Texarkana Gazette

NBC play-by-play announcers will not attend Winter Olympics in Beijing

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NEW YORK — COVID-19 protocols will keep NBC Sports’ play-by-play teams from reporting on the scene at the Winter Olympic games in Beijing next month.

Greg Hughes, senior vice president of communicat­ions for the NBC Sports Group, said Wednesday that the announcing teams will be based at the sports division’s studios in Stamford, Conn., rather than subject them to the risk of contractin­g the omicron variant of the coronaviru­s that has been on the rise in China.

The pageantry of the Olympics being held in a far-flung location is part of the allure for viewers, and not having announcers on the scene could detract from that atmosphere.

But Hughes said viewers may not notice the difference as announcing teams for various major sports have been working remotely since the middle of 2020, when live action resumed in stadiums and arenas throughout the U.S. following a pause for the pandemic.

“Technology allows for this and we’ve learned and adapted,” he said. “The viewer experience will be the same as it would have been otherwise, at a very high level.”

While NBC faced COVID-19 challenges deploying teams to Tokyo for the Summer Olympics in 2021, commentato­rs — including former Olympian Michael Phelps and “Today” show” talent Hoda Kotb — were in Japan for major events such as gymnastics and swimming.

But all other sports were covered from Stamford.

The Games in Beijing are already fraught as the U.S. has declared a diplomatic boycott of the event to protest China’s human rights abuses. Athletes have been warned about speaking up on human rights issues while in China for their own safety.

Having announcers call an event without being in the stadium or arena became a common practice for sports TV networks even before the pandemic hit. NBC Sports had play-by-play teams in its New York studios calling events for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.

NBC Sports planned to send three teams to Beijing to cover the Winter Games, which run from Feb. 4-20.

But with the higher sensitivit­y of coronaviru­s testing in China, the likelihood of positive outcomes are high, potentiall­y putting announcing teams out of commission once they were in the country. NBC is still sending several hundred technical and support staff to the games.

Some familiar on-air names will be on location.

Mike Tirico, the lead host of the Olympics, will be in Beijing for some portion of the Winter Games, but is returning to the U.S. for NBC’s coverage of Super Bowl LVI, being played Feb. 13 in Los Angeles. Craig Melvin, the news anchor for NBC’s “Today,” will be reporting from Beijing for at least a week.

Other personalit­ies were already scheduled to work remotely, including studio host Maria Taylor and “Today” co-host Savannah Guthrie, who will handle commentary during the opening ceremonies. Both will be working out of NBC’s New York studios.

The Olympic Games have long been a cornerston­e of NBCUnivers­al business.

In 2014, the media company committed $12 billion to extend its partnershi­p with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee through 2032.

Every two years, NBCUnivers­al has used its 17 days of Olympics coverage to showcase its sports division and forge relationsh­ips with key advertiser­s, pay-TV distributo­rs and millions of viewers.

Its Olympics telecasts typically crush the competitio­n in the ratings. However, massive audiences have become less of a sure thing due to a fractured TV landscape, competitio­n from streaming services and fewer marquee athletes.

Ratings typically rise and fall based on the strength of the performanc­e of the U.S. athletes, and NBC does better when it has big-name athletes to promote.

NBCUnivers­al is also hoping to use the Beijing Games to help redefine how the audience is counted. The company has contracted with research firm iSpot.tv to provide data that will combine the number of viewers watching on traditiona­l TV and steaming platforms, including Peacock, which will carry every event shown on NBC’s cable and broadcast networks.

NBCUnivers­al also has used the past two Games to market its 18-month-old Peacock service as the place to watch hours of coverage of individual sports. The company plans to live stream events on its $4.99-a-month streaming service.

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