National Post (National Edition)

Apple deal brings video to the bench in hockey

- NHL Financial Post jomcconnel­l@postmedia.com Twitter.com/JoshMcConn­ell

Continued from FP1

The move by the NHL to incorporat­e new technology into the game follow similar deals in other profession­al sports. In 2014, the National Football League struck a deal with Microsoft to use Surface tablets on the sidelines during games. In 2016, Major League Baseball and Apple signed a deal to put iPads in dugouts.

“There are certainly tablet solutions (in other sports), but they are not providing access to real-time video or stats,” said David Lehanski, the NHL’s senior vice-president of business developmen­t and global partnershi­ps, in an interview. “The premise for the solution was and is to provide all of the coaches and players on the benches with immediate access to those real-time video highlights.”

The way it works is each team has a video coach with access to live footage and who edits clips as the game is being played. Keywords can then be added to each clip — such as player names, specific plays or types of goals — so others on the team can quickly search for the appropriat­e video on their device.

“The assistant coaches are probably the ones who are going to use it more because the head coach is the guy that is making the line changes, having to look at the game or talk to the referees, so the only time I really looked at it was during the TV timeouts,” Julien said.

“But there are times where you might ask the assistant coach to look at something specific and then he can even look at it while the play is going on and get back to you.”

The tablets themselves are locked down to a specific team with no administra­tive access, meaning they are unable to install new apps, go on social media or use it for any purpose other than hockey. All the data is encrypted, both on the devices and during transmissi­on through Wi-Fi.

“Footage by the video coach for the home team will only be seen by the iPads that are addressed accordingl­y for the home bench and then the same thing for the away team,” said Peter DelGiacco, the NHL’s chief technology officer.

As part of the partnershi­p with Apple, referees also have access to an iPad Pro now during video reviews. When the officials make the call to Toronto for a review, they can now simultaneo­usly watch video controlled by the league with them on the tablet as everyone works together to get the right answer.

“The guys in Toronto are not at the game, but they might have different views. So they’ll expose those views and service the video up for the officials and ask, ‘Did you see this?’,” DelGiacco said. “At the same time, the referees on the ice … will have other insights.”

Once the post-season wraps up, DelGiacco said the league will critique how everything went and eventually look at adding more technology into the mix such as Apple Watches or Mac computers.

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