Journal notes sports bar transformation

Geeks are taking over sports bars, according to the Wall Street Journal (WSJ).

It says live Internet broadcasts of professional science-fiction war games are proving a key revenue stream for sports bar owners, edging out traditionalists who prefer football, baseball, basketball and hockey games when they tilt back a few brews.

WSJ said “Starcraft III” is the latest game drawing geeks to sportsbars, where multiple television sets normally dedicated to sports are used to cater to gamers. The game is part of the Activision Blizzard Inc. arsenal of games, and “Starcraft III” is specifically designed to appeal as a spectator sport, Activision publicist Bob Colayco told the Journal.

The Journal said the popularity of such games as “Starcraft III” leads some traditionalists begging. At a Washington, D.C. sports bar, the manager finally switched one of 26 televisions to a baseball game after one customer asked for “anything but this videogame,” according to the Journal. The “Starcraft” trend is of interest to mobile sports viewers because, if the geeks continue to take over pubs across the country, your smartphone or tablet may be your only option for catching professional sports.

Is 49ers vrs Raiders Fan Fight a Sign of the Times?

By now everybody that watches pro football is aware of the debacle that occurred at last weekend’s game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Oakland Raiders; two shootings and a beating, with fan fights continually breaking out all over the stadium.

Sad to say I am not surprised. This is not an indictment on the fans of either team, but rather for one of the rare moments I am in agreement with 49er team president Jed York, who said that these are not our regular fans. The sad thing is that they may well soon become his regular fans, and the same with many other teams across the nation. ( I think KissingSuzyKolber was wrong on this one)

I was a 49er season ticket holder for 25 years starting with the first year of Bill Walsh’s head coaching career there. We eagerly went to our first preseason game as ticket holders only to find a huge fight in the section below our seats. A friend claimed that at a Rams game in the early 70’s a Ram’s fan, after constant harassment, pulled a gun and threatened the people around him.

Preseason games were always nightmares. A much ruder, coarser, drunker group of fans tended to go. I think that Friday and Saturday games, particularly when it is warm, encourages drinking. For most fans there is no work the next day. We always gave our tickets away and so did all of our friends that had season tickets, and in the teams great years everybody wanted them, but as they continued their slide to mediocrity, at best, it was hard to give them away.

Many I have talked to have simply blamed the Raider fans but while 49er fans had developed a reputation as “chardonnay drinks’, as labeled by former offensive lineman Randy Cross- who incidentally the fans took a dislike to due to his movement penalty in the Superbowl that almost cost the game- but prior to that were considered some of the worst.

Former quarterback John Brodie once wrote about warning Colt’s great Johnny Unitas about the need to wear a helmet when leaving the field due to fans throwing bottles. After the team erected chicken wire around the field entrance fans started heating coins to drop through, he said. That was at Kezar Stadium, a place literally surrounded by bars.

However I see this in some aspects as the new generation of fans. People my age now preferred top buy a big screen and a broadcast package that allows you watch games in the comfort of your home. No $12 beers, $35 parking and all of the other expenses that you get at games. At least one city last year charged to tailgate. It is younger fans that are starting to fill the parks, and they seem to have a rougher edge. NFL owners are to blame, for the most part, in my humble opinion.

Three years ago Bill Simmons wrote at ESPN a very good piece on how teams destroy the tailgating experience for their most loyal fans. As you realize how badly the team treats you, viewing you as simply an ATM there for them to tap, it just makes sense to enjoy the game elsewhere.

So while teams build new palaces with which to play the games, attendance has been declining overall in the NFL. Certainly there are a number of factors, poor economy, high ticket prices, a number of teams being perennial doormats etc.. but it is becoming clearer to the average fan that the sightlines and cost are much better at home. Last year it was estimated that attendance was at its lowest level since 1998.

However no need to worry about fights at future 49er/Raiders games- it looks like that series has been canceled for the time being.

Smartphones and a lotta’ Luck

Andrew Luck and beard

Stanford Cardinal QB Andrew Luck

It is one of the most compelling stories in the history of college football. Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck, a mortal lock for the No. 1 pick in the 2011 NFL draft, instead decides to complete his senior year as the Cardinal signal caller. He is considered by some primed to have one of the 10 greatest seasons in the history of alma mater gridiron, and is the first really phenomenol story since the dawn of Twitter.

But what if he gets hurt? Or something strange happens in his personal life, like his recently revealed beard is really precursor to a move to Utah to start his own religious cult. And the most likely scenario, a single mental error or physical mistake costs Stanford an undefeated record and damages an otherwise perfect season. Wouldn’t you want to be the first to know?

Mobile Sports Report thought so, which is why we think following every Luck snap in 2011 is a must for every college football fan. Here are three good ways to wire in to Luck, and be the first to know if Luck will continue his rise to college immortal unabated:

KNBR is the official station for Stanford Cardinal football, and is as active as any radio station in the country on Twitter. Every snap Luck takes carries with it NCAA Championship implications, and KNBR is a way to stay wired wherever you are. 

The official line for information is Stanford Athletics, and it is worth a follow for anyone able to recognize the magnitude of the Luck story.  

Stanford gymnist Nicole Pechanec  is Luck’s No. 1 girlfriend. Although she’s not active on Twitter, she’s registered. And she’s worth a follow in case something heats up in Luck’s life and she has something to say.

The Friday Fanfare

I always love how I am always told that sports help bring people together, omitting that filling a building with two groups of fans that may hate each other seems to put the lie to the statement. While riots at soccer matches now seem passé, try wearing a Cowboy jersey to an Eagles home game. The international scene is just as bad- look at the “friendly” match between the Georgetown Hoyas and Chinese professional team Bayi Rockets. Then again a bench clearing brawl does bring the players together!

So you are a developer looking to create a sports app for the Android. Do you create a web-based app or one that is designed specifically for the mobile users. Well according to the latest research from market researcher Nielsen’s Smart Phone Analytics, mobile apps wins if the metric you are looking for is time used. According to the release on Nielsenwire, “the average Android consumer in the U.S. spends 56 minutes per day actively interacting with the web and apps on their phone. Of that time, two-thirds is spent on mobile apps while one-third is spent on the mobile web” Creating a popular app is also very important (no kidding), with the top ten Android apps accounting for 43% of all time spent by users.

For the few that might have missed it, Google has made its biggest potential acquisition todate with its $12.5 billion bid for Motorola Mobility, a $63% premium over the closing price of MM shares from last Friday. There are a huge number of reasons for Google’s move, starting with the more than 15,000 patents owned or filed by MM. Google has been complaining that rivals such as Microsoft, Sony and Apple are trying to squeeze it via their patent portfolios and the recently acquired ones they have gained via their $4.5 billion purchase of Nortel Networks. The newly acquired MM patents will help Google fight back as well as help the company expand into additional markets. I expect a decent patent war to break out between the different parties before they come to their collective senses and signs some cross patent licensing agreements a la the Intel/AMD deals of yore.

Today’s rant: I can force myself, on occasion, to watch preseason games. Football tends to be the one sport I do it the most for since I often attend baseball Spring Training. So why do the broadcast channels insist on overrunning the games with sideline reporters? It’s bad enough in baseball when the coach spouts a few clichés straight out of Bull Durham, but in the later part of preseason NFL games it seems that every star is interviewed when their time on the field is finished. I have yet to heard anything of interest, and since it takes away from showing the game, I often tend to drift off to another channel-ohh look Animal Planet has a feature on badgers! How about trying to supply some real analysis? Maybe talk about the formations and the players and who might have a chance to stick, you know, what I am always hoping a network will provide. End rant.

Weekly Fishwrap

Patent wars break out between Google and, well, everybody else
While you can’t keep a good man down, so the saying goes, you can try and keep a good program down via a judicial use of patents. Google is crying foul over the efforts of Apple, Microsoft and Oracle who it claims are running an organized campaign against Google’s Android, a campaign that Google labels as based on bogus patents. The three protagonists have a range of lawsuits across the globe and Google even complained that Apple and Microsoft teamed up to buy Nortel patents to thwart Google- However it should be noted that the winning bid was $4.5 billion, Google bid $900 million so there could be more involved.

Bet you did not know this
Do you like dropping a dime on your favorite football team, either pro or college, or both? The Wall Street Journal has an interesting piece on how professional gamblers are making bets fast and furious very early in the process. One of the reasons is that with not much known about teams early on, the odds have a good chance to swing a great deal, providing opportunity for the experience gambler.

iPad to remain king of the tablet space? iPhone sales continue to grow.
A research report from Digitimes claims that Apple’s iPad has a huge sales and market lead in 2011. According to the report, approximately 65.2 million tablets will be shipped from manufacturers’ and of that figure the iPad will account for 40 million, or a 61% market share. In the second half of the year it expects Apple to ship 25.5 million units, a 76% increase over the first half of the year.

In related news Apple could sell as many as 30 million iPhones in the fourth quarter, powered by sales of the latest version of the phone, slated for release around that time frame. This compares very favorable to the 14.1 million sold during the same period last year.

DirectTV and Comcast fight over NFL Sunday Ticket Ads
Now that the NFL is back are you looking at adding Sunday Ticket to you cable bill? Watching the ads that claim that you can add it without any extra charge? Have you noticed the little asterisk? Well Comcast is taking the time to point out, and file a lawsuit over, the fact that in Comcast’s opinion the ad is a complete lie. They have a nice little conversation on the topic at the Consumerist. Either way make sure that you ask the proper questions when adding the service to ensure you do not suffer from buyers regret at some point in the future.

Online Voting Allows for Informed Selections in MLB All-Star Game

The Major League Baseball All-Star game is just around the corner, with voting ending today for the July 12 event, so as they used to say in Chicago, vote early and vote often! The game will be broadcast on FOX and is being played at Chase Field in Phoenix.

It is interesting how the Internet and the online community has changed the way in which people vote and actually provides them with the ability to make better informed selections, if they are so inclined and they can influence the MVP vote as well.

The baseball All-Star game has always held an interesting position, especially in my early sporting life [editor’s note: does that include the Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig years?]. Going to ball games we always sought out the ushers who were the guardians of the ballot to see how many we could nab. After being given the once over by the usher at the top of our section the person would reluctantly hand a few of the paper ballots to use, no doubt convinced that none of them would ever get used.

We would diligently vote, disappointed that you could not easily punch out multiple ballets at once. We all had different strategies. I voted for the best in both leagues, at least initially. One of my friends would only vote for players on his favorite team and for the other league he voted for the players that we perceived were the worst at their position, with all of us arguing as to which ones they were. After a few full ballots we would inevitably drop the rest around our seats as we lost interest, no doubt confirming the ushers’ opinion of us.

On-line voting has changed all that. While there have been some hiccups over the years, including rumored ballot stuffing, it is not only easier, but MLB has taken steps so that you can make values judgments. Voting for NL players and you only follow the AL? All you need to do is select multiple players, say DeWitt from the Cubs and Emaus from the Mets and you can see which second baseman has the better stats in a number of different categories. Just click on “Compare Stats” and a menu scrolls down showing a number of counting stats including Avg., runs, home runs and runs batted in. If none of the choices appeal to you there is space to add write-ins at the bottom of the ballot. Fans vote for the starting lineup, minus pitchers, and then after the Manager fills out the rest of the positions, an Internet vote is taken for the last man on each squad.

You can vote 25 times, which while significantly lower than that which I witnessed by a group of A’s fans who had built boards with needles built-in to punch out entire ballots and were doing dozens at a time, that seems like plenty to me. If you use your phone I am sure you can double your votes. Fans will not just have a say regarding who is on the team but can also vote for the r choice for the Ted Williams Most Valuable Player Award presented by Chevrolet via the 2011 All-Star Game MVP Vote Sponsored by Sprint. (Nice that they get two sponsors for one award)

I imagine traditions still die slowly and fans of rival teams will have a difficult time voting for players from teams they dislike getting on the team and for the MVP award, and I thin that is just the way that it should be.