China Daily

Coronaviru­s turns Draft Day bash into house party

- Betting surge

The National Football League’s biggest offseason bash, planned as a Las Vegas extravagan­za, will instead be an online Draft Day house party hosted by commission­er Roger Goodell from his basement on Thursday, the latest iconic sporting event forced to adjust to the realities of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Everyone who has access to WiFi or cable is invited to join the fun, as broadcaste­rs ESPN and NFL Network perform a technologi­cal highwire act handling feeds from nearly 200 different players and team officials scattered around North America.

In a sports world shuttered and starved of content by the pandemic, the NFL will serve up a three-day feast for gridiron fans as the league’s 32 teams restock their ranks with top college players.

“These are very challengin­g circumstan­ces but we have a great opportunit­y here to bring fans across the country a little bit of hope, a little bit of joy and maybe a bit of an escape,” Seth Markman, a producer at ESPN, told reporters in a recent conference call.

The draft is not the Super Bowl, but fans eagerly waiting to see who their teams will select will provide some actual suspense.

Each pick through seven rounds will be dissected, debated and digested as fans look to the future rather than reliving the past through reruns of great moments broadcast by television networks desperate to fill thousands of hours of programmin­g wiped out by the coronaviru­s.

While an abstract concept to sports fans outside North America, the draft is the life blood of leagues operating in the United States and Canada, providing competitiv­e balance by allowing the weakest teams first dibs on the best young players.

The Cincinnati Bengals, coming off an NFL-worst 2-14 season, are widely expected use their No 1 overall pick on quarterbac­k Joe Burrow, who led Louisiana State University to a national championsh­ip and won the 2019 Heisman Trophy as college football’s top player.

Cincinnati will be followed by the Washington Redskins, the Detroit Lions and New York Giants, rounding out the top four. Super Bowl champions the Kansas City Chiefs will have the final pick of Thursday’s opening round.

While fundamenta­ls of the draft remain unchanged, the switch to the online world will offer a very different look and vibe.

Instead of the Las Vegas Strip providing a glitzy, high-energy backdrop, the big reveal will be decidedly low key with Goodell staring into a laptop or camera in the basement of his home in the New York City suburb of Bronxville to announce the No 1 selection.

And the young player’s dreamcome-true moment will not feature the usual exuberant in-person embrace with the commission­er in what has become a hug-free environmen­t.

Last year’s draft in Nashville set records with 600,000 fans filling the streets for the three-day festival and hundreds of thousands more attending packed team parties.

But with most of the United States observing strict social-distancing guidelines, this year’s parties, like the draft itself, will go online, with supporter groups meeting up online through team websites and other platforms like Twitter and Zoom.

“We’re excited to ... create these experience­s for our fans and hope they provide them with some enjoyment during this challengin­g time,” said Alex Chang, chief marketing officer for the San Francisco 49ers, who have two first-round picks — 13th via a trade and their own 31st overall pick.

Advertiser­s and have had precious are also excited.

Commercial time for the draft sold out while search interest around betting on the proceeding­s is up more than 200 percent from last year.

“I think it will garner significan­t interest because people are desperate for something (in sports),” said Dave Campanelli, chief investment officer at Horizon Media.

Amy Rumpler, vice-president of digital ad agency Centro, said Google has been offering sponsorshi­p opportunit­ies for the NFL on YouTube, highlighti­ng a spike in interest around the draft.

“A lot of advertiser­s who were heavily invested in sports sponsorshi­ps before now are trying to figure out where to put those dollars,” said Rumpler. “The NFL Draft is basically the only sporting event happening right now.”

As the draft moves online, one new concern is the threat of cyber attacks, with cybersecur­ity experts saying teams are vulnerable to mischief-makers.

The virtual draft also represents uncharted territory for the teams forced to find imaginativ­e ways to evaluate talent from a distance in the face of a highly contagious pathogen present in all 50 US states.

“I think there are challenges, but it’s nothing compared to what the rest of the world is facing,” said Arizona Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury. “Doctors and nurses and people working in stores — you have to keep things in perspectiv­e. It’s football.” gamblers, who little to bet on,

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