Ottawa Citizen

Take me out to the screen: Baseball in virtual reality

- RONALD BLUM

Nicholas Montes put on goggles and a catcher’s mitt and crouched.

The 13-year-old will never catch a 104 miles-per-hour pitch from Aroldis Chapman. But at the AllStar FanFest, he felt what it’s like to be Buster Posey snagging virtual strikes.

“It was like I was actually in the game. When I was catching, I felt the ball move and everything,” the Miami teen said enthusiast­ically Sunday. “And then when I saw it go in my glove, I tried touching the ball, but I felt the remote control thing. So it was pretty cool.”

Developed by GMR Marketing, the Esurance Behind The Plate With Buster Posey VR Experience allows fans to “catch” fastballs, curveballs and sliders from a generic pitcher at velocities ranging from 86-93 mph.

“I’ve always said that I thought it would be cool for the average fan to either step in the box or like this get behind the plate and get the same sense of what it’s like to see a 90-plus, 95-mile an hour fastball coming your way,” Posey explained last week.

Esurance Insurance Services Inc., a subsidiary of Allstate Corp., became a sponsor of Major League Baseball in 2015 and signed Posey as a brand ambassador. The company had a 180-degree photo experience at the 2015 FanFest in Cincinnati, then provided 360-degree videos of fans taking swings last year in San Diego.

In a dual setup at FanFest, which opened Friday and runs through Tuesday, people get to signal for three pitches over about 90 seconds as Posey’s recorded voice offers tips. They can choose the pitch type by pointing their glove toward an icon on the screen, triggering a sensor. When a pitch is successful­ly caught, the person hears and feels the mitt snap.

“It is as real as it can be,” Danny Devarona, a 48-year-old who coaches youth baseball in Miami Lakes, said after taking his turn.

Commercial and social media content was shot over two days during spring training in Scottsdale, Arizona, where Posey’s San Francisco Giants train. Posey’s voice-over was recorded after the season started.

Based on PITCH f/x data, breaks of 38-to-52 inches are simulated.

“Fans will receive a social-shareable video for them that they can then distribute to their friends,” said Kristen Gambetta, Esurance’s brand partnershi­ps manager. “With VR, there’s something really entertaini­ng about seeing people’s facial reactions and kind of seeing their movements and how they react to having a ball flying at their face.”

Several thousand fans were expected to put on the electronic “tools of ignorance” over the five days. And unlike real catchers, they won’t have to stuff sponges in the glove to absorb the impact.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Fans look at enlarged baseball cards of the Marlins’ Giancarlo Stanton, left, and the Yankees’ Aaron Judge at the All-Star FanFest in Miami Beach, Fla. VR baseball is a hit at the convention.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Fans look at enlarged baseball cards of the Marlins’ Giancarlo Stanton, left, and the Yankees’ Aaron Judge at the All-Star FanFest in Miami Beach, Fla. VR baseball is a hit at the convention.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada