The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Prospects ready for closeup from home

- By Joe Reedy

Yetur Gross-Matos would have liked to have been in Las Vegas for the NFL draft on Thursday night, but the Penn State defensive lineman is OK with participat­ing from home.

Gross-Matos is one of 58 prospects who will take part remotely in the draft, which has gone virtual this year because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The players received video kits from the NFL that will record their reactions to being selected, whether it is during the first round on Thursday, second or third rounds on Friday, or during the remaining four rounds on Saturday.

“I would have liked to go to the draft because it would have been a great experience. But being at home with a few people and family is more comfortabl­e,” said GrossMatos, who will be watching from his home in Fredericks­burg, Virginia, with his mom, dad, brother, girlfriend and trainer.

The kits sent to prospects include two cellphones, two light stands, a pair of tripods, a headset for interviews and a microphone. One of the phone cameras will be on the entire time until the player is selected while the other will be used for interviews with ESPN/NFL Network, Commission­er Roger Goodell and the teams that pick them.

The package also includes hats from all 32 teams, so the players can put on the right one after they’re selected.

The NFL had the prospects run a test Tuesday in which they called in and showed their setups and ensured the connection­s were stable. Gross-Matos said he has both cameras set up in his living room. One will be focused on where he will be sitting to capture his reactions. He has positioned the other next to a window for a more picturesqu­e setting when he is being interviewe­d. Most mock drafts have Gross-Matos being selected in the first round.

The draft is yet another step in what has become a virtual process since the onset of the pandemic shortly after the NFL combine. With pro days canceled and teams not sending anyone on the road, most of the pre-draft interviews have been done on Zoom or FaceTime.

“It has been a little odd forming connection­s with people, but as it kept going on I took it as an educationa­l process,” Gross-Matos said.

Michelle McKenna, the NFL’s chief informatio­n officer, said prospects have had an easier time adjusting to things being done virtually.

“You don’t have to tell them how to mute or unmute a phone because they know how to do it,” she said. “The only issues have been making sure the framing and lighting were going to be right.”

What viewers will see during the draft required building out a massive technical infrastruc­ture over just a few weeks. Some of it already existed because of the amount of video transmitte­d during games, but this is more extensive because of the more than 100 feeds coming in from prospects, general managers, coaches and fans. Three call centers have been set up to serve as the main point of communicat­ion before they are transferre­d to the ESPN/NFL Network production center in Bristol, Connecticu­t, to be interviewe­d.

“I’ve done a lot in my career and I thought nothing would ever top the challenges of being part of the team for the (design and launch of) Wizarding World of Harry Potter (at Universal Studios Orlando). This tops that,” said McKenna, who has been with the NFL since 2012. “The coordinati­on of building and testing while setting it up in three weeks has been incredible. There isn’t a lot of time to talk through changes.”

McKenna said her department has been in contact with internet providers in prospects’ hometowns to make sure there is increased bandwidth to avoid lags or delays. They also monitored last Friday’s WNBA draft, also done in a virtual format, to see how interviews went.

“We realize it is going to be a unique opportunit­y to feel that we are staying home and being safe,” she said. “We want it to be authentic instead of overdressi­ng it with backdrops or other things.”

 ?? ROGER STEINMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Dec. 28, 2019, photo, Penn State defensive end Yetur GrossMatos (99) faces off against Memphis in the Cotton Bowl in Arlington, Texas. Gross-Matos would have liked to be in Las Vegas on Thursday, April 23, 2020, with other NFL draft prospects, but the Penn State defensive lineman is just as comfortabl­e watching it at home.
ROGER STEINMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Dec. 28, 2019, photo, Penn State defensive end Yetur GrossMatos (99) faces off against Memphis in the Cotton Bowl in Arlington, Texas. Gross-Matos would have liked to be in Las Vegas on Thursday, April 23, 2020, with other NFL draft prospects, but the Penn State defensive lineman is just as comfortabl­e watching it at home.

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