Barrett agrees the way sports is broadcast is probably going to change forever

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Chuck Barrett hasn’t had to deal with doing several hours of live sports talk on the radio without any games going on but he has a pretty good idea of how he would handle it.

“I’ve got the advantage because I grew up in Arkansas and I would have talked about every game I’d seen,” he told Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis (Halftime) on ESPN Arkansas Tuesday. “It’s difficult right now. You’ve gotta keep delivering the mail every day and that’s how it works.”

During this current health crisis, television networks have changed the way they’re covering sports with announcers not actually at the game but in a studio back home.

My first thought was “uh-oh” when I heard about that. Let me be clear — I don’t really care one way or the other, but watching the advances in technology it’s something you could see coming a mile away.

Whether anybody likes it or not is going to be a personal opinion.

“We’re going to see more and more of this,” Barrett said. “That’s one of the things in our business that’s going to change and won’t change back. That’s kind of the way the world works now.

“I’m not going to say I think it’s great but that’s the way we’re headed. Television has a little advantage because they let the picture tell the story.

“It’s going to be interesting to see how we evolve as a business.”

Auto racing started it last weekend with NASCAR getting under way and continues Tuesday and Wednesday evenings during a hectic schedule of seven races in 11 days.

A golf deal with Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Peyton Manning and Tom Brady will be played this weekend with the announcers back in a studio.

I’m not really sure how that would play out on radio, but it came off okay for television. It has changed the face of television with more and more interviews via different platforms.

Press conferences have gone on Zoom or teleconference. While it’s not perfect the system seems to be much better than nothing.

With the NCAA’s expected announcement Wednesday of green-lighting teams to have players back on campus in June (and the SEC to announce something Friday), we have no idea how things are going to work in the media.

But it will be different.

Bud Light Seltzer Morning Rush Podcast — Sam Pittman ranked, Courtney Fortson joins and more!

Tye & Tommy on where Athlon Sports ranks Sam Pittman, Courtney Fortson joins, plus Would You Rather Tuesday!

Fortson recapping days with Hogs, playing in China, relationship with Musselman

Former Arkansas player Courtney Fortson has done well playing basketball in China, but he admitted Tuesday morning to Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) things are a little different there.

He also went down memory lane on some of the bigger games the Razorbacks won while he was in Fayetteville plus knowing Hogs coach Eric Musselman.

Big week ahead as announcements may clear path for some kind of football

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Last week everybody we talked to or heard in interviews on the national scene fully expects some sort of college football this season, but nobody knows what it will look like.

Sports Illustrated, citing numerous sources said over the weekend the NCAA Division I Council, a 40-member decision-making body made up of key college athletics figures, could vote Wednesday to remove the ban on on-campus activities.

Add in the encouraging news about a possible vaccine (that will be fast-tracked in what could be an unbelievable record time) caused the stock market to shoot up Monday and announcements on college athletics coming this week.

The NCAA has their meeting Wednesday, then the SEC has already said they will have an announcement of some sort Friday.

There was always going to be football in the fall. It’s too big to fail and a lot of colleges can’t afford NOT to have it.

Schools are going to have to re-design just about everything in their athletic facilities. Thank goodness it’s somebody else’s job to reconfigure a weight room.

Locker rooms will be not be used as normal … at least in the summer. There’s no sharing of water bottles, towels or anything like that. It’s all going to be spaced out … at least in theory.

All food and drinks will be pre-packaged.

There is even a thing called a RAZOR, according to a story in Sports Illustrated, that is like a fogger on steroids for athletic environments.

In other words everything indoors will be fogged with one of those RAZOR things, which does create an interesting marketing angle for the Hogs.

It’s one of the things that was originally created to help stem flu outbreaks and this current virus works in much the same way in terms of how you get it.

Despite the panic doom-and-gloom predictions of some, there is a strong possibility of football starting on time and playing a full schedule.

Don’t expect it to be equal for all 130 teams, though. Too many different rules in different states and it’s sounding like the ones in states that allow it will go full steam ahead while others, well, won’t.

“It’s not going to be equitable,” Craig Thompson, commissioner of the Mountain West, told Sports Illustrated last week. “There are no equal solutions.”

The key thing, though, is there probably will be football.

New father Neighbors on the fun and games being a new dad

Arkansas women’s basketball coach Mike Neighbors is a new dad and Bowen Stone Neighbors will be a member of the Class of 2039 as he told Derek Ruscin and Zach Arns (Ruscin & Zach) on ESPN Arkansas on Monday afternoon.

It wasn’t easy being a New Yorker coming into Alabama, Gold says

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It was one thing for Eli Gold to get the job as the play-by-play announcer for Alabama in 1988 but another was getting a diehard fan base to accept a New York native calling the games.

“Now I’m accepted,” Gold told Phil Elson, Matt Jenkins and Matt Travis (Halftime) Monday afternoon on ESPN Arkansas. “It was a difficult start.”

He started doing men’s basketball in 1988-89 because then-coach Wimp Sanderson had noticed his work in Birmingham. Gold added football in 1989 after John Forney retired after three decades,

Forney and Gold are the only two football announcers for the Crimson Tide since Paul “Bear” Bryant got the job there in 1958.

And that is where most of the complaints came from with a Brooklyn guy who came to Birmingham to do ice hockey taking over a job as high profile in Alabama as any elected official.

“It took awhile,”. It probably took 10-12 years and for some people longer than that. I was a pro sports guy with no ties to the university. It was a difficult time.

“There were people that thought it was terrible I was selected to do the football and basketball games. It was not pleasant. Thankfully, the university stuck with me and here we are 32 years later.”

With Arkansas joining the Southeastern Conference in 1992, Gold started coming to the state every other year since then but it was his only trip to War Memorial Stadium that sticks out in his mind.

“Then-Gov. Bill Clinton attended,” Gold said of the game in 1992 during his first initial presidential campaign. “It showed me how impactful college football is when he took time out of a presidential campaign to get the eyeballs college football brought to him. No pun intended, but it was an eye opener for me.”

He hasn’t had to call many Crimson Tide losses since the Razorbacks came into the league, either. Alabama holds a 21-7 record over that time frame and the last win by the Hogs was in 2006.

“Bama has done pretty well against the Razorbacks over the years,” Gold said.

ESPN’s Greenberg: ‘Nothing better than to talk ball’ with basketball junkies

ESPN college basketball analyst Seth Greenberg talked with Arkansas coach Eric Musselman among others last week and it’s a welcome break “just talking ball” with college basketball coaches during this shutdown.

Greenberg on Monday was with Tye Richardson and Tommy Craft (The Morning Rush) on ESPN Arkansas.