Hornet Mania wrote:I mentioned this in another thread, but worth pointing out again.
ESPN spent three times as much airtime interviewing Kyle Filipowski (who wasn't even drafted that night) about his outfit than they did discussing the 6th overall selection in the draft. A foreign player who fans needed more info about, and a guy who fit the 'big night for France' theme they were pushing at that point.
That network utterly failed on both nights of the draft, though the second round was more pathetic. If Adam Silver can look at this and think it's fine he is an idiot. The league office needs to privately dress down ESPN for this crap. Compare it to the much better job the same network does for the NFL. The association split their draft over two nights to try to recreate some of the NFL's success and ESPN vomited out that miserable programming in response. At minimum the NBA needs solid assurances this **** show won't happen again if they insist on making it a two night event.
Not saying they couldn't up the level some but think you're barking up the wrong tree. You like almost all of us on these boards know more about the actual players and personalities in the NBA than 95% of other sports fans, if not more. ESPN isn't going for that demographic of fans, they're going for the dead middle of people who don't pay attention that much but like to have someone to root for and something to argue about.
Mainstream sports media is Stephen A Smith and Kendrick Perkins and Skip Bayless, that's the level of actual basketball info the average sports consumer wants. I.e. negative info, they want the facts of any game to be distorted so it can be an entertaining argument to fill up 3-4 minutes at a time. The average fan who's sitting around at his uncle's place or at his frat house or whatever does think it's a lot more entertaining to argue about Filipowski's suit than to watch a few minutes of Sarr's or Saluan's tape and have some subtle take on why they might and might not succeed. I grew up with all these fans and I'm still around them a lot.
There are lots of other options and ESPN is fine with letting those peel off some of the higher-info fans. That's what we're supposed to be doing.