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Archives for June 2018

NOTABLE QUOTES: KPMG WOMEN’S PGA CHAMPIONSHIP, SATURDAY’S ROUND 3

June 30, 2018 By admin

NBC Sports Group Notable Quotes

KPMG Women’s PGA Championship

Third Round

Saturday, June 30, 2018

Kemper Lakes Golf Club

Kildeer, Illinois

 

**To avoid potential inclement weather on Sunday, tee times are being moved up for the final round of the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship. Final round coverage will be live streamed on Golf Channel and NBC Sports mobile apps, as well as on GolfChannel.com and NBCSports.com, from 12:45-3:45 p.m. ET.

**Live tournament coverage of Sunday’s final round will begin on NBC at 3 p.m. ET as scheduled through the tournament’s conclusion. Recap coverage of the final round will air on NBC through 6 p.m. ET.

 

KPMG Women’s PGA Championship Leaderboard

So Yeon Ryu              -11

Brooke Henderson      -8

Sung Hyun Park          -7

Angel Yin                   -6

Bronte Law                 -5

 

VIDEO: Rich Lerner, Arron Oberholser and Karen Stupples Recap Saturday’s 3rd Round  

 

On So Yeon Ryu, leader at 11-under par (5-under 67 on Saturday)

Mark Rolfing – “She has been brilliant all day. Very steady.”

Gary Koch – “She has been so consistent in her routine today, keeping the pace of her putting stroke the same every time.”

Paige Mackenzie – “She has had a lot of consistency, especially with her putter coming down the stretch.”

 

On Brooke Henderson, 2nd at 8-under par (2-under 70 on Saturday)

Mackenzie – “She has got an incredible attitude and is an incredible talent. I think it if weren’t for Lydia Ko over the last several years, Brooke Henderson would be the all-star that we are talking about. From what she has been able to accomplish at such a young age, she is massively underrated mostly because all of the spotlight, when you talk about youth, goes to Lydia Ko.”

Mackenzie – “She doesn’t typically labor over shots. It almost seems like today her putting routine is quite a bit longer than the rest of the routine throughout her bag.”

Koch – “She has gotten out of her normal routine, at least it appears to us, especially when it comes to her putting today.”

Mackenzie – “So many great putts over the last several days, just seems like this back nine, she went very cold, very quickly.”

 

On Sung Hyun Park, 3rd at 7-under par (1-under 71 on Saturday)

Jerry Foltz – “One of her nicknames, in addition to being known as Tiger, translated in English means ‘Shut up and attack.’”

Foltz – She has been hitting almost every tee shot exactly where she has aimed all week long.”

 

On Angel Yin, 4th at 6-under par (4-under 68 on Saturday)

Kay Cockerill – “With as much power that she has, she can do a lot of things that a lot of other women can’t. She is learning there is a time to be aggressive and a time to be conservative.”

 

LPGA Commissioner Mike Whan and PGA of America CEO Pete Bevacqua joined NBC’s Dan Hicks in the Broadcast Booth

Mike Whan – “We have played 17 events so far this year and have had 16 different winners. Last year it took us 15 events before we had a repeat winner. You’ve got an Olympic leaderboard here.”

Pete Bevacqua – “I think this is a great partnership we have with Mike and the LPGA, obviously with KPMG, as well as NBC and the Golf Channel bringing all of the attention to this event, taking it to some of the greatest major championship venues in the country, venues that have hosted the best men’s events. That was critical to the planning and strategy that we put into this championship. We want to take the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship to the very best golf courses in this country.”

 

Golf Central Notable Quotes

On Saturday at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship

Karen Stupples — “What a remarkable day. Arron [Oberholser] and I sat here this morning and really wondered how in the world players were going to put a decent score together out there. We saw a driving display from Brooke Henderson and an overall scoring display from So Yeon Ryu. All in all, quite an exciting day of golf, which is exactly what you expect on Saturday at a major.”

Arron Oberholser – “This is a major championship golf course with a couple of ladies at the top of the leaderboard with major championship pedigrees.”

 

On So Yeon Ryu

Oberholser – “The putting stroke just looks magnificent right now.”

Stupples – “When you look at the big picture of Korean golfers, she has a chance to make her mark on Korean golf and golf in the history books.”

Oberholser – “She started creating momentum at number 11, which was the biggest putt of the day for her. That is where the script flipped for these two ladies [Ryu and Henderson]. So Yeon Ryu was able to go ahead and take the momentum all the way to the house.”

Oberholser – “I didn’t think anybody could create separation on this golf course today, and she has done that with her putter.”

Stupples – “She is drawing confidence for her long game with how she is performing on the greens. That confidence is running through every aspect of her game right now. She is walking down the fairway with her head held high, and she is owning this golf course at the moment.”

 

-NBC Sports Group-

Filed Under: NBC, Uncategorized

30 MILLION VIEWERS HAVE TUNED INTO TELEMUNDO DEPORTES’ 2018 FIFA WORLD CUP RUSSIA™ COVERAGE THROUGH GROUP STAGE

June 30, 2018 By admin

For First Time, Telemundo Ranks #1 among All-Spanish Language TV Networks in Total Day Viewership for 13 Consecutive Days among Adults 18-49

Telemundo Has Delivered Top 2 Most-Watched World Cup Matches on U.S. TV in 2018, Matches Also Rank as Top 2 Sports Broadcasts in Telemundo Deportes History

Telemundo Deportes’ Digital World Cup Presentation Has Accounted for the 4 Most Livestreamed Events in Spanish-Language History & Has Streamed More than 1.6 BILLION Minutes

Telemundo Sets Daytime TV Viewership Records on 11 of 14 Tournament Match Days

Unprecedented Exposure and Promotion Yields Double & Triple Digit Increases for Additional Telemundo Dayparts and Soccer-Related Shoulder Programming

MOSCOW – June 29, 2018 – With the Group Stage concluding on Thursday, Telemundo Deportes’ exclusive Spanish-language presentation of 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia™ has delivered critically-acclaimed broadcasts, daily record-setting viewership metrics, and unprecedented exposure and promotion for programming across all of the network’s dayparts.

Through 48 matches over the 15 days of Group Stage competition, Telemundo Deportes’ World Cup presentation has reached 29.7 million TV viewers and generated 1.64 billion minutes, according to data from Nielsen fast cume and live+same day data, and digital metrics from Adobe Analytics.

Telmundo Deportes’ linear and digital coverage of the World Cup has yielded a Total Audience Delivery average of 2.3 million viewers per match across Telemundo, Universo, NBCSN, TelemundoDeportes.com, the Telemundo Deportes En Vivo app, and the NBC Sports app. Live streaming of the World Cup on TelemundoDeportes.com and the Telemundo Deportes En Vivo and NBC Sports apps is powered by NBC Sports Group’s Playmaker Media.

Among Telemundo’s multitude of milestones and records established during the Group Stage of the 2018 World Cup:

 

TELEVISION

  • For the first time in its history, Telemundo ranked as the #1 Spanish-language network in Total Day viewership for 13 consecutive days among Adults 18-49 
  • Telemundo ranks as the #1 Spanish-language broadcast network in Total Day for the full tournament through Wednesday, June 27, outperforming its closest competition by 49% among total viewers (1.25M vs. 838K) and 78% among Adults 18-49 (617K vs. 346K), according to Nielsen.  
  • Since the start of the tournament on June 14, Telemundo has dominated Spanish-language broadcast television, delivering the top 20 telecasts on Spanish-language broadcast television in Total Day among Adults 18-49, and with the top 10 telecasts among total viewers.  
  • Telemundo posted seven consecutive days of record-breaking daytime viewership (Sunday 6/17-Saturday 6/23) & set daytime viewership records on 11 of the 14 Group Stage match days among total viewers.
  • Telemundo posted its two most-watched weekends in Total Day in history (June 16-17 and June 23-24) and on each weekend doubled the combined average viewership for all other Spanish-language U.S. broadcast networks among total viewers and Adults 18-49.  
  • Telemundo’s June 17 Mexico-Germany and June 23 Mexico-South Korea games are the two most-watched World Cup matches on any network this year and rank as two of the nine most-watched Spanish-language matches in World Cup history (412 matches, including World Cup finals, since 1994). The matches also rank as the two most-watched sports broadcasts in the network’s history. 
  • Telemundo continues to dominate in major Hispanic markets. Through 40 game windows, World Cup matches on Telemundo have ranked #1 among Adults 18-49 in Spanish-language 92% of the time in the Top 14 Hispanic markets with Local People Meters (513 of 560 windows in those markets).

 

DIGITAL

  • Telemundo Deportes’ Digital has delivered the four most-watched livestream single-day events in Spanish-language history during the 2018 World Cup. The June 27 Mexico-Sweden match holds the all-time Spanish-language record with 6.9 million livestreams.
  • The Mexico-Sweden Group Stage finale peaked at 1.02 million concurrent livestreams – the most for any event in NBC Sports Digital history, excluding Super Bowls, and the only event other than the Super Bowl to hit the 1 million mark.
  • Telemundo Deportes has generated 1.64 MILLION total minutes – pacing to easily become the most-consumed multi-day event in Spanish-language history.
  • For the full World Cup, Telemundo Deportes digital coverage of the tournament has reached 10.7 million total unique users, generating a record 105.3 million livestreams.
  • For the tournament to date, Telemundo Deportes has added more than 140,000 social fans. In the last full week of the tournament, fans have generated over 4,000 comments and nearly 7,000 shares per day on Facebook.
  • Telemundo was the #1 most socially engaged network across all broadcast and cable this past Wednesday June 28, and on Thursday, June 29, Copa Mundial de la FIFA 2018 on Telemundo was the #1 most socially engaged sports program.

 

WORLD CUP SHOULDER PROGRAMMING & ADDITIONAL DAYPARTS

  •  Since the start of the World Cup, Telemundo has increased its lead in weekday prime time (8-11pm ET) as the most-watched network growing by +15% among Adults 18-49 (666K to 765K).
  •  Telemundo’s regular daily news and entertainment programming have delivered ratings significantly above their respective prior four-week daypart averages among Adults 18-49 throughout the tournament:
    • Daily morning show Un Nuevo Dia is up +82%
    • Daily news magazine Al Rojo Vivo is up +65%
    • Daily nightly news Noticiero Telemundo is up +28%
    • Daily sports entertainment late night show Titulares y Mas is up +20%
    •  Telemundo’s World Cup shoulder programming is delivering significantly above respective prior four-week daypart averages:
      • Un Nuevo Dia Copa Mundial I, with a morning start time: +449% (527K vs. 97K)
      • Un Nuevo Dia Copa Mundial II, with an afternoon start time:  +462% (602K vs. 107K)
      • Hoy Copa Mundial I, with an early morning start time: +202% (151K vs. 50K)
      • Hoy Copa Mundial II, with an afternoon start time: +352% (624K vs. 138K)

Source: TV data based on Nielsen. Total Day: L+SD, 6/14/18-6/27/18, M-Su 6a-2a strict daypart. Prime: Most Current (Live+7 through 6/10/18 & Live+SD from 6/4-6/27/18), 6/14-6/27/18 vs. 5/14/18-6/10/18, M-F 8-11pm strict daypart. Program data: L+SD, 6/14/18-6/27/18 vs. 5/14/18-6/10/18, comparisons for Al Rojo Vivo (M-F), Noticias Telemundo (M-F) & Titulares y Mas (M-Su) based on prior 4-wk program average. Un Nuevo Dia and all World Cup shoulder program comparisons based on prior 4-wk time periods (live feed pattern). Fast national cume based on 6 minute qualifier, 6/14/18-6/28/18. TAD is based on match window duration.Source: Nielsen Live+SD Ratings – Telemundo Game Program averages vs competition time period; ranks based on impressions. SLTV Includes TEL, UNI, UMA, AZA, ETV

Source: Nielsen Social Content Ratings, linear program-level metrics, Talkwalker Social Analytics; Adobe Analytics

###

Filed Under: NBC, Uncategorized

2018 NCAA Division I Baseball Championship Leads the Way in Viewership with Multi-Year Highs in Every Round

June 29, 2018 By admin

The 2018 NCAA Division I Baseball Championship is the most-watched baseball postseason since 2012, boasting multi-year viewership highs throughout the Road to Omaha..

The post 2018 NCAA Division I Baseball Championship Leads the Way in Viewership with Multi-Year Highs in Every Round appeared first on ESPN MediaZone U.S..

Filed Under: College Baseball, ESPN

NOTABLE QUOTES: KPMG WOMEN’S PGA CHAMPIONSHIP, FRIDAY, ROUND 2

June 29, 2018 By admin

Golf Channel Notable Quotes

KPMG Women’s PGA Championship

Second Round (11 a.m.-3 p.m. ET)

Friday, June 29, 2018

Kemper Lakes Golf Club

Kildeer, Illinois

 

**Golf Channel will recap all of Friday’s second-round action from the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship tonight on Golf Central tonight at 7 p.m. ET, produced and broadcast on-site at Kemper Lakes Golf Club.**

**3rd round coverage of the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship will air Saturday on NBC from 3-6 p.m. ET.**

VIDEO: Dan Hicks, Gary Koch and Paige Mackenzie Recap Early Leaders From Round Two at KPMG Women’s PGA Championship

 

On Brooke Henderson, current co-leader at 6-under par (1-under 71 on Friday)

Paige Mackenzie – “She has changed her putter multiple times this season, four or five times. She loves it when she has a fresh club in her bag, a fresh putter. It makes her want to go out to practice even more and gets her excited about putting.”

Kay Cockerill – “It is almost like, young love. She is addicted to that feeling of a new toy.”

Dan Hicks – “Henderson puts on exclamation mark in her second round. A little up and down. Five birdies to go along with three bogeys. She is in a very familiar position at the top of the leaderboard here at this championship.”

Gary Koch – “12 birdies in the first two rounds. You can afford to make a few bogeys when you are making that many birdies.”

 

Brooke Henderson speaking with Golf Channel’s Lisa Cornwell following her round

Brooke Henderson – “It was kind of up and down all day. I made some birdies but countered them with bogeys. So to finish off with a really nice birdie putt on 18, it gives me a lot of confidence going into tomorrow. I would have liked to shoot a little bit better today but 1-under when it was so hot and so windy, I’ll take it.”

Henderson – “I love it [the new putter]. It has been working out really well this week, so I’m happy with that. I feel like I can see the line really well on this course here, and I have been hitting putts with solid speed. That has been making me make a lot of birdies which is always fun.”

Henderson – “It is a lot of fun. To see the crowds out today and see that my name is on top of the leaderboard. That is fun and exciting. A little bit of nerves today with some of those bogeys, but to counteract with birdies, that is momentum and confidence. I’m continuing to do that every single week which is a lot of fun and I’m looking forward to the next couple of years.”

 

On So Yeon Ryu, current co-leader at 6-under par (3-under 69 on Friday)

Mark Rolfing – “She really found a spark at the end of her round today.”

 

So Yeon Ryu speaking with Golf Channel’s Lisa Cornwell following her round

So Yeon Ryu – “That is one of the best birthday gifts I have gotten (chip-in at No. 5). That chip shot was pretty tough one, because I made that birdie and I was able to have two birdies under my belt after five holes, so I was pretty happy.”

Ryu – “When I won the Meijer Classic I think my expectation level was just zero. I just really enjoyed every moment with my little golf ball out there. I think after I won the Meijer Classic, that was the attitude I needed to have for this year. I just want to have a good rest for today and for the next two days, just a positive attitude and I just want to enjoy it instead of thinking about the big picture.”

Ryu – “I think I started to hit a little longer since after 2016. In 2017, definitely was longer and this year I started to have almost a club longer with the irons so that has definitely helped me to play more aggressive. Playing more aggressive just allows me to have more birdie opportunities as well. These days it really is a matter of putting. I just need to have confidence around the green. Right now it looks really great on the putting green, so I just need to keep that confidence on the green and the golf course.”

 

On Sung Hyun Park, current co-leader at 6-under par (even-par 72 on Friday)

Jerry Foltz – “Tom [Abbott] mentioned about how she is not feeling as comfortable being out front as she is when she is chasing. She talked quite openly about this being a major and she is getting nervous and she expects that to continue. I can tell you one thing for sure, I don’t know anyone in the game that looks less nervous when she is on the golf course.”

 

On Lydia Ko, currently at 4-under par for the championship (6-under 66 on Friday)

Mark Rolfing – “One of the best putting rounds on any tour or in any tournament I have seen in a long time. Her distance control has been so good. She has tremendous confidence with the putter. She plays totally to her strengths.”

Tom Abbott – “This is an incredible round of golf from Lydia Ko on a golf course that is not that easy.”

Lydia Ko watches her highlights and speaks with Golf Channel’s Lisa Cornwell following her round

Lydia Ko – “I gave my putter a pedicure and manicure last night. I hit the ball really well yesterday and the only two putts I holed outside of 10 feet were two par putts. I wasn’t putting great. Straight out of the gate today I made a birdie on the first. That just gave me the confidence to say, ‘Hey, you can make a birdie on this golf course.’ I played solid. I know I missed a few fairways, but I tried to put myself back in good positions. Got lucky with the chip shot too but I’ll take a 66 around here.”

Ko – “I think I had a bit of confidence coming in to this week because of the two top-10 finishes the past couple of weeks. I felt like I was driving it pretty good and rolling it good. I was able to do one of those two things yesterday, and one of the two today, so hopefully I can put them together on the weekend. Confidence is a huge thing for me where the swing itself or the stroke itself is not too different. If I am out there playing with confidence I can execute the shots a little better.”

 

On Cristie Kerr, currently at 1-under par for the championship (4-under 68 on Friday)

Mackenzie – “She started walking putts early in the round. When she has that kind of momentum it seems to snowball. She is one of my favorite players to watch, because usually you can hear her as well as watch her talking to her ball. You don’t even need us in the booth most of the time.”

 

-NBC Sports Group-

Filed Under: NBC, Uncategorized

NASCAR ON NBC LAUNCHES SECOND “NBC SPORTS NASCAR AMERICA” FANTASY LEAGUE

June 29, 2018 By admin

NASCAR America Fantasy League Kicks Off This Weekend on NASCAR.com’s NASCAR Fantasy Live Platform

 

Transcript – NASCAR on NBC Season Preview Media Conference Call with Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and Sam Flood

 

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Racing Returns to NBC Sports Sunday, July 1 from Chicagoland

 

STAMFORD, Conn. – June 29, 2018 – On the heels of NBC Sports Group’s successful debut earlier this year of the first-ever “NBC Sports NASCAR America” fantasy league, NASCAR on NBC launches its second 10-week condensed league this week going into NASCAR Cup Series racing at Chicagoland. Available on NASCAR’s Fantasy Live platform, the unique league allows fans to set their fantasy lineups and play against NASCAR on NBC’s broadcast team.

 

Fans can enter the league at nascar.com/nbcsportsfantasy, and see their names alongside NASCAR on NBC analysts and hosts. League results will be featured weekly on NASCAR America. NBCSN’s daily motorsports show will include recurring segments every Monday and Thursday, breaking down each broadcaster’s picks for the weekend, as well as analyzing results, top scorers and league standings. League participants are encouraged to sign up today and share their lineups with @NASCARonNBC using #NASCARAmericaFantasy.

 

NBC Sports’ lead race announcer Rick Allen was the winner among all NASCAR on NBC broadcasters in the first league earning bragging rights among his fellow analysts, reporters and hosts.

 

Rotoworld.com is the official fantasy news provider for NASCAR America and the “NBC Sports NASCAR America” fantasy league. Rotoworld’s NASCAR fantasy news section includes driver updates, power rankings, and columns, as well as race-specific fantasy previews and reviews.

 

DALE EARNHARDT JR., STEVE LETARTE & JEFF BURTON PREVIEW 2018 NASCAR ON NBC SEASON

 

NBC Sports Group NASCAR analyst and motorsports icon Dale Earnhardt Jr., 21-time Cup Series winner Jeff Burton, Daytona 500-winning crew chief Steve Letarte, as well as NBC Sports Group Executive Producer Sam Flood previewed the 2018 NASCAR on NBC season on a media conference call yesterday. Click here for a full transcript.

 

ONE DAY UNTIL LIVE MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES RACING RETURNS TO NBC SPORTS

 

NBC Sports Group launches its 2018 NASCAR season this weekend with more than 18 hours of trackside coverage from Chicagoland Speedway, culminating with the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Overton’s 400 Sunday, July 1 at 2:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN.

 

NASCAR ON NBC

The official home of the NASCAR Playoffs, NBC Sports Group will present the final 20 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races, final 19 NASCAR Xfinity Series races, and select NASCAR Regional & Touring Series events in 2018. NBC Sports Group’s NASCAR programming also includes NBCSN’s daily motorsports show NASCAR America, coverage of NASCAR’s Awards Ceremonies, the annual NASCAR Hall of Fame induction ceremony, as well as original programming specials.

 

For more information about NBC Sports Group shows and properties, including press releases, photos, talent and executive bios and headshots, please visit NBCSportsGroupPressBox.com.

 

–NBC SPORTS GROUP–

Filed Under: NASCAR, NBC, Uncategorized

Evert, John McEnroe Preview Wimbledon, Marvel at Today’s Greats

June 29, 2018 By admin

ESPN’s Exclusive, First Ball to Last Ball Live Coverage Begins Monday, July 2
Primary Topics: American Men, Serena, Enduring Greatness of Federer & Nadal, The Prospects of Djokovic, Brits & Canadians, and Their Personal Favorite Moments in the Open Era

The post Evert, John McEnroe Preview Wimbledon, Marvel at Today’s Greats appeared first on ESPN MediaZone U.S..

Filed Under: ESPN, Tennis

ESPN Radio Adds New Weekend Show Covino & Rich

June 29, 2018 By admin

ESPN Radio will debut Covino & Rich on Saturday, June 30, at Noon ET. The program, which first premiered on SiriusXM in 2005, is co-hosted by Steve Covino and Rich Davis. Covino & Rich will air Saturdays and Sundays from Noon – 4 p.m. this summer and cover the hottest topics and stories in sports, seasoned with opinions and humor. They will appear on multiple platforms in addition to ESPN Radio.

The post ESPN Radio Adds New Weekend Show Covino & Rich appeared first on ESPN MediaZone U.S..

Filed Under: ESPN

NOTABLE QUOTES – KPMG WOMEN’S PGA CHAMPIONSHIP – THURSDAY’S ROUND 1

June 28, 2018 By admin

Golf Channel Notable Quotes

KPMG Women’s PGA Championship

First Round (11 a.m.-3 p.m. ET)

Thursday, June 28, 2018

Kemper Lakes Golf Club

Kildeer, Illinois

 

**Golf Channel will recap all of Thursday’s opening-round action from the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship tonight on Golf Central tonight at 7 p.m. ET, produced and broadcast on-site at Kemper Lakes Golf Club.**

 **2nd round coverage of the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship will air Friday on Golf Channel from 11 a.m. -3 p.m. ET. Golf Central Pre Game will prepare viewers for live action at 10:30 a.m. ET**

 

On Jessica Korda, current co-leader after the morning wave at 5-under par

Kay Cockerill – “She has shown a lot of patience today.”

Paige Mackenzie – “Her momentum has been building. She lost a little the last couple of weeks but all of the tools are there.”

 

Jessica Korda speaking with Golf Channel’s Lisa Cornwell following her round

Jessica Korda – “It was great, finally a golf course that benefits the long hitters. The last couple of weeks it has been a lot of rescues, 3 and 4-irons off the tee so this is really, really nice.”

Korda – “It’s golf. I’ve been rolling it really well and they have been hitting the lips and just not going in, so I just continued on the same path that I have been. Sometimes they fall and sometimes they don’t and that is the beauty of golf.”

 

On Charley Hull, one shot back at 4-under par after Thursday’s opening round

Cockerill – “Charley always looks so calm when she’s playing. She is in to each shot one at a time.”

Mackenzie – “There is a lot about her that is old school. She doesn’t overthink it. She is extremely decisive when she makes her shot. Doesn’t take long to pull the trigger.”

 

On Minjee Lee, 3-under par 69 after her opening round

Mackenzie – “One of her greatest assets is she doesn’t beat herself. She doesn’t make a lot of mistakes. She keeps the ball in front of her and plays very smart golf.”

 

On defending champion Danielle Kang, 1-over par after Thursday’s opening round

Mackenzie – “Here game is suited for major championships because she is a tremendous ball striker. She also loves the big stage. Major championships suit her personality as much as her game.”

 

Danielle Kang speaking with Golf Channel’s Lisa Cornwell following her round

Danielle Kang – “I tried to keep it under wraps the whole day, but I’ve had a really bad stomach ache before I even teed off. I don’t know what caused it but I am thinking it was the waffles. I threw up after nine and I just kept trying to not feel it. Steady as possible. But it was ok. I’m hitting the ball great so I hope I feel better for the next three days.”

Kang – “I’m definitely striking it really well. My putting speed is great, so there is nothing about my game today at the end of the day to be disappointed about. I played solid golf. Who knows, even if I felt great I don’t know what I would have shot. Yeah, it’s just funny. You know, you practice, you are ready for the week and you come and you get a stomach ache. I’m like, ‘Come on, what is this.’ But I hung in there, so it’s ok.”

 

On Lydia Ko (playing in the afternoon wave)

Mackenzie – “There are lot of things that are unrecognizable, a lot of maturity as well a lot of changes that she has gone through. Kind of proves that she is capable of doing what she can do with a lot of different tools and golf swings.”

Jerry Foltz – “Raised a lot of eyebrows when she made all those changes. She raised some eyebrows when she made the club change, but when she made the coaching change again, you really started to wonder if she would get back to how good she was when she got to be number one player in the world. She has shown signs of it.”

 

On So Yeon Ryu (playing in the afternoon wave)

Foltz – “A very complete all-around game. Incredible poise and patience on the golf course, which a major championship demands, and a well-above average putter.”

 

On the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship

Mackenzie – “The collaboration between the LPGA Tour, PGA of America and KPMG, to say that it is elevated would probably be an understatement. They have created a new standard of what a major championship should be. It is quickly becoming a favorite event on the LPGA Tour schedule for these players. A lot has to do with the identity around this event is playing on great golf courses that really create a huge stage for these players to play on.”

Dan Hicks – “Major championships are a different kind of animal. You just have to stay patient, keep grinding and see where you come up in the mix on Sunday.”

 

On Thursday’s first round at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship

Mackenzie – “We are seeing some scoring. We are seeing some birdies out there. A lot of receptive greens, but we also notice that you are penalized if you mishit it. To me, it has been a major championship from the start, and we are seeing them start to separate the field.”

Gary Koch – “Those players playing this afternoon, having seen and watched that there are birdies out there, it is changing their mindset. At the start of the day, pars were good scores on this golf course. Now you know there are some birdies to be had.”

 

-NBC Sports Group-

 

Filed Under: NBC, Uncategorized

TRANSCRIPT: 2018 NASCAR ON NBC MEDIA CONFERENCE CALL

June 28, 2018 By admin

THE MODERATOR: Thanks to everyone for joining us on today’s call. We’re thrilled to be kicking off our half of the 2018 NASCAR season. The official home of the NASCAR playoffs, NBC Sports group will present the final 20 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races and final 19 NASCAR Xfinity Series races in 2018. NBC Sports launches its 2018 NASCAR season this weekend with more than 18 hours of trackside coverage from Chicagoland Speedway, culminating with the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Overton’s 400 July 1st at 2:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN. Joining us on today’s call to preview the season are NBC Sports Group’s newest on-air contributor and NASCAR’s most popular driver for an unprecedented 15 consecutive years, Dale Earnhardt Jr.; 21-time Cup Series winner Jeff Burton; Daytona 500-winning crew chief Steve Letarte; and of course NBC Sports Group executive producer Sam Flood.

In just a moment I’ll hand the call off to Sam, Dale, Jeff and Steve for opening remarks, and we’ll then open the call to questions. Before I do that, I did want to mention one final item. A transcript of today’s call will be available starring at 3:00 eastern on NBCSportsGroupPressbox.com.

Without further ado, Sam, I’ll hand the call off to you.

SAM FLOOD: Thanks for joining us today. We are very excited to get going. The team has been getting ready for this since midway through last season when Dale decided to join the NBC family and we started thinking about how we were going to grow the sport, grow our telecast and make sure that for the 20 races on the back end of the season, there was one place to be on race day, and watch with this NBC team and the NBC family.

So we’ve had some fun rehearsals. We’ve had a ton of great conversations about what we want to do, and now we get to work. So that’s exciting. We think there’s been a great start to the season, a lot of good things happening on and off the racetrack, and we’re looking forward to celebrating all the wonderful things that are happening in NASCAR. It’s a good way to start the call by handing it off to Mr. Popularity himself, 15-time winner of the popularity contest and all-time winner on our team, Dale Jr. Go ahead, Dale.

DALE EARNHARDT JR.: Thanks a lot. I’m excited to finally be at the racetrack with my teammates and getting ready to go to work, so I’m just watching these guys and following them around to see how they prepare and what all goes into the days leading up to the race itself.

It’s been extremely educational, and like Sam said, we’ve been talking about it for a long time. We’ve been practicing, and here it is, it’s time to get to work, and we’re going to have a great first weekend to kick off the next several trips to the racetrack, and it’s going to be an awesome run all the way to Homestead.

JEFF BURTON: I’m really excited to be back at the racetrack. We’ve been watching three drivers just be unbelievable this year. To come to the racetrack and watch them and see who can knock those guys off or join them is going to be really fun.

I love racing. I joke that I get paid to talk about what I’d be watching anyway, and it’s awesome to be back at the racetrack. It’s really going to be fun to see who are the fourth, fifth, sixth guys that can go up and tangle with the three that have been winning all the races, and see who can step up. That’s what the next 10 weeks are really going to be about, and I’m excited to get it started.

STEVE LETARTE: Yeah, I’m going to echo what everyone said. I’m just excited to be back at the racetrack. As a race fan, I’ve watched the first half of the year, taking part in my NASCAR America, kind of breaking down what we’ve seen on the track, but there’s really nothing like covering it live. It’s something I’ve learned over the last three years to love, standing up in the booth and watching it as it unfolds. Explaining the what and more importantly maybe the why something is happening on the racetrack. It’s really been enjoyable.

I’m excited that Dale is joining the team. It’s going to be fun to work with my old buddy again. It’s been a few years. And that’s really it. There’s been a lot of preparation. The preparation really never stops. We’ve been working hard in the booth, but the other groups have been working hard on graphics and everything else it takes to put on a broadcast, and after a lot of conference calls and meetings and practices, it’s time to go live, and that’s usually just the most exciting part of the season.

Q. First question would be for Dale; Dale, obviously you’ve mentioned that they’ve had you do some mock broadcasts in the weeks leading up to this. What have those been like for you, and how intense and challenging have they been?

 

DALE EARNHARDT JR.: Well, we spent a couple races in the radio booths at the Hall of Fame. We did Texas, Talladega and one other track — Charlotte. We did two in the booth at the Hall of Fame, and then we did Charlotte at the racetrack in a suite. And it was good. You know, I was really nervous about going in cold turkey without really a whole lot of experience, and so it gave me a lot of peace of mind, and it allowed me to build a little bit of a rapport with Jeff and Rick because we’re going to need that chemistry. It helped me kind of understand what their jobs are and where I fit in there and what I’m going to be asked to do and what my objectives are. It was really helpful for me.

I’m not sure what the other guys got out of it, but I was — and it also, I guess — I still got the job. So NBC is pretty happy with what they heard in our practice runs, and I got a lot of great feedback and was able to adjust on the fly. It was cool.

Q. Sam, just a quick question for you. Can you elaborate a little bit on the Peacock Pit Box? That looks like it’s going to be a lot of fun this year. And any other cool production elements that you guys are adding or excited about this year?

 

SAM FLOOD: Well, the Peacock Pit Box is going to put us in the middle of the action. It kind of plays off of what we do with “Inside the Glass” with hockey, “Inside the Race” on a motorcycle on the Tour de France course each day with Steve Porino. The thought was to put them inside the action.

It’ll start the shows because that’s where the entire pre-race will come from. We’ve had the big set down on the grid for the first three years of the contract. We realized that sometimes the fans departed from that area as we got closer to race time and took away some of the sense of place. So the idea was to have a real sense of place throughout the day, starting with the pre-race show.

NASCAR is going to give us a pit stall in the middle of all the action, which will enable us to have all the activities. There will be crews set up next to us. It’ll be like any other pit box on pit road, except ours will be a little fancier and have more television technology on board, and that technology in some races will be there for Steve to hang out, particularly in the Xfinity races, where he’s going to be hanging down on pit road in a pit box, kind of restarting his old career of looking at the race when you only can see half the racetrack on pit road. So we think by bringing Steve, it’ll give him more opportunity to focus that unique mind of his on what the heck all the other cars are doing on the track. So we see that as a huge advantage.

And most importantly, it gives us a place inside that mayhem that is pit road, which has become one of the most exciting places at the racetrack each week. So excited about that.

The additional big change is adding some new technology, and that’s a guy named Dale Jr. in the booth. We think people are more important than any technology we can add, and we got the top pick in the draft. We got the ultimate free agent signing. So to have Dale as a part of this team that was already best in class, it’s exciting for us, and it can only make us better to have Dale joining the team that we’re so proud of what they do each Sunday, each Cup race and each Xfinity race, and just as importantly, these guys focus for the practices and the qualifying and they make it a fun place to hang out.

I always say, you’d better invite our team into your living room or into your den each week to watch the race; who would you rather share a beer with and watch the race than Dale Jr., Steve Letarte and Jeff Burton? Pretty cool way to hang out and enjoy the race with your buddies. So that’s the plan, and that’s what we’ve got going on.

Q. Dale, you have been the most popular driver for so many years. You’ve had media chasing you as much as any driver probably in the history of NASCAR. My question to you is what have you learned that you didn’t know as you’ve learned all this about television from the media side of it now that you’re on the other side?

 

DALE EARNHARDT JR.: There’s a lot of things. I don’t know if there’s one thing that sticks out. There’s a lot of things that my perception changed about, things that I thought that was annoying or unnecessary or — as a driver, I find them necessary, and I understand the sort of purpose for a lot of things coming from the media standpoint.

You know, when you’re a driver, you think you have all these ideas about how a sport needs to — what the sport needs to be better or be — we’re always trying to improve the health of the sport. Everybody has got the sport’s best interest at heart, and as a driver you have those opinions of what those things are, and then when you go into the broadcast booth and you’re on the other side, just looking at it through a totally different lens, some of those things change like 180 degrees.

When I was a driver, I didn’t like being mixed up in rivalries, and I tried to fly under the radar and didn’t want to be front-page news all week with a dust-up with another driver or be in any type of disagreement or conflict and didn’t like to be the story all week leading up to the next race or any of the videos coming up for the next race’s promotion about me and some other driver running into each other.

But now that I’m on the media side, I understand what the purpose behind that type of promotion is and why the media exercises to share that with fans and help them understand the story lines in the sport. That’s so critical, and I just didn’t see it that way as a driver.

And that’s just one of many, many things that my perception has changed on, and now I’m just — there’s so much to learn and absorb, and this is going to be an incredible 21 weeks of education for me, and I’ll have a lot more things on that list, I’m sure, by the time we get through Homestead.

Q. Sam, I want to ask you, if you guys — you’re on the cusp of such a great opportunity with Dale Jr. adding to the team and the start of a new season brings that. Do you guys feel like this is a huge opportunity that if you just do your jobs great, the ratings will slowly come back, that we’ll get more ratings if you just are really good at what you do?

 

SAM FLOOD: Our plan is to be good at what we do. Our plan is to make people want to hang out with us for every race. And we’ve got the people — if I’m home on a Saturday or Sunday, Saturday night or a Sunday afternoon, this is the group I’d want to hang out with. And after spending time with them during the rehearsal it was a great indication that this is a place people are going to want to be. We’ll let the ratings take care of themselves.

Our marketing group does a nice job getting the word out. I think people are aware that Dale Earnhardt Jr. is joining our team. I don’t know if anyone has been told that yet, but apparently there is some information out that he is going to be on NBC. So with that good news, we’re confident that people are going who do tune in are going to be entertained and they’re going to have a lot of fun because Steve and Dale don’t always see the race the same way. We know that Jeff and Steve don’t see the race the same way. So it’s going to add some fun to it, and to have two drivers in the booth the caliber of Jeff Burton and Dale is going to be a perfect combination. We’re eager to get going and are confident that when you tune in, you’re going to have fun listening to these guys bang it around.

Q. I’ve got a question for Dale. In the last year, Dale, beginning with this race in Daytona, how dramatically has your life changed?

 

DALE EARNHARDT JR.: A lot. I’ve had a

little girl, and over a year into an amazing marriage to an incredible girl, incredible person. You know, I got out of driving cars and a little bit more involved in all the businesses that we’re kind of trying to grow, and I’ve been trying to learn everything I can to be ready for the priority in my professional life, and that’s my new job with NBC.

It’s been really smooth so far. You know, no big hold-ups or speed bumps or no real huge surprises. But my teammates in the booth have been real supportive and helpful, and the entire staff at NBC has been incredibly helpful. There’s no stupid questions it doesn’t seem, and they’re full of information.

I’ve had the opportunity to go into the studio back in Charlotte and do some of the Wednesday shows and get a little bit of practice, just sort of being around the team, and had the awesome experience of going over to South Korea. That was an incredible once in a lifetime opportunity to do something like that. That really gave me a ton of confidence that I joined the right team and they were happy to have me. Everybody has been really incredibly nice. We had fun at the Super Bowl, too.

It’s been a lot of fun, really. I don’t even feel — I feel like I retired and haven’t even started working again. It’s pretty surreal.

Q. Was it harder to learn how to drive race cars or to become a broadcaster?

 

DALE EARNHARDT JR.: I felt like that I had a lot more understanding of what I was getting myself into with race cars. Growing up around it, and my family being so involved in it on my mom’s and my dad’s side, I was pretty sure at least when I was younger that I thought I knew everything about racing. But I know that there’s — I had no history or background in broadcasting. Really kind of coming from a blank page here and drawing from my teammates, Jeff and Rick and Steve and everybody around me at NBC, just trying to draw all the information I can.

The best part about it is that Sam Flood says just be yourself, and I keep asking him if that’s really what he wants because that sounds a little bit too good to be true and a little bit too easy. But that’s what they expect out of you, and that should be very fun, to get up there and just watch races and react.

All the guys in the booth are such huge fans of what we’re seeing, it’s going to be a lot of fun just doing that, sitting around and talking about what’s happening on the racetrack. I’m excited to learn a lot and get to know my teammates even better.

Q. Sam, what will you tell Dale to try to keep him from being too nervous, and also can you go through, is your plan to have a four-person booth, and how will that work?

 

SAM FLOOD: We have a multi-option offense. We have different booths for different tracks, and we’re putting people in positions to make it fun for the audience and give the most insight to the race. We have five different styles of booths, and we’ll roll them out and let you know each week what we plan to do.

In terms of keeping Dale relaxed, we gave him — Letarte is nearby, and he’s going to be able to check in with Letarte, make sure he feels good, just like Steve got him calmed down before a race or pumped up before a race. We’re confident that Steve will push the buttons, and we’ll also have Mad Matt Marvin in the truck as a producer, who’s got the ability to connect with each person on the telecast and make sure they are in the right place to succeed.

So having experienced the joy that Dale has brought to our rehearsals and the joy he’s brought to the process, I’m confident that’ll translate come Sunday and obviously Saturday when we have the first taste of this group at the Xfinity race.

Q. Jeff, you’ve had a busy off-season, following Harrison on the racing circuit. I’m sure it’s been a lot of fun. Has the different vantage point of seeing the sport as a father of a driver changed your perspective of it?

 

JEFF BURTON: Well, I think one thing it’s done with having Harrison race is it’s kept me involved 24/7, 364. It’s nonstop. I think there’s one day a year we get off. I think the bottom line is I love racing, and he gives me a reason to go to the racetracks when otherwise I wouldn’t be there.

It’s a unique situation where I drove my own cars, I broadcast, I have a son that races. It’s kind of crazy that my life pretty much revolves around racing in some form or fashion or another. The main thing I think for me is it enables me to still be on the inside of the sport. It’s very hard when you are no longer driving to really get all that information and really be into the details, but with Harrison racing, it allows me to do that.

So it’s helped me with my broadcasts, and more importantly, as a father, it’s cool to have a son that has a passion for the same thing I have.

It’s really a win-win, and it has given me a little bit different perspective. But he’s going through the same thing I went through when I was a young driver, so I’m kind of experiencing some of that stuff again.

Q. Steve, I know that Sam touched a little bit on the Peacock Pit Box earlier, and it seems to be a little bit the natural progression from that on-the-box you did in Kansas last year, but can you talk about the experience of calling a race from that position and what you think that adds to your broadcast?

 

STEVE LETARTE: Well, like Sam mentioned, I think we’ve seen in other sports, hockey and cycling, that bringing the perspective closer to the action has only increased the opportunity for the viewer to be entertained. I think that from above, watching it from the booth gives you a great idea to see the entire race, gives you a great viewpoint to call the entire race, but so much action happens on pit road. We’ve seen these races decided by pit decisions, by pit stops. We see drivers competing even on pit road at these slower speeds, 55 miles an hour, yet the race can be determined in that section of the racetrack. And I think moving a broadcaster to that location and a pre-race show to that location just kind of gives the viewer a sense of what’s going on.

There’s so much that happens on pit road, it’s great to show it from a camera, but it’s another thing to say it from that location. And I think just the audio around, the energy, the excitement, I know personally when I go down to pit road for a pre-race show or things like that, you can just feel the energy in the racetrack. It’s where I’ve grown up, where for 20 years I was in the infield; for 10 or 12 years I was on top of a pit box, so it’s a second home. It’s very comfortable for me.

It took me a long time from the booth to understand the cars would be coming from the left, so Sam was nice enough last year to give me a couple opportunities where they were back coming from my right, and it’s great because even though you only see the racetrack, normally only the front stretch, between timing and scoring and the other tools these crew chiefs have, I have all of those tools on top of the pit box, and it allows us to see the race from a true crew chief’s perspective, from what they have in front of them, and that helps me understand the decisions they are making.

Just like last week in Sonoma, we saw a pit decision determine the outcome of the race, and I think we can do a better job giving the fans a variety of perspectives, and I think pit road is a very important one.

Q. Sam, what have you seen as the biggest factors for the steady decline in NASCAR ratings?

 

SAM FLOOD: Well, I look to last year when we did our 20 races on NBC and we essentially had the same number of viewers on NBC for the 20 races last year. So I look at what we can control and what we do in our part of the season, and I look at a very successful 2017 vis-á-vis 2016, and the reality is if the race in Miami had lasted a little bit longer — our first two years in Miami the races have gone exceptionally long due to late cautions and weather, and if we had had a long-running race like we had our first two years in Miami, we might have been up for the season. So I look at that as a very positive thing as we go into the season. I also look at six of the eight highest rated summer programs in the sports world last year were all NASCAR races.

So there are some incredibly good statistics that we can point to that give me incredible confidence going into this season. I think there’s a tendency to look at the glass half empty. I look at it as almost full, and I’m thrilled that we have the opportunity to continue to grow the race game, to have Dale join us, and create more interest in our telecasts, and that’s the opportunity we have going forward. Our job is to lean in and to make it as entertaining a show as possible. But based on our data from last year and what we accomplished at NBC, I’m very excited where we are with NASCAR.

Q. Do you think one broadcaster, whether it’s Dale Jr. or any famous athlete, can really make a difference in the ratings, as well?

 

SAM FLOOD: Well, I look at ’16 to ’17 when we had the same broadcast team, and we had an equal number of viewers. So obviously something is right about our broadcast team that people want to hang out with them. I can only say, being cautiously optimistic, that people want to hang out with Dale, as well. But I don’t put the ratings on Dale; I put it on all of us to make it happen. I think the experience of being with these — this entire talent team is going to make for an experience hopefully that will engage more viewers.

Q. Dale, I think we all kind of have friends of ours who we try to get into the sport. We all love it so much and we can’t seem to find a way to get them in. What can you guys do to not only just bring the new viewers in, kind of make them feel welcome but at the same time not alienate the longtime NASCAR fans?

 

DALE EARNHARDT JR.: You know, I think we just have to talk about what we see on the racetrack, talk about the action, have energy and genuine passion about what we’re seeing and what’s happening in front of us, and I think that’ll come across to the viewer and make the viewer feel like they’re watching something unique. I’ve always felt like that the broadcaster has an incredible responsibility to make — to engage with the viewer and make the show entertaining and point out what about the show is exciting.

We can’t just rely on the race to do all the work. It’s important for the production and us in the booth and everyone else to just kind of make — bring the fan into the experience and make them feel like they’re getting something unique.

You know, I’m excited for that challenge. I feel very confident about the direction of the sport and the health of the sport and the future of the sport, or I wouldn’t be in this position and want to be part of this team. I’m excited about where we’re going and where we’re headed, and I think we’re going up, and I want to be on that ride.

SAM FLOOD: I’ll tell you this: When we were rehearsing the Texas race, which was the first race that the group rehearsed, late in the race there was a restart, and Harvick and Busch were side by side on the restart in the front row, and the excitement that Dale had for that restart and what he said about how eager he was to see it, I don’t care if you were a hockey fan, a football fan, a basketball fan, a baseball fan; if you’re a fan of sport, you want to watch what Dale was describing. It was infectious. The entire talent team got up on their feet, got fired up for it. It lived up to its billing. It was side by side for the lead. It’s everything that makes this sport spectacular. It’s people taking risks, going as hard as they can into a turn, who’s going to lift first, who’s going to push through it and how are they going to take the lead. And to have a guy like Dale, infectious, telling you how cool it’s going to be, you lean in a little bit, you listen a little harder, you watch a little closer, and the excitement is generated from there, and off we go. And that’s what we hope to see as we go forward in this new world with our new team.

THE MODERATOR: You can catch Dale, Jeff and Steve tonight at 5:00 p.m. ET on NASCAR America on NBCSN, live from the all-new Peacock Pit Box at Chicagoland Speedway.

Filed Under: NASCAR, NASCAR AMERICA, NBC, Uncategorized

NBC SPORTS PHILADELPHIA NAMES TARYN HATCHER MULTI-PLATFORM REPORTER AND HOST

June 28, 2018 By admin

SOUTH JERSEY NATIVE RETURNS TO HER ROOTS

Philadelphia, PA (JUNE 28, 2018) – NBC Sports Philadelphia – home of the Authentic Fan – announced today that Taryn Hatcher, a South Jersey native, has joined the network as a multi-platform host and reporter covering the Eagles, Flyers, Sixers and Phillies. She will join the network on July 23.

“We are thrilled to welcome Taryn back home,” said NBC Sports Philadelphia Vice President of Content, Michelle Murray. “Taryn’s knowledge and passion for Philly sports, combined with her ability to create content for multiple platforms, is a valuable skill that will allow her to make an immediate connection with fans.”

“It feels incredible to join the team at NBC Sports Philadelphia,” said Hatcher. “I grew up watching the Flyers, Eagles, Sixers and Phillies — I fell in love with sports and wanted nothing more than to be a sports reporter. This has been my dream since childhood and I absolutely can’t wait to get started.”

In her new role at NBC Sports Philadelphia, Hatcher will serve as a host and reporter primarily on NBCSportsPhiladelphia.com, and also serve in the same capacity on–air, including filling in on SportsNet Central as needed. A former network intern, she returns home from Hawaii News Now where she was a sports reporter since 2015. She was also a sideline reporter for the Big Ten Network.

Taryn graduated from Rutgers University where she studied Journalism and Mass Media Studies, as well as Political Science. During that time, she also worked for the university radio station as a sports broadcaster, and interned at iHeart Radio in Philly, Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia, and in the sports department for WCBS-TV in New York.

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Filed Under: NBC, Uncategorized

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