Tag: soccer World Cup

  • CNN looking for ‘Super Fans’ for soccer World Cup

    CNN looking for ‘Super Fans’ for soccer World Cup

    MUMBAI: With less than three months for the 2010 soccer World Cup to kick off in South Africa, CNN International is signing up a global army of football fanatics to become ‘Super Fans’.

    Tapping into CNN’s iReport community, the network is inviting passionate football fans around the world to submit videos outlining why they should be considered a ‘Super Fan’. Whether they are planning to cheer from the stadiums across South Africa, their local sports bars and pubs or are armchair pundits watching from their homes, all they need to do is have a passionate opinion about football and record a short video which needs to be submitted to www.cnn.com/ireport.

    CNN says that it wants to hear about the impact of the World Cup in every competing country and the selected ‘Super Fans’ will appear on air on CNN International and online at www.cnn.com/superfans over the coming weeks and months as the world counts down to 11 June. In India, the event will air on ESPN Star Sports.

    One can visit www.cnn.com/worldcup for an overview of CNN’s coverage of the 2010 Fifa World Cup including the latest football headlines; interviews with top players and coaches; a panoramic view inside Soccer City Stadium; a guide to all of South Africa’s World Cup venues; updates from the host country; and quizzes to test World Cup knowledge.

    One can also, follow CNN’s World Cup team on Twitter at www.twitter.com/WorldCupCNN to receive updates on teams and footballers plus information about CNN’s on-air and online coverage of the 2010 Fifa World Cup South Africa.

  • Zee Sports to telecast Fifa Beach Soccer World Cup ’06

    Zee Sports to telecast Fifa Beach Soccer World Cup ’06

    MUMBAI: Zee Sports will telecast live the Fifa Beach Soccer World Cup, the 10-day, 12-team tournament, which will take place on Rio de Janeiro’s Copacabana beach from 2 to 12 November 2006.

    The participation of international players such as Frenchman Eric Cantona, legendary Spanish strikers Michel and Julio Salinas and Brazilian stars such as Romario, Junior and Zico has helped to expand television coverage to large audiences in over 170 countries worldwide, making Beach Soccer one of the fastest growing professional sports in the world and converting it into a major showcase for international commercial opportunity.

    The biggest names in beach soccer are now preparing to face each other on the Copacabana beach from 2 to 12 November. They include Portugal’s raft of stars – Alan, Madjer, Hernani and Belchior – brothers Federico, Santigao and Ezequiel Hilaire of Argentina and also the Japanese sharpshooter Takeshi Kawaharazuka.

    Since 2005, Beach Soccer has been a part of the Fifa family. In May 2005, the first Fifa Beach Soccer World Cup was staged on Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro.

  • Soccer World Cup generates 135 million euro profit

    Soccer World Cup generates 135 million euro profit

    MUMBAI: Looks like the German soccer and tax authorities have netted a serious windfall from this year’s soccer World Cup.

    This summer’s World Cup turned out a real financial success for the German organizers.

    German football federation president Theo Zwanziger has been quoted in media reports saying that the event made a 135 million euro profit before tax.

    After tax, an amount of 56.6 million euros will be shared between the German Football Federation (DFB) and German Football League (DFL) while football’s governing body Fifa earned 40.8 million euros.

    Reports add that the accounts still need to be checked by Fifa auditors KPMG. The final figures will not be known until all work has been finalised but they could easily exceed the previously mentioned amount.

    Germany managed a strong attendance during the event which took place from 9 June 2006 to 9 July 2006.

  • Brazil stays soccer World Cup favourites on sports betting site

    Brazil stays soccer World Cup favourites on sports betting site

    MUMBAI: Now that the month-long soccer World Cup has reached the quarterfinal stage, only eight of 32 teams remain in contention for the trophy. World Cup favourites Brazil remains the bookmaker’s pick to win their sixth world championship at 5/2 odds.

    With the hopes of fans pinned on their national teams PinnacleSports.com, which claims to be the internet’s largest sports betting site, has announced updated odds on the eight
    remaining teams capturing soccer’s biggest prize.

    After a thrilling overtime victory over Mexico, PinnacleSports.com lists Argentina at 9/2 odds to become World Cup champions along with host-country Germany, who will face Argentina in the first quarterfinal match Friday.

    Meanwhile, Italy stands at 13/2 to capture their fourth World Cup following their controversial penalty-kick win over Australia.

    Despite uninspired play in both the Group stage and versus Ecuador, England currently stands at 7/1 to end the country’s 40-year World Cup drought. Meanwhile, PinnacleSports.com lists France (11/1), Portugal (14/1) and Ukraine (55/1) as long shots to emerge as world champions.

    PinnacleSports.com’s Simon Noble says, “Entering the tournament, Brazil was known for its explosive goal scoring ability, but after only allowing one goal in World Cup play, they appear to be equally skilled on the defensive end. Argentina has become a trendy World Cup pick with experts and bettors, but the young Argentineans next face the grueling task of playing the Germans in front of a hostile Berlin crowd. Although they advanced thanks to a controversial foul call in extra time, Italy, with their exceptional defense led by Buffon in goal, cannot be overlooked for the remainder of the tournament.”

    PinnacleSports.com is offering online betting options with limits of up to $50,000. For each match, Pinnacle Sports will offer three-way betting, low-margin Asian handicaps.

  • Soccer World Cup viewing in Germany up 51 per cent

    Soccer World Cup viewing in Germany up 51 per cent

    MUMBAI: Soccer’s governing body Fifa’s marketing agency Infront has been collating data for television audiences for the ongoing 2006 Fifa World Cup in Germany. And, it looks as if they are heading for the record books.

    It is clear that Germany’s quest for a fourth Fifa World Cup title has glued the host nation to the television, with viewing figures ‘at home’ up 51 per cent percent on average over the previous tournament in 2002.

    Meanwhile, from ‘overnight’ audience research in 45 key markets, a positive picture is emerging, with some surprising and significant trends. They are being collated by Sponsorship Intelligence, a UK-based research driven consultancy.

    Germany’s first four matches scored a combined TV audience on German public service broadcasters ZDF and ARD of 87.6 million, which gives an average of 21.9 million per match, according to data provided by Sponsorship Intelligence. This compares with an average 14.5 million viewers who followed each of the first four matches in 2002. It is also up on France 1998 – staged in Europe in the same time zone – which makes a fairer comparison.

    In 1998, the first four German games attracted a cumulative audience of 85.5 million, on average half a million viewers fewer per match than in 2006. Taking into consideration that huge public viewing is a feature of the 2006 event and not yet taken into account in these early figures, the total audience is likely to be much higher.

    In Berlin, for example, police estimated that up to one million fans converged on the official Fan Fest public viewing venue in front of the Brandenburger Tor on Saturday to watch the host nation beat Sweden for a quarterfinal berth.

    Also in Europe, the television rating for the live coverage of the Netherlands vs. Argentina match broadcast on NL2 was the highest of any broadcast so far. It achieved a rating of 52.5 per cent (TVR), an audience of 7.2 million viewers and a market share of 80.3 per cent.

    In England, 16.3 million UK television viewers watched England’s first “sudden death” match against Ecuador, broadcast live by the BBC. The figure equated to a 79 per cent audience share. The game was the second-highest-rated match of the World Cup thus far in the UK after ITV’s coverage of the England vs. Sweden tie last Tuesday, which averaged 18.8 million viewers and peaked at 20.9 million.

    Elsewhere, the international appeal of the tournament was illustrated by the fact that more people in China tuned into the England vs. Paraguay game than the entire populations of England and Paraguay. The match was broadcast in China on CCTV-5 at 9 pm in the evening, attracting 62.9 million viewers, with 22.3 per cent of China’s television viewers at that time choosing to watch the match.

    In South Korea, the France vs. Korean Republic match was watched by 11.2 million in Korea, a TVR of 24.9 per cent, which is good considering the match was shown at 4 am. The rating is only 7.3 points behind the rating of 32.2 per cent by TF1 in France.

    Brazil’s two opening matches attracted 60.5 million and 54.5 million respectively, both achieving a market share in the region of 90 per cent. The audience for Brazil’s match against Croatia was only 0.4 rating points short of the audience of 2002’s final match.

    16.8 million Argentinean viewers watched the Argentina vs. Ivory Coast game, a market share of 93.6 per cent.

    In the US, the Argentina-Mexico match broadcast on Univision was the most-watched sports telecast in the history of US Spanish-language television, with an average of 6.7 million viewers.

  • Net portal Lycos teams up with PermissionTV for online TV platform

    Net portal Lycos teams up with PermissionTV for online TV platform

    MUMBAI: US net portal Lycos is working with the broadband TV platform PermissionTV to offer a variety of video programming to its 25 million visitors. PermissionTV is a system for media companies and content owners to distribute television programming via the Internet.

    The two companies will team up to deliver a high quality TV entertainment solution to the nearly 25 million visitors to the Lycos Network of sites.

    Lycos will use the PermissionTV platform to offer a variety of video programming to the Lycos audience. Lycos says that the deal reinforces its core strategy to provide consumers with quality video programming and entertainment enhanced with the interactivity of the web, and a platform for creators to showcase and market quality content.

    Lycos CEO Alfred Tolle says, “We chose to work with PermissionTV because we considered it to be one of the most powerful broadband TV platforms available today, allowing us to offer high quality video to our end users that is television-centric, while providing our content partners their own customized channels with a completely unique look under the Lycos brand.

    “By teaming with PermissionTV, Lycos is uniquely positioned to become a leader in the television internet space.” Lycos plans to leverage the PermissionTV platform to acquire a wide range of on-demand content from episodic television, to independent films and programming, to long-form films, providing a totally unique broadband based video experience.

    PermissionTV CEO David Graves says, “The combination of Lycos’s reach, and PermissionTV’s advanced technology is an attractive proposition for video programmers who want to attract a large audience in the most compelling way. This platform makes it easy to get up and running, allowing content providers to build an audience for their own brands.”

    For sponsors, the enhanced online programming offers exactly what they have been seeking: the targetability of web advertising with content that fit expectations of traditional TV viewers. With the PermissionTV platform, Lycos is able to offer media companies and content owners a new distribution channel with subscription, advertising or VOD (video on demand) packaging options. Advertisers get a robust and cost-effective way of reaching potential buyers, while viewers get a controllable on-demand viewing experience that feels like TV.

    Tolle adds, “The era of merging the interactivity of the Web with traditional broadcast television programming is here. Lycos can bring an instant audience, immediate distribution and traffic, and consistently re- engage our users with new content, making this platform particularly attractive to content partners and advertisers alike.”

    The first programming kicked off on 9 June 2006 with the launch of Lycos’ behind- the-scenes video coverage of the soccer World Cup. For the remainder of World Cup, Lycos will give an insider’s look at World Cup culture, featuring exclusive video from embedded Lycos videographers on the front lines, available only at worldcup.lycos.com and powered by PermissionTV. Additional programming will be launched in the coming weeks, including branded television- and movie- related offerings that lend themselves to mainstream audience demand.

  • STMicroelectronics drives in-car mobile TV during soccer World Cup

    STMicroelectronics drives in-car mobile TV during soccer World Cup

    MUMBAI: STMicroelectronics which supplies semiconductors to digital consumer and automotive industries, has announced that its complete system solution for Mobile TV will be used in Europe’s first implementation of Terrestrial – Digital Multimedia Broadcasting (T-DMB ) receivers in the car.

    The pilot project, done in cooperation with Blaupunkt in Germany has been timed for the ongoing Soccer World Cup.

    As part of the trial, World Cup matches will be broadcast over DMB in 12 German cities, including Berlin, Munich and Cologne. Digital Multimedia Broadcasting (DMB) is a digital transmission system for sending data, radio, and TV to mobile devices, based on the Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) standard. The T-DMB Mobile TV service uses the existing DAB infrastructure, which is operational in Germany and most other European countries.

    Connected to the Dab radio receiver inside the car, the T-DMB decoder is based on ST’s t Nomadik mobile multimedia processor, the STn8810. ST says that the device emerged as a clear choice for the project, thanks to its video and audio quality, scalable performance, low power consumption, and advanced security features with digital rights management (DRM) support.

    Moreover, Nomadik’s software platform including video and audio codecs (e.g. MPEG4/H264, BSAC, ACC+) brings key advantages for product implementation and reduces time-to-market constraints. Nomadik’s distributed architecture combines a ARM9 processor with smart accelerators for audio and video decoding and an advanced power management unit on a single chip.

    The Nomadik SoC also features a set of peripheral interfaces for connection to the external components, including the car radio, digital-to-analogue converters for top-quality audio and video playback, memory cards (SD/MMC), or USB. Associated DMB software includes a Receiver Data Interface (RDI)decoder, error detection and correction software, the latest video (MPEG-4/H264) and audio (AAC) codecs, and software blocks for rendering and synchronizing audio and video data.

    The in-car Mobile TV solution is part of ST’s hardware and software platform, ready to address the demand for Multimedia convergence in the car. The platform is centered on ST’s Nomadik application processor and benefits from ST’s leadership in GPS receiver, radio tuner and Bluetooth ICs.

  • Soccer World Cup: Casbaa kicks off anti-piracy campaign

    Soccer World Cup: Casbaa kicks off anti-piracy campaign

    MUMBAI: The Cable & Satellite Broadcasting Association of Asia (Casbaa) has once again urged the Hong Kong hospitality sector to boost legitimate entertainment and sports industries, and not engage in signal piracy.

    As part of its long-term campaign, Casbaa and its members are seeking to further raise the consciousness of bars and clubs in Hong Kong that screening pay-TV services without legal subscriptions means they are operating outside of the law, states an official release.

    With the launch of the Fifa World Cup soccer competition in sight this Friday, Casbaa has reminded some 300 bars and clubs that legal action can be taken against those who air unlicensed pay-television broadcasts that infringe copyrights and the Hong Kong Broadcasting Ordinance. 

    The 300 advisory letters to the bars and clubs, including private members clubs, note that pay-TV television signal theft is not to be tolerated by government or industry, the release adds.

    Meanwhile, Casbaa commented that some progress is being made. During the past year, some bar owners have given undertakings to cease screening illegal TV broadcasts.

    “We commend those who screen only legitimate pay television broadcasts,” says Casbaa chairman Marcel Fenez. “And we continue to encourage bar-goers to contribute to Hong Kong’s economy by giving their patronage to businesses airing legal, Hong Kong-licensed TV services. Certainly we want the community to enjoy the World Cup, but to do so in a way that ensures adequate remuneration to Hong Kong’s service providers and the sports leagues who stage the games.”

    Under Hong Kong law, bars and clubs may only display pay-TV channels, under an appropriate subscription from a Hong Kong licensed pay-TV operator such as i-Cable or now Television. Other pay-TV operators such as UBC of Thailand, MultiChoice of South Africa and Dream of the Philippines are not authorised to offer pay-TV subscriptions in Hong Kong.

  • Worldspace associates with BBC & TWI for Soccer World Cup programming

    Worldspace associates with BBC & TWI for Soccer World Cup programming

    MUMBAI: Worldspace Satellite Radio has announced that subscribers in India can get the inside track on the world’s most popular sporting event as its channel Play! kicks off its coverage of the FIFA World Cup 2006.

    Play! is partnering with BBC and Trans World International to bring subscribers an exclusive mix of programming that captures the action, news, views and profiles from the World Cup.

    India’s top footballer, Baichung Bhutia, joins the Worldspace team as they decode the strategies, talk you through the day’s highlights from Germany, and rope you into the game with exciting contests and interactive programming initiatives, states an official release. Star profiles, background trivia on the stadiums, coaches and teams, daily previews, comments from fans, and expert analysis will be part of the programme offering.

    Playtime, the morning programming session on Play!, will air an hour and a half of football programming, sharing the previous day’s results, commentary bytes and vox-pops from fans in Germany as well as listeners from around the world. Playtime will also host a special call-in segment with Bhutia between 11:30 am and noon every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday during the World Cup, where subscribers will get to discuss the previous day’s goals, blunders and strategies, the release adds.

    Playground, the afternoon session, kicks off at noon with daily TWI updates and a weekly chat with Bhutia every Friday afternoon. Matthew Kenyon, Worldspace’s lead reporter at the FIFA World Cup, reports live from Germany, wrapping up the show with his predictions for the day’s games.

    Play! Quiz takes on a World Cup theme the entire month. Subscribers get a chance to win exclusive merchandise by answering football trivia on players, teams, coaches, venues and more.

  • ESS to share with DD semis, final of soccer World Cup

    ESS to share with DD semis, final of soccer World Cup

    NEW DELHI: ESPN Star Sports has reached an in-principal agreement with the government to make available the semi-final and final matches of FIFA World Cup soccer to Indian pubcaster Doordarshan.

    Confirming the development, ESPN India MD RC Venkateish said as an icing on the cake and a goodwill gesture, DD may end up with having the opening ceremony of the soccer feast too.

    ESS, which holds the exclusive rights of the soccer World Cup for the India region, will share the feeds of the above mentioned matches with DD on a 75:25 revenue share basis.

    This sort of a pact is on the lines of concessions that private broadcasters, holding exclusive rights for events held outside India, are ready to make involving Grand Slam tennis tournaments and important cricket series.

    Asked whether DD will have to do without the soccer World Cup as the `listed sports’ have not been notified as mandated by the newly-formulated downlink norms, a senior government official gave a non-committal answer.

    “The list of sports of national importance is not yet ready to be notified. So nothing definite can be said on soccer at the moment,” I&B additional secretary P Singh said today on the sidelines of a press conference called by Prasar Bharati, which manages DD and All India Radio.

    The downlink norms state that irrespective of the rights holder, all sporting events of national importance will have to be shared with the national broadcaster, Prasar Bharati, on a mandatory basis. This also includes events taking place outside India.

    However, both Ten Sports and ESS have moved the courts appealing against this norm.

    The month-long soccer World Cup, which begins in June 2006, is a hot property for any broadcaster in the world and despite India never reaching even the qualifying stages of the tournament, the number of soccer fans here is legion.

    Being one of ESS’ biggest properties for the year, the channel has already announced a slew of initiatives that it is hoping will build excitement.