logo
NHL is expanding use of Hawk-Eye measuring and tracking. It may eventually solve some on-ice issues

NHL is expanding use of Hawk-Eye measuring and tracking. It may eventually solve some on-ice issues

Commissioner Gary Bettman at the NHL general managers meeting this spring had a clear answer for when the league might be able to use tracking technology to determine a variety of things with certainty, from high-sticking to whether a puck fully crossed the goal line.
'When we're certain that it works,' Bettman said at the time. 'We will test it and re-test it, but we haven't hesitated to spend the money or the time on technology to improve the game.'
The NHL is taking another step in that innovation with the expansion of the use of Hawk-Eye measuring and tracking techology as part of a new techology partnership with Sony announced Wednesday, hours before the start of the Stanley Cup Final.
The same technology that has become omnipresent in tennis to determine whether the ball is in or out has evolved to the point that it could in help hockey officials and the league's situation room make more precise calls for close plays on the ice.
'We're closer — we keep getting closer,' NHL executive VP of business development and innovation David Lehanski said. 'It's going to be a solution that includes multiple inputs and different types of technology. ... Likely it will be a combination of active tracking in the puck, in the players, the jerseys — wherever it might be — optical cameras and maybe some other type of technology that all need to get stitched together.'
The league has used Sony's Hawk-Eye technology for the past decade as part of Synchronized Multi-Angle Replay Technology (SMART) services in every team's arena to make replay reviews and coach's challenges faster and more accurate. It also helps organizations keep track of player health and safety.
The technology has improved to the point where cameras capture 29 skeletal points on each player and three more on sticks.
'What that enables us to do is to have an incredibly high-fidelity, low-latency view of the athletes' movements in real time,' Hawk-Eye Innovations CEO Rufus Hack said. 'The NHL have a real clear vision around what they're going to do with this, but obviously it's still very much in the early stages of what that could look like for them.'
Lehanski said a mix of various tech elements could help on the ice with everything from penalties to positioning on the ice. Off the ice, beyond animated telecasts and visualizations that will continue, the league is hoping Sony cameras can get the home viewing experience closer to in-arena excitement.
'(It's about trying to) bring that game experience into everyone's homes,' Sony president of imaging products and solutions in the Americas Theresa Alesso said. 'As the cameras get better and smaller and lighter, get those angles to the game into someone's living room is really important.'
___
AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/NHL

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Top NHL draft prospect Matthew Schaefer not letting personal tragedies define him
Top NHL draft prospect Matthew Schaefer not letting personal tragedies define him

NBC Sports

timean hour ago

  • NBC Sports

Top NHL draft prospect Matthew Schaefer not letting personal tragedies define him

When the time comes for defenseman Matthew Schaefer to take the stage at the NHL draft inside the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles this week, the top-ranked prospect won't be climbing the stairs alone. There's no doubt in Schaefer's mind his late mother Jennifer will be accompanying him in spirit. It will stand as a joyous moment for the 17-year-old Erie Otters player celebrating the person who's been at his side for every step even after she died of cancer some 16 months ago. 'I love talking about my mom, because I talk about the happy memories instead of the sad memories,' Schaefer said. He recalled the times Jennifer suited up in goalie equipment to face shots from him and his older brother. Even when sick, she'd muster the energy to play mini-sticks in the family basement. 'She's always with me in spirit. I know she has a front-row seat to every game,' Schaefer added. 'I just want to carry on her legacy and character and the person she was.' His mother's poise and strength are reflected in shaping Schaefer's-upbeat perspective in the face of other losses and setbacks. Some two months before Schaefer's mother died, the mother of his billet family was struck and killed by a train in what was ruled a death by suicide. In December, he was in Ottawa representing Canada at the world junior championships when Otters owner and Schaefer's mentor, Jim Waters, died of a heart attack. Schaefer broke his collarbone at the tournament, forcing him to miss the final three months of the season. Through it all, Schaefer refuses to be defined by pain and tragedy. 'My mindset has changed a lot with everything. Just seeing what my mom went through, having a smile on her face with cancer kind of trying to bring her down, but she wouldn't let it,' he said. 'She's the strongest person I've ever known.' No. 1 in Central Scouting rankings A testament to Schaefer's perseverance: The 6-foot-2, 183-pound player from Hamilton, Ontario, has remained atop NHL Central Scouting's rankings among North American skaters with the two-day draft opening on Friday. Though the debate between ranking Schaefer over high-scoring OHL Saginaw Spirit center Michael Misa was close, scouting director Dan Marr said Schaefer earned the nod because of the development he showed when healthy. Marr referred to Schaefer as 'stealing the show' at Canada's Under-18 summer camp before scoring six points (two goals, four assists) in captaining Canada to win the Hlinka/Gretzky Cup in August. After missing the start of the OHL season with mononucleosis, he posted 22 points (seven goals, 15 assists) in 17 games with Erie before being sidelined at the world juniors. 'He's one of the guys I think teams can safely interpret what you see is what you get,' Marr said of a two-way, fluid-skating defenseman who is responsible defensively, a play-maker offensively, and labeled 'a special talent' by Central Scouting. What's unmeasurable is Schaefer's character. 'He's just a breath of fresh air,' Marr said. It's a quality Otters forward Malcolm Spence saw in Schaefer every day as a roommate. 'He's a guy that you wouldn't even know what he's gone through,' Spence said. 'He wakes up every day with a smile on his face.' Engaging personality Schaefer's engaging personality was on display throughout the pre-draft combine in Buffalo, New York, followed by him joining top prospects in attending Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final in Florida. In skipping the combine's bench-press and pullup testing portions, he urged his fellow prospects to succeed. In Florida, Schaefer recalled how his hotel room wasn't ready upon arrival, so he took advantage of a sunny day. 'We got a little tan going on, a couple of us,' he said. 'I'm happy with that. I'm pretty light as it is. I have a hockey rink tan, as I'd say.' The only thing fazing him was being awestruck in meeting several NHL players, including Florida's Brad Marchand and Edmonton's Connor McDavid, a former Otters player who went No. 1 in the 2015 draft. Schaefer elicited a laugh when saying he was rooting for the Oilers, before noting he failed to mention that in meeting Marchand. Sharing his story There is a serious side to Schaefer, evident during the combine. He made a point to visit a Buffalo-area outreach group for grieving youths. Gwen Mysiak, co-founder of Western New York Compassion Connection, was impressed by how Schaefer engaged an audience that included about 15 youths, ranging in ages 7 to 17. 'When he walked through these doors, you sensed the genuine nature he has, and how passionate he is to make a difference with all his pain,' she said. 'To have peer support coming from a young man like that on the precipice of his NHL career was a gift,' added Mysiak, whose husband died two years ago. 'I will be watching the NHL draft for the first time in my life because he really captured our hearts.' Schaefer said the visit was the least he could do, noting he skipped his high school graduation ceremony to be there. 'There's young kids that are going through tough times. A lot of people love to keep it in, and I want to try to put their minds at ease in any way,' Schaefer said, before reflecting on his experiences. 'You know, if love could have saved them, they would have lived forever. That's a good saying I go by,' he said. 'But everything happens for a reason in life. Makes me super stronger. And I want to help people.'

NBA, NHL Ratings Swoon Can Only Be Fixed by Game 7
NBA, NHL Ratings Swoon Can Only Be Fixed by Game 7

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

NBA, NHL Ratings Swoon Can Only Be Fixed by Game 7

A question for all those casual hockey fans—an oxymoron, but we'll let it slide—who have yet to overcome their apathy for the Oilers-Panthers Stanley Cup Final rematch: What's it going to take to get you to tune in to this nerve-chewingly entertaining series? Four games in, and everything's all tied up at 2-2 after Thursday night's lunacy, which featured Edmonton rallying to undo a 3-0 first-period deficit and Florida's Sam Reinhart potting the tying goal with just 19.5 ticks left on the clock. This marked the third game of the series to require bonus cantos, two of which were triggered by a goal that knotted up the score within the final 20 seconds of regulation. Advertisement More from If tight, evenly matched games aren't your thing—but for the 6-1 blowout in Game 3, this Final has been riveting throughout—perhaps all the scoring might convince you to engage with the NHL title tilt. With 32 goals, the series now stands as the fourth-highest scoring Final through four games in the history of the league. TNT Sports thus far hasn't been able to capitalize on this bonkers matchup, and while the unspectacular TV ratings aren't terribly shocking, the deliveries are nowhere near commensurate with the quality of hockey on display. Through the first three telecasts, TNT/truTV's coverage is averaging 2.41 million viewers per night, down 28% compared to ABC's analogous stretch (3.34 million) one year ago and off 8% from the pace set when the Warner Bros. Discovery networks carried their first Final in 2023 (2.63 million). Little wonder. A rematch between a Sunbelt squad and a Canadian team with no stateside market representation was already going to be a drag on the ratings, but the absence of a big-reach broadcaster really seems to have put the squeeze on the NHL's numbers in the States. Cord-cutting is showing little sign of letting up, as the legacy pay-TV bundle lost another 12% of its subscriber base in the first quarter, bringing overall penetration down to just 36% of all U.S. TV households. Advertisement Since TNT Sports covered the five-game Golden Knights-Panthers series in 2023, some 13.1 million subscribers have ditched the bundle, an erasure that obviously isn't working in the rights-holder's favor. And while virtual MVPDs are doing their bit to offset at least some of those cable/satellite/telco-TV defections, the arrows are still pointing downward. (According to MoffettNathanson estimates, approximately 65.2 million consumers subscribe to some sort of video package; given a universe of 125.8 million U.S. TV homes, overall pay-TV penetration is now at 52%. When cable was at its peak in 2012, more than 90% of Americans bought the bundle.) If there's a silver lining to these cable-throttled Final deliveries, it's that the NHL is guaranteed at least a six-game set. (And given the dizzying back-and-forth nature of this year's series, a seventh game all but seems predestined.) Historically, the sixth frame is when even the lesser-watched series tend to see a significant uptick in deliveries, and a seventh telecast always draws a crowd. The deciding game in last year's Final scared up 7.66 million viewers on ABC, a stampede that boosted the overall series average by 16%. Meanwhile, the Oilers' quest to hoist Canada's first Cup since 1993 has kept fans to our north locked in, as Sportsnet/CBC are averaging 4.19 million viewers through Game 3. All told, the Final is averaging 6.6 million viewers across the NHL's home nations. As hockey awaits the boost that accompanies a long series, basketball faces a similar narrowing of interest. Through Wednesday night's broadcast of Game 3 of the NBA Finals, ABC is averaging 8.95 million viewers, down 23% versus the year-ago 11.6 million. Advertisement While a protracted series would go a long way toward beefing up the TV numbers, the turnout thus far has been blighted by a combination of small markets and relatively anonymous players. With a combined home-market reach of 1.99 million TV households, No. 25 Indianapolis and No. 47 Oklahoma City represent just 1.6% of all U.S. TV homes. (New York City alone boasts 7.49 million TV homes, or 6% of the national base.) In advance of Wednesday night's game in Indy, NBA commissioner Adam Silver dropped in on NBA Countdown, where he tried to find the upside to the ratings crunch. Silver noted that Games 1 and 2 were the 'highest-rated programs in May and June so far on television,' before going on to say that the hometown fans have been captivated by the Pacers-Thunder series. 'We have two markets … that are completely captured by the Finals,' Silver said. 'Every store you go to, there's signage. Everybody on the street is wearing team colors. I've been doing this for a long time; I don't remember being in two markets where it feels so dominant to have these games.' That's all very well and good, but 98.4% of Americans don't reside in either market. If the Finals are to get a ratings bump, the Basketball Gods will need to serve up a seventh game. And ABC wouldn't say no to a full slate, either; a half-dozen games should generate north of $250 million in ad revenue, while precedent suggests that a seven-night run will yield more than $300 million in marketing spend. Advertisement If the Finals grind on for the full seven games, the bonus deliveries will help pull ABC out of a deep ratings hole; through the first three broadcasts, the TV numbers are on pace to underperform every previous title series but for the 2020 bubble matchup. That said, Game 7s aren't easy to come by. In the last quarter-century, only four series have required a seventh frame, with the average audiences ranging from 19 million for the Spurs-Pistons clincher in 2005 to 31 million for the second Cavs-Warriors series nine years ago. As with the NHL, every day the 2024-25 season gets extended is a win for the NBA. That said, if Indiana wins Game 4, the Thunder may not be long for this world. Once heavily favored to win the title at -700, Oklahoma City now faces a 2-1 deficit and has seen its odds whittled down to -230. If nothing else, this suggests that bettors are expecting a protracted run, as OKC will need at least six if they're to get past a confounding Pacers squad. Game 4 tips off Friday night at 8:30 p.m. ET. Best of Sign up for Sportico's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Sam Reinhart wasn't at the Panthers' first parade. He lived it up this time
Sam Reinhart wasn't at the Panthers' first parade. He lived it up this time

Miami Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Sam Reinhart wasn't at the Panthers' first parade. He lived it up this time

Sam Reinhart made his way to the stage on Fort Lauderdale Beach on top of Brad Marchand's shoulders, pumping his fist and firing up a crowd of more than 200,000 Florida Panthers fans on Sunday afternoon. It was a moment long in the making. Reinhart didn't take part in the Panthers' championship parade last year when they won the Stanley Cup for the first time in franchise history because he had to attend his best friend's wedding that day. 'Obviously you'd love to be there for the parade and to celebrate with the fans,' Reinhart, who scored the game-winning goal in Game 7 of the 2024 Stanley Cup Final to secure the championship, said at the start of training camp. 'Certainly there's some FOMO [fear of missing out] there, but I made the right decision. I know that. Hopefully, it's something we can build towards again and I'll be there for the next one.' Fast forward one year, and here the Panthers are again on Fort Lauderdale Beach after winning a second consecutive Stanley Cup — something only six other teams have accomplished in the expansion era (since the 1967-68 season). And this time, Reinhart was there to enjoy in the festivities. After entering on Marchand's shoulders, he took the mic from captain Aleksander Barkov as a few notable plays from his Stanley Cup playoff run — including his first of four goals in the Cup-clinching Game 6 of the Cup Final against Edmonton — played on screen. 'The only thing I've heard all day is how this is the best parade that's ever happened in South Florida,' Reinhart said. 'Thank God I missed last year and not this year.' Reinhart then channeled in inner DJ Khaled for the rest of his speech. 'We the best! And I mean that!' said Reinhart, who led the Panthers with 39 goals and 81 points in the regular season, tied for the team lead with 23 points (11 goals, 12 assists in the playoffs) and finished runner-up to Barkov for the Selke Trophy given annually to the NHL's best defensive forward. 'Another one!' It capped a wild week that saw Reinhart unleash his wild side. His peak moments came Thursday night into Friday morning when the team went to E11even, a worldwide known nightclub in Miami. Reinhart climbed a stripper pole to grab a signed Barkov jersey from the a trapeze bar hanging from the rafters to chants of his nickname, 'Reino! Reino!' Later in the night, Reinhart was seen with forward Evan Rodrigues pouring shots down people's throats and even handing out full bottles. 'Reino's had a couple legendary moments so far,' Marchand said. Added coach Paul Maurice on Saturday: 'I would think any celebration and anything that he would enjoy like that would be strictly for the other players, the laughter amongst them, right? Sam's not trying to build a brand here, but he has one in our room. He's got a great sense of humor. He's very, very bright. Really well spoken. Understands the game at a high level. He understands the game completely differently and on a higher level than I do because he's a player. He's a quiet man, but he has a voice. When you need it, he will say something on the bench. He has a great sense of when they need him to speak and he has that time.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store