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View Full Version : 12 NCAA Basketball Games To Be Broadcast In HDTV And 5.1 Surround Sound


VacuumTubes
02-26-2003, 11:48 PM
Thought you all might want to check this out. The good ole' Sears-CBS HDTV partnership at it again. Good for us.

From Article: http://www.cbs.com/info/hdtv/hdtv_ncaa_basketball.shtml

SEARS AND CBS TEAM UP TO BROADCAST NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL FINAL FOUR AND CHAMPIONSHIP GAMES IN HDTV

12 NCAA Basketball Games To Be Broadcast In HDTV And 5.1 Surround Sound

NEW YORK, February xx, 2003 -- Sears, Roebuck and Co. (NYSE: S), and CBS Television announced today an agreement in which Sears will sponsor High Definition Television coverage of the 2003 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship, including the Final Four and Championship games.

Coverage will include 12 High Definition games starting with first-round action from Birmingham, Ala., on Friday, March 21 (four games) and Sunday, March 23 (two games), as well as South Region action in San Antonio, Friday, March 28 (two games) and Sunday, March 30 (one game). The first eight games will be regionalized broadcasts, while the South Region final in San Antonio, the two national semi-final games and the National Championship Game will be national broadcasts.

The telecasts, which will be presented live by CBS Sports, will be "unified" productions produced in HDTV's highest definition format, 1080i, and downconverted for the CBS Television Network's analog broadcast coverage. This production technique also produces a better quality analog picture. Whether watching in widescreen HD or traditional 4x3 analog, viewers will see the same camera angles, replays and graphics and will hear the same play by play.

For the first time, the NCAA Basketball Tournament will be broadcast in 5.1 channels of CD quality surround sound. This addition of surround sound audio to the broadcast, coupled with the clarity of 1080 lines of picture resolution, will bring the stadium experience to the viewer's home. CBS will also be broadcasting the Grammy Awards in HDTV and 5.1 surround sound on February 23, 2003.

"The combination of high-definition and CD quality surround sound provides an extraordinary experience for NCAA Basketball Tournament viewers watching the games on CBS," said Sean McManus, President, CBS Sports. "The coverage will really bring the game home for millions of college basketball fans, and we are very pleased to be partnering with Sears in making this experience a reality. This is the fourth consecutive year we have broadcast the Final Four in HDTV, re-affirming CBS's leadership in presenting big-ticket marquee events in high definition."

"While Sears is a leading retailer in the sales of HDTV, we are aware there is a good deal of confusion among consumers about HDTV," said Ray Brown, Vice President/General Merchandise Manager, Electronics for Sears. "With this effort with CBS, Sears is taking a leadership role to help educate millions of consumers about the benefits HDTV offers.")

CBS Sports' coverage of the 2003 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Final Four and Championship games will be broadcast live Saturday, April 5 (6:00-11:00 PM, ET) and Monday, April 7 (9:00-11:30 PM, ET) from New Orleans.

billw
03-10-2003, 09:01 AM
can someone explain what regionalized broadcasts means in reference to HD.

Does this mean you have to be in the correct region to receive HD?

sillygoose
03-10-2003, 12:18 PM
Yeah I think that's what it means. In the early rounds with multiple games occuring at the same time which one you see will depend on where you are. Maybe if it is a toss up (none of the teams are local and they are pretty evenly matched) they will lean toward the one in HD I don't know.

billw
03-10-2003, 01:52 PM
sillygoose,
Where are you in MD?

sillygoose
03-11-2003, 06:03 AM
montgomery county

billw
03-11-2003, 10:07 AM
Is montgomery county receiving CBS in HD with comcast?

sillygoose
03-12-2003, 06:40 AM
Yeah ever since I signed up for HD at the end of January I've been getting CBS in HD. Sorry I know you're still waiting for it in Baltimore. I've been thinking lately about trying to find a cheap OTA tuner though so I could get the Baltimore stations.

billw
03-12-2003, 08:03 AM
Comcast sucks!

57U
03-21-2003, 09:49 PM
Surfed past tonight.

HD & DD5.1, WOW.

What excellent pictures. Could barely pull myself away....:)

Nice work CBS

teach
03-24-2003, 05:42 PM
I hope somebody from CBS reads this:

THANK YOU!

Great job, keep broadcasting those games in HD

bighec
03-25-2003, 12:31 AM
Yeah, I watched yesterday's Texas vs Purdue game in my home in Houston and it was awesome. Everything is so clear, I can't wait until the Final Four and the championship game.

spaceman_spiff
03-25-2003, 08:28 AM
Comcast Sucks BIG TIME.
And I also dislike the system of independant county operations of comcast. Customer service suffers.

rrinn
03-28-2003, 09:25 PM
Just finished watching the 'Horns beat UConn in the Regional Semis on KEYE in full 1080i, as provided from CBS through Time Warner Cable.

Absolutely awesome!

...and the video was fantastic, too!

Many thanks to Time Warner and KEYE, and looking forward to the region finals Sunday.

I understand CBS will carry all of the Final Four games in HD.

-Reed

wmshd
03-30-2003, 05:11 PM
Watching Michg. St. vs. Texas in HD. You need to experience this!!! AWESOME:eek:

billw
04-01-2003, 10:33 AM
Nothing like going through the trouble to get an OTA receiver to watch MD play sub par against Michigan ST.

I guess they couldnt pull it out this time.

Texas is tough anyway so it may not have mattered.

Anyway,
Great job CBS! How about negotiating with Comcast so we can actually see the games!

Sorry I am just ranting.

hammerman
04-03-2003, 09:10 PM
Since I live in Houston and Texas happened to play in every venue with HDTV covereage, I have seen games in HD throughout the tourney. The first game had lots of glitches, the score ticker was formatted for 480i and blown up, resulting in a very blurry, unreadable ticker. The game clock also gave them trouble. At first it was in graphics, but jumped around, then it was an empty hole, then they filled the hole with the actual scoreboard time, which took a few times to line up properly.

One funny thing I saw on Saturday, was durring halftime of one of the games, when you would usually expect to be watching highlights, instead you saw a wide angle shot of the court with whatever was going on at the moment and heard what sounded like the commentators eating. They kept saying "Thanks...", "Thank you...", so I think they were being served food by some lacky. It stayed this way until it finally went to commercial.

Another interesting thing was when the tournament first started, and CBS was showing war coverage and the games were moved to ESPN. The HD version of my CBS station was still showing basketball in HD, while the analog version was showing war coverage!

FYI - I pick up my HD using a simple power amplified rabbit ear antenna. I get CBS, ABC, NBC, Fox, WB, UPN, and a spannish channel all perfectly. I even live about 30 miles away from downtown. The only one I can't get is PBS. I get channels that the local cable HD package doesn't carry yet. The NBC channel uses a subchannel to show doppler radar 24/7. The only time I have problems is if someone visits me with a Cingular phone. When its about to ring, it interferes with my HD signal and freezes my picture until they get off the phone. It also pixilates for a moment if they get a text message

57U
04-03-2003, 10:58 PM
Originally posted by hammerman The only time I have problems is if someone visits me with a Cingular phone. When its about to ring, it interferes with my HD signal and freezes my picture until they get off the phone. It also pixilates for a moment if they get a text message hmm, interesting a digital phone interfering with a digital TV. Can you read the text message on the TV?:p

Shows you how sensitive the receiver is if it can pick up the weak signal of a cell phone.

           


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