Tag: Cricket Connected

  • Star Sports’ Cricket Connected to celebrate Sachin’s birthday

    Star Sports’ Cricket Connected to celebrate Sachin’s birthday

    MUMBAI: The ‘God of Cricket’ Sachin Tendulkar will headline this week’s special two-part episode on Star Sports’ show Cricket Connected that airs on Saturday, 25 April. The part one of the episode will be broadcasted at 7 pm and part two at 9 pm, which will be hosted by Jatin Sapru.

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    Team India legends VVS Laxman and Harbhajan Singh along with former Australia pace machine Brett Lee have been roped in as the experts for this week’s episode. The growing popularity of the show in English and Hindi has urged Star Sports to introduce the show in its regional channels.

    Star Sports 1 Tamil, Star Sports 1 Kannada and Star Sports 1 Telugu are doing a lot to keep the channels engaging and entertaining for all cricket lovers.

    Tendulkar will give a special sneak-peak on how he’s coping with life during the lockdown. The master blaster will dole out interesting tips on how he used to practice indoors and will also help the current crop of professional cricketers with priceless advice on how to stay mentally focussed during challenging times that COVID-19 has posed before the world.

    Tendulkar, urging fans to stay indoors, said on Cricket Connected: “My fans wished well for me for many years. They encouraged me and they prayed for me. What did they pray for? That Sachin shouldn’t get out and I should be at the crease. My wish for them is that they should also not get out. They should also stay inside the crease which means indoors, safe, and healthy. If they are healthy and safe, then I am more than happy.”

    Tendulkar, who ended his glorious career in 2013, also shed light on his fabled ‘Desert Storm’ innings against Australia in 1998 at Sharjah. The cricket legend had smashed 143 against a bowling attack featuring the likes of Shane Warne, Damien Fleming and Michael Kasprowicz as temperatures reached a maximum of 41 degrees Celsius. Tendulkar also recalled some of his magic with the ball.

    This episode of Cricket Connected will also see the Greatest Of All Time (G.O.A.T.s) players from the Indian Premier League being extended to fans via polls. Winners from the five categories – batsmen, bowlers, all-rounders, captain and coach – will be declared by popular choice. The episode will also give an insight into Team India captain Virat Kohli’s life during the lockdown.

    Cricket Connected is an innovative concept by Star Sports to fill in the void left by the absence of live events. The show has proved to be that medium for fans to connect with their favourite experts. Each episode has segments that encourage fans to engage and interact with cricketing legends.

    Segments such as #AskStar give fans an opportunity to share their favourite cricket moments by tweeting their questions using the hashtag for the legends to answer. There is also another segment, Kids Connected, which involves young fans and invites them to share home-made videos of them doing commentary.

  • How Star Sports created ‘Cricket Connected’ while staying distant

    How Star Sports created ‘Cricket Connected’ while staying distant

    MUMBAI: In the absence of live sports amid COVID-19, Star Sports, in order to keep cricket enthusiasts engaged, had launched a talk show called Cricket Connected.

    “Cricket Connected is an attempt to create a window every week for fans to connect with each other and with cricket legends," says a source close to Star Sports.

    The show has, so far, featured cricket legends such as Harbhajan Singh, Ashish Nehra, Gautam Gambhir, VVS Laxman, Kevin Pietersen, among others, along with host Jatin Sapru. It is produced both in Hindi and English. So far, three episodes of the show have already been released.

    The show is an output of video conference of cricket legends along with a moderator (anchor), and it required a complete re-design of production. “We have not done anything like this in the past and don’t believe anyone has ever done the same so far,” says the source. “We create virtual connections with the help of video conference application Zoom, on which we have added a layer of technology that allows us to produce a call in a typical chat show format.”

    The lockdown has forced everyone to stay indoors but the show must go on. Hence, the broadcaster has allowed one of its directors, who used to direct Hindi IPL, to set up a production control in his living room. He, from his house, not only monitors, records the conference call as a show, but also remotely accesses the archives to get relevant footage. The director also gives final touches to show from his makeshift PCR.

    To guide the moderator and panellists and to maintain the pre-decided flow of the show, the director and a producer join the call only through audio. The operation remains very similar to a typical production. However, the production design is very different from the one done via a proper production control room.

    The show is a combination of video conference features, relevant contextual visuals and one-on-one Instagram video chats of current cricketers along with two dedicated segments like Kids Connected and #AskStar. Kids Connected is a segment, wherein the broadcaster urges viewers to send clips of cricket-enthusiastic children either commentating or anchoring about cricket and #AskStar is an interactive segment during which a question asked by a cricket fan is answered by one of the panellists.

    The two major challenges the broadcaster faced while producing the show were good internet bandwidth and the two-second lag during video call. “We record the call in the morning before 1 pm for good bandwidth to ensure the content that we are producing is in line with our broadcasting quality,” source explains.

    Whereas, to overcome the second issue we started giving a cue to the next speaker during a live conference call. Source adds, “We built a customised solution on the Zoom application that allows the anchor to actually know when the expert is finished talking and helps to maintain the flow.”

    Not every cricket veteran is tech-savvy and understands the video call. Hence, the broadcaster ensures that each of the panellists is given a detailed brief about the show flow and a tutorial of the Zoom call prior to recording. The anchor being a bridge between the panellists and viewers, is also briefed a day prior to the recording. Cricket experts join the video conference call either through mobile phones or laptop cameras.

    "Generally, the idea and flow of the show is decided on Monday of every week and the conference calls take place either on Thursday or Friday morning. Moreover, the one-on-one interaction between two cricketers is recorded as per their availability. We also allow the panellists to choose their video call background but suggest them to maintain the look and feel quite natural,” Source reveals.

    The content strategy of the show revolves around four basic pillars: news points, great stories, anecdotes, and interactive segments that talk about the life of current players under lockdown.

    “We wish to discuss cricket topics that are relevant and contextual; topics that are not making news but have the potential to be news,” the source says while talking about the first pillar of content strategy. “We choose the content that is relevant in the week. Something that will get fans to discuss on social media and are likely to be trending.”

    The source further adds, “The second pillar of our content strategy is to pick up interesting moments from cricket history, which are still relevant and can be given new angles. We choose topics that have great stories and anecdotes around them to keep them trending for a week.”

    The third pillar is about interactive sessions, wherein the aim is to create engagement with viewers and cricket fans through social media, a quiz on the life of a sporting star, or an important cricket match in history. The most important pillar out of all four is the last one wherein it attempts to show the life of current cricket stars under lockdown and give glimpses of their lifestyle.

    There hasn’t been a specific marketing strategy to promote this show. The show is an alternative to live cricket but is likely to be continued for a long time. So far, the first episode has gained a cumulative reach of 8.3 million and overall watch-time of 48.6 million.

    Star Sports is also mulling to take this show to regional languages such as Tamil, Telugu and Kannada. Though it’s in the primary stage, the broadcaster is likely to come out the same show in Tamil in the next 10 days, which will rope in cricket experts from that region, who would talk about CSK as a team and its players as well as about the Tamil Nadu team’s performance in Ranji Trophy. The broadcaster is also thinking of coming up with the same format in football in order to engage the Indian soccer fans.

    So far, the broadcaster has not onboarded any sponsors or advertisers. With the rising traction, sources close to Star Sports mentioned that the network is planning to go to market with this show

    The upcoming episode of Cricket Connected will feature unknown achievements of Sachin Tendulkar as his birthday (24 April) that falls during this week. The episode will also feature KL Rahul, who turned 28 last weekend. The original telecast of the show is scheduled every Saturday at 7 pm and 9 pm. However, re-runs are shown till Tuesday of the following week.

  • Star Sports celebrates IPL’s 13th birthday with #CricketConnected

    Star Sports celebrates IPL’s 13th birthday with #CricketConnected

    MUMBAI: In a special episode this week, Cricket Connected will celebrate the Greatest of All Time (GOATs) players and coaches of the Indian Premier League to mark the thirteenth birthday of the tournament. Hosted by Jatin Sapru, the episode will air on 18 April at 7 pm on Star Sports.

    The third episode will feature an ensemble of experts – Danny Morrison, Kevin Pietersen, Gautam Gambhir, Ashish Nehra and Irfan Pathan – who will be picking their GOATs from the most decorated among batsmen, bowlers, all-rounders, coaches and captains along with a host of other prominent sports journalists of the country.

    The broadcaster has also urged fans to pick their favourite IPL moment using #CricketConnected on Twitter and may even stand a chance to have their selections up for discussion on the show.

    The experts on the show will be dishing out their thoughts on Brendon McCullum’s blockbuster of an innings of 158 not out against Royal Challengers Bangalore in what was a perfect curtain-raiser that kick-started one of the biggest sporting extravaganzas of all time. McCullum's blistering knock in the very first match of the IPL in 2008 propelled Kolkata Knight Riders to a crushing 140-run victory.

    The cricket legends will also revisit the incredible story of Team India’s first-ever Test series win over arch-rivals Pakistan in 2004 that came under the astute leadership of Sourav Ganguly.

    #CricketConnected is a non-live chat show to fill in the void left by the absence of live events. In times when the sporting world has been forced to press the pause button due to COVID-19, Cricket Connected has proved to be that medium where fans can connect with their favourite experts.

    Each episode has segments that encourage fans to engage and interact with the cricketing legends. Segments such as “#AskStar” gives fans an opportunity to share their favourite cricket moments by sending their questions using #AskStar for the legends to answer.

  • Cricket veterans find October most suitable for IPL 2020

    Cricket veterans find October most suitable for IPL 2020

    MUMBAI: The Indian Premier League (IPL) has been the talk of the town ever since it was cancelled for the first time on account of the COVID-19 pandemic. Cricket enthusiasts and all the stakeholders, including the brands associated with the league, are eagerly awaiting an outcome: postponement or an outright cancellation. Cricket veterans Harbhajan Singh, Ashish Nehra and Sanjay Manjrekar joined the conversation on the IPL’s future during a talk show, hosted by Jatin Sapru, called Cricket Connected, on Star Sports channels and Hotstar.

    Discussing the possibilities about the IPL, the cricket legends, sharing a common view, hoped that India’s biggest domestic tournament will be held in the near future. For the first time ever, the Board of Control for Cricket in India has suspended the sport-entertainment event till 15 April. However, it seems like the lockdown is likely to continue and the chances of holding the IPL anytime soon look bleak.

    As COVID-19 has forced to scrap almost all sporting events across the globe, sports broadcasters are trying alternatives. Cricket Connected is one of the by-products of Star India’s strategy to lure the sports enthusiasts to its channels. The new show will have both English and Hindi versions and will be shown every Saturday at 7 pm, starting from 4 April.

    The players discussed three windows: May-June, August-October. With the rising cases in India, the first seems most unlikely. The panel considered the second and third option via video call discussions.

    These possibilities can only be considered if there are changes in the cricket calendar of the year. In August, Caribbean Premier League, Asia Cup and England home seasons are scheduled, whereas the International Cricket Council T20 World Cup is scheduled in October.  

    “If choices are given, October would be more preferable than August, as the month falls under the rainy season,” former pacer Ashish Nehra, who last played for Sunrisers Hyderabad in 2016, pointed out. “Also, if things normalise by June-July, a buffer of two-three months would help the tournament to regain momentum and settle the dust of the virus completely and cricket enthusiasts will also be seen on the stands cheering for their respective teams.”

    It has also been speculated that the stakeholders are thinking of holding a close-door stadium tournament. In this regard, Chennai Super Kings spinner Harbhajan Singh said: “As a player, I’ll definitely want the audience to be present on stands, but under the given circumstances, I don’t mind playing without spectators.”

    “There’s a possibility that we most likely will miss the vibe while playing closed-door matches as the audience builds enthusiasm and excitement for the game. They are important stakeholders during a live sporting event,” Singh said in his comment.

    Singh was replying to a Twitter user’s question, who asked about the closed-door option with hashtag #AskStar way before the chat show was scheduled.

    Comparing the IPL’s postponement with the tenth standard exam, the batsmen-turned-commentator Sanjay Manjrekar believes that it won’t be cancelled, just postponed till COVID-19 ends. He said: “The moment we get clearance from all the authorities, IPL should kick-start the economy, as there are many people making a livelihood out of it.”

    Estimates are that close to $1.5 billion is riding behind the IPL in terms of advertising, sponsorships and ticket sales. Global advisory Duff & Phelps estimates a huge loss of at least Rs 1000 crore if IPL gets cancelled due to the pandemic.