Production Power to Rebuilt David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium
The Allen Fieldhouse refresh followed the truck retrofit and preceded the football-stadium reconstruction, establishing a design philosophy that now defines Rock Chalk Video: modern, consistent, and scalable workflows that behave the same way no matter which venue a show originates from.
A Three-Phase Build With AlphaFor Alpha, the Kansas project is another chapter in a long partnership. The integrator has delivered multiple generations of KU control rooms. This project required a more segmented engineering approach given the physical separation of the major venues. Allen Fieldhouse sits in the heart of campus; the football stadium does not. That distance shaped the production strategy from the ground up.
It's difficult to get fiber and other infrastructure between the two locations, notes Jeff Volk, VP, Sports & Entertainment Group, Alpha. So football has to have its own self-contained solution over at the football stadium.
David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium welcomed a sellout crowd to the season opener in August.
Kansas enlisted engineering consultant WJHW to produce the technical specification for the stadium renovation, but, as with many publicly funded capital projects, schedules tightened fast.
After all of that came together, the timeline had to move very, very quickly, Volk says. I don't think we came under a contract until, I want to say March or April, which is very, very late to get that all up and running and ready to go in July. It came down to the wire, but it sure got done.
Experienced Engineering Muscle on CampusAlthough Alpha led design and integration, Lickert stresses that the execution relied heavily on campus-side engineering led by KU Athletics Director, Broadcast Engineering, Andy Leslie. Andy did monumental amounts of work throughout the four control rooms to get it done, says Lickert.
Volk echoes that sentiment, noting that long-tenured in-house engineers are critical when construction timelines compress. Having people that have been working either as a contractor to athletics or directly for athletics for long periods know where all the bodies are buried around campus and how to get things done. They fully understand what we're trying to get done on these very short timelines.
New control-room facilities help drive videoboard production at venues across the Lawrence campus.
Kansas also benefited from the project's sequencing. Long before the new football room went live, the team had a full year of experience with the refreshed Allen Fieldhouse rooms and the upgraded truck.
Everyone essentially had a year of using all the same equipment at Allen Fieldhouse and in their production trailer, Volk says. The production staff and the engineering staff are intimately familiar with all the gear. The only things you have to worry about are how the room is laid out differently, how the productions flow a little bit differently.
Building Consistency Across Multiple Production FacilitiesAt the center of KU's new infrastructure is a unified Ross Video backbone. Each major control environment - football, the dual rooms in Allen Fieldhouse, the mobile unit - runs on a Ross Carbonite Ultra 60 engine with a TouchDrive 3M/E panel. Each facility also has its own Ross Ultrix FR12 frame, loaded with HDX I/O, UltriMix audio, and tally integration. UltriCore licensing and RCP-QE36 control panels unify the operator experience regardless of location.
Volk says the goal was straightforward: They have common systems that [users] get familiar with across the board.
Kansas relies heavily on Ultrix's integrated multiview architecture. Sixteen UltriScape licenses power custom layouts tailored to each control room's needs and workflow.
A new centerhung videoboard at Allen Fieldhouse debuted a year ago as part of the multi-year project.
Replay consistency was another priority. Across football, basketball, and the truck, Kansas standardized on Evertz DreamCatcher, building an HDR-capable 108










