ESPN Adds Twitter, Facebook ‘Share’ Buttons to In-House Commenting

For a long time, we’ve wondered how ESPN was going to resolve the two different social worlds it was playing in — the comments on its own posts and games from “registered” ESPN users, and the Tweets and Facebook comments it used to add fan commentary to its shows, columns and more.

The answer? We just noticed in our ESPN bracket that if you comment in a group, you now have the option to “share” that comment to Twitter or Facebook. See the screen grab to the left:

When you Tweet it appends code showing the comment came from ESPNFantasy, which is a great way for ESPN to get people to play games on their site. Now all we need to complete the circle is the ability to “sign in” on ESPN with our Twitter handles so we don’t have to have all these logins.

Make it so, Worldwide Leader. Make it so.

UPDATE: According to the great folks on the ESPN PR team, Facebook and Twitter share have been a part of the site for almost two years now. But I would swear that I haven’t seen them integrated into the comments system, like they are for the fantasy games and now even in the regular story comments, like the one I just grabbed below. Anyone else notice these things before? Since I am not a “regular” ESPN commenter maybe I’ve just missed them.

UPDATE II: I think I am right and these things were added recently. If you look at the screen shot we took of the ESPN site when the whole “Greater than Tebow” thing erupted on their comments pages, you can see that the tools that are available now for sharing weren’t there last fall. So this has to be a recent, and much welcome, addition. Looking for the day that the whole ESPN and other-site registration thing goes away… we don’t need a personality for every site.

UPDATE III: According to ESPN, the new sharing buttons were just added this week. We stand by our story! 🙂

PlayUp Releases Version 2.0 of Fan-Interaction App

PlayUp has released version 2.0 of its fan-based social networking app, with improved navigation and “Live Now” scoreboards for individual sports.

PlayUp, which has signed several exclusive deals with college conferences and schools this year and also hosted NFL players for exclusive online chats during the Super Bowl, said the new features available immediately include:

— The ability to choose your favorite leagues to easily see live scores, stats and hangouts for the sports you care about most
— “Live Now” scoreboards by individual sports
— An enhanced interface with bigger and brighter graphics
— Improved navigation and user experience including faster load times, better calendars, and quicker access to live updates
— Enhanced Facebook and Twitter integration
— The ability to receive notification alerts when fans add you as a friend or when you are invited to a game
— The ability to message easily across multiple rooms with “Recent Hangouts” for the latest action you and your friends have been following

Screen shots of the new version of the app are below. Click here to download the PlayUp app.

Boom Goes the Twitter: Manning-to-Denver News Takes Over Monday Morning

Here’s the tweet that started it all: ESPN’s Adam Schefter hit the innerwebs at 8:52 a.m. PT today with a missive that simply said, “From @mortreport and me: Peyton Manning will become the next quarterback of the Denver Broncos, barring unexpected snag in contract talks.”

And then Twitter hell broke loose. Not only was there instant reaction to the apparently successful recruitment by NFL Hall of Fame quarterback John Elway in bringing Manning to the Mile High City, but you also had the attendant fallout question of “what now for Tim Tebow,” the one-man twitterstorm who set the league’s social media airwaves aflame last fall when he unexpectedly found success with his unorthodox playing methods.

From @mortreport and me: Peyton Manning will become the next quarterback of the Denver Broncos, barring unexpected snag in contract talks.

As an old comrade of Schefter’s (our paths crossed briefly when I was a sportswriter in Boulder and he was starting his career with the Rocky Mountain News) it’s great to see him toeing the line on “not breaking news on Twitter” — if you’ve noticed lately a lot of his posts start with the wording “Filed to ESPN” at the start. Not the Manning one, though. Better to get the scoop first and worry about the internal politics later, we’re guessing. But see the WWL-correctedness in the follow up tweet:

Either way… a scoop’s a scoop, and this is definitely the biggest one of the NFL offseason. Now we are betting that Jim Harbaugh is on the line to Alex Smith, offering to carry his golf bag at the AT&T pro-am next year. Just guessing.

Tweet for Cash: Belmont Bruins Have an NCAA Twitter Contest

I am guessing you will want to be living in the Nashville area or be a Belmont alum to be interested — but the 14 seed Belmont Bruins are celebrating their return to the NCAA men’s basketball tournament with a Twitter contest that will give tickets and other schwag worth $300 to the fan who “produces the most creative (as well as clean and positive) Tweet while Belmont is alive in the NCAA tournament.”

Since the 27-7 Bruins drew traditional powerhouse Georgetown in a Friday opener, you might want to sharpen up those keyboard skills and get tweetin’ since Belmont may be a one-and-done. Rules? You gotta follow the Belmont Twitter account, @BelmontMBB, and include the hashtag #itsbruintime to enter. More rules and prize information available here. I am pretty sure I have the Bruins going out quickly in my bracket, but maybe you know better?

Fab Melo Blows Up Twitter; Should You Blow Up Your Bracket?

That smoke you are smelling is the aroma from ESPN’s website servers, cooking at full temperature as everyone changes their brackets to downgrade Syracuse after the Fab Melo news today.

Even before the tournament has started, it’s clear that Twitter will be the de facto “news wire” for updates of all kinds: scores, injuries, missed shots and inevitably, academic eligibility questions like Melo’s, which just adds to a very weird year in upstate New York.

The question is, how will Syracuse be affected by Melo’s absence? They got beat by Notre Dame during the season when Melo missed three games due to “an academic issue” but he only averages 7.8 points per game. But then he also averages 5.8 rebounds and possibly most important, 2.9 blocks per game. So can Syracuse survive without its signature big man? Will they become the first first seed to fall in a first-round game? Or will they complete the strangeness of the season and take the title?

Carmelo Anthony’s not walking through that door. And Fab Melo’s walking out of it. See ya, Syracuse.

@jimrome

Jim Rome

Whatever happens… we know we’ll hear about it on Twitter first.

UPDATE from the New York Times which says Melo is probably out at Syracuse. Love the throwaway line at the end of the story: “The announcement is likely to force some late scrambling in office pools.” ya think?

Twitter Shows Boost for @keselowski During Daytona 500 Fire-Tweet

How many Twitter followers did Brad Keselowski, aka @keselowski, gain during his on-track tweeting from the Daytona 500, when the track-drying truck fire caused a two-hour delay? The folks at Twitter put out a handy graphic to show the meteoric rise, when he added more than 100,000 new followers before the checkered flag was waved:

That’s what viral is all about. Anyone else doubting that Twitter spreads like wildfire? Or that it is the way sports personalities will “talk” to their fans going forward?