Las Vegas Review-Journal

New pregame trickery: Distract the visiting team with bad Youtube videos

- By Kelly Whiteside New York Times News Service

PISCATAWAY, N.J. — As the Seton Hall men’s basketball team warmed up for a game at Rutgers recently, a strange baritone filled the arena. Players stopped their stretching routines, gaping at a giant video board overhead playing a 1970s video clip of a Russian singer crooning, “Trolololo la/oh ha ha ha ho!”

In the video, the singer, Eduard Khil, wearing a double-breasted suit, a frozen smile and a coif like the clip-on hair of a toy figurine, ambles across a mustard-colored backdrop like a mannequin come to life. It was impossible to look away.

Which was the point.

The brief disruption to Seton Hall’s pregame preparatio­n was a form of old-school gamesmansh­ip with a new-school twist. “Their players were looking up at the video board, and we thought, ‘Wow this is making a little bit of difference,’” said Mike Greengarte­n, Rutgers’ assistant director of marketing, who played a role in having the video shown. “‘It’s getting in their head a little bit.’”

Distractio­n has long been part of college basketball. As opponents attempt free throws, fans float giant cardboard heads or act out behind the basket. Teams often use music to troll their opponents during the game.

And pregame antics have been common, too; more than 30 years ago, Iowa had the visiting players’ locker room painted pink.

But for this generation, YouTube clips on an arena screen seem much more of the moment, and Rutgers appears to be one of the few schools to deploy such curated, psychologi­cal warfare.

Its impact is unclear. The Scarlet Knights are 2-2 at home (including an upset of Seton Hall) since employing the pregame antics in December, but at least they’re able to laugh about it.

“Everyone is so sensitive about everything. This stuff is supposed to be fun,” ESPN college basketball analyst Jay Bilas said. “The fact that the NBA has more fun than college is disturbing. They can enjoy what’s going on around them and then lock into what they’re supposed to do. The college guys certainly can do it, too.”

Seton Hall officials declined to comment on the Mr. Trololo video. Representa­tives at the schools that beat Rutgers while being subjected to the bizarre clips, Stony Brook and Hartford, did not respond to requests for comment.

Rutgers defeated Wisconsin on Friday at home with its most extensive playlist yet — seven minutes of Youtube absurdity that included singing bananas in pajamas and Donny and Marie Osmond.

“I told the guys to stay focused,” said Aaron Moesch, a Wisconsin senior. “I don’t think I’ve ever experience­d anything like that before in any arena.”

Some see gamesmansh­ip, sportsmans­hip and humor as a strange mix. The idea of tricks, however benign, to rattle rivals “seems antithetic­al to hosting someone, to the roots of competitio­n to strive together,” said Jack Bowen, author of the book “Sport, Ethics and Leadership.” But he had to admit, it’s funny. “There is something clever in what they’re doing,” Bowen said. “On one hand I like it; it’s not in your face. It’s not doing anything explicitly wrong. It’s the kind of things that millennial­s will say, ‘Wow, that is an awesome way to throw these people off.’”

The videos do resonate with the intended audience.

“We’re the first generation to grow up with Youtube,” said Jordan Cohen, a Rutgers senior who recorded the Mr. Trololo moment and tweeted it.

The idea for the pregame distractio­ns arose from a bit of one-upsmanship. During Rutgers’ warm-ups at Minnesota in early December, the Gophers played songs such as the Weather Girls’ “It’s Raining Men.”

“We heard some ridiculous songs and we were like, ‘We can do better than that,’” Greengarte­n said. Four members of the athletic staff, including two 20-somethings, compiled a list of silly Youtube clips for pregame deployment.

In the game after the Seton Hall upset, against Stony Brook, a clip of “Dominick the Donkey” — Hey, chingedy ching, hee haw, hee haw/it’s Dominick, the donkey — appeared on screen as Stony Brook warmed up. A video of the Village People’s “Go West” followed, but was cut short when Rutgers players emerged from their locker room for pregame introducti­ons. (The Scarlet Knights warm up to a selection of hip-hop music.)

Nowadays, it’s hard for Greengarte­n and the video crew to walk through the Scarlet Knights’ athletic offices without staff members suggesting some random yodeling video.

Amid the monotony of loading the routine items on the video board such as player introducti­ons or advertisin­g spots, there is now a little opportunit­y for creativity.

And given the outer reaches of online absurdity, the list of possibilit­ies is long. Greengarte­n has put 100 suggestion­s on a list, categorize­d under genres like “Songs That Make No Sense” (see “The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins,” sung by Leonard Nimoy.) Under “Funny Sounds/videos,” the “Whistler Mullet Guy” looms large.

Against Hartford, in the hours before the game, Colin Osborne, production director, and Tim Demartin, production coordinato­r, scrolled through clips on their control system.

At first I was afraid/i was petrified …

“Gloria Gaynor and disco roller skates, come on,” Osborne said of the video for “I Will Survive,” but ultimately it didn’t make the cut.

“Pennsylvan­ia Polka,” performed by cast members of “The Lawrence Welk Show,” did. Hartford players paused their pregame passing drills and stared at the video board as it segued into the “Brady Bunch” kids singing “It’s a Sunshine Day.”

The effect of this mash-up was fleeting. The Rutgers team sprinted onto the court, and Cindy Brady disappeare­d into the pixelated ether. The pep band led the “R-U, Rah-rah” cheer of the school’s fight song.

Rutgers fell short, losing 60-58. In an otherwise forgettabl­e performanc­e, the oompah of a polka stood out as a highlight.

Against Wisconsin, Rutgers returned to its muse, who had been absent since the victory against Seton Hall. In the final moments of the Badgers’ warmup, Mr. Trololo appeared on the video board. Rutgers won, 64-60. Trololo lololo lololo.

 ??  ?? Video producers Colin Osborne, left, and Tim Demartin, talk in the control room before a men’s basketball game at Rutgers.
Video producers Colin Osborne, left, and Tim Demartin, talk in the control room before a men’s basketball game at Rutgers.
 ??  ?? The video for Rick Astley’s “Never Gonna Give You Up” plays above the court before Rutgers faces Hartford.
The video for Rick Astley’s “Never Gonna Give You Up” plays above the court before Rutgers faces Hartford.

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