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Voice of the Quakers

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Everything posted by Voice of the Quakers

  1. The lack of a 1500 for women was sexist. I've worked in TV for 30 years. The timing by FINA/World Aquatics to include a 1500 for women when Ledecky was the biggest US swimming star, as the US generates half of the TV rights revenue for the IOC, was not coincidental. https://www.statista.com/statistics/199938/broadcast-rights-fees-of-the-olympic-games-since-1998/
  2. 800 might be in contest, but the FINA/World Aquatics added the 1,500 for women last cycle to "give" Ledecky another gold medal and that still seems assured for these games and maybe even 2028. That being said, Caitlan Clark is winning this year's award by in a walk.
  3. No longer in effect. EIWA site reports Wilkes only sent 6 wrestlers to the tourney in 1996. (I thought they had started the tourney -15.) Pretty sure the rule was changed shortly thereafter. https://eiwawrestling.org/results/EIWA_results_1996.pdf
  4. I would joke that Michigan doesn’t have any takedowns thru 4 matches, but the non-Mesenbrink tally for Penn State is not impressive, either
  5. Bormet wasting a challenge on his transfer national champ against a wrestler two weight classes smaller is peak Michigan
  6. I would say Starocci is ducking Griffith, but who are we kidding
  7. A scouting trip for Snyder - I love how he tests himself more than most of our top guys. I think many of our guys wrestle too little these days. He'll be better against the Iranian the next time. Tad is a whole 'nother problem for Snyder and everyone.
  8. Linear TV and digital media are generally measured and counted differently because the advertising models for each media are different. Linear TV viewing totals are the averages of every minute watched because advertisers want to know how many viewers watched their ads, not the content itself. So, more than 34,000 watched some portion of the OKST-NCST dual on ESPNU - very few people watch every minute of any telecast (think of the channel surfing you do) - but the average number of viewers at any given time was 34,000. Linear TV is primarily measured by Nielsen and a viewer counts if the program is watched in the same format as the original telecast WITH THE SAME AD CONTENT within 7 days of viewing. So, if you recorded that match on ESPNU using your YouTubeTV virtual cable TV subscription service and watched within 7 days of the original telecast - which it sounds like you did - your viewing could be added to an amended total that is provided to the network and its advertisers. (Not sure I want to go into all that goes into the final tabulations of data from Nielsen's panel and its access to "big data" from cable services.) However, in digital media like streaming video, ads are delivered on an individual basis based on what the platform believes who is watching on a given device. (These assumptions are hilariously terrible and people would be a lot less worried about data privacy if they knew how badly the algorithms worked.) So, if a person watches the match on YouTube and not the YouTube virtual cable service, viewing would be added to a separate cumulative total of views of the meet on the platform no matter how much or little of the meet you watched. Ultimately, the powers that be at ESPNU would much prefer you to watch the meet on ESPNU in real time because they would make more money if you did. But, they also know they must follow their viewers. So if people want to watch portions of the meet on YouTube they will put it there lest people watch pirated versions of their telecast and they make no money whatsoever.
  9. Linear TV and streaming TV have about the same audience share as we speak, and streaming TV is definitely growing and cannibalizing itself at the same time. (That "Other" bucket is largely streaming via cable set top box app and video game viewing.) Per my response above, the Big 4 Broadcast networks would rank between Netflix and Amazon Prime Video on the right hand side. Granted, these networks do it each airing ONE program at a time while YouTube does its with nearly infinite choice and Netflix has over 10,000 individual titles. Ultimately, the largest TV events will reaming on linear TV because it is where you can still gather the largest audience and, in turn, generate the most revenue. It's great that you and I can feed our unique media needs on streaming, but there's a reason why it's called BROADcasting.
  10. Average Prime viewership rankings and Persons 2+ viewers by network for 2023, according to Nielsen: 1. NBC - 4,537,000 Persons 2+ watched any minute from 8-11P M-Sat / 7-11P Sun 2. CBS - 4,508,000 3. ABC - 3,888,000 4. FOX - 3,353,000 6. ESPN - 1,705,000 40. ESPN 2 - 323,000 107 BTN - 64,000 121. ESPNU - 44,000 You, like me, are but one person of the 330 million in the US.
  11. Scripted entertainment of linear TV sees significant viewing on a delayed basis, but delayed viewing of live sports is a bit of a myth.
  12. I've worked in TV audience research and measurement for ~30 years. No one tunes into BTN or ESPNU for anything but college football, and even then the best matchups will have 1/10th of the audience of the crappiest game on ESPN 2 and 1/100th if the crappiest game on ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, or ESPN. Be happy that theses networks are re-learning that live sports content beats talk shows and whatever the heck these networks rerun when they're not showing live games and that wrestling is getting a larger platform. But, be ready to scrutinize the audiences for our sport when meets or tournament finals are on ESPN or ESPN 2. That's when we can have that apples to apples comparison with the other sports fighting for more media coverage.
  13. UFC. If they want cash, go take the cash. I'll be cheering for the concussions.
  14. Given Penn's lineup at Lehman, I would expect Troczynski at 149, Revano at 157 and Urbas at 197.
  15. F&M Lehman Open pre-seeds this weekend. Really respect what the staff is doing in Lancaster. 125: 1.Troy Hohman NC State 2.Vincent Robinson NC State .Anthony Molton Campbell 4.Zander Phatorus Campbell 5.Nick Treaster Unattached 6.Carson Wagner Binghamton 133: 1.#17 Braxton Brown Maryland 2.#18 Dominic Zaccone Campbell 3.#25 Brandon Ferretti Navy 4.#27 Mason Leiphart F&M 5.#29 Vince Santaniello Pitt 6.Gable Strickland Lock Haven 7.#3 D2 Devin Flannery Millersville 8.Coleman Nogle Harvard 141: 1.#9 Kal Miller Maryland 2.#20 Joshua Koderhandt Navy 3.#22 Wyatt Henson Lock Haven 4. #27 Cole Matthews Pitt 5.Connor McMonagle Lehigh 6.Carter Bailey Lehigh 7.Devin Matthews LIU 8.Chris Rivera Campbell http:// 9.Rich Treanor Army 10.Pat Phillips F&M 149: 1.#13 Ethen Miller Maryland 2.Shannon Hanna Unattached Campbell 3.#8 D2 Craig Cook Millersville 4.Matt Williams Army 5.Michael Zarif Binghamton 6.Kelly Dunnigan Penn 7.Ty Linsenbigler Lock Haven 8.Nicholas Stonecheck Lock Haven 157: 1.Connor Eck Lock Haven 2.#31 Michael North Maryland 3.Luke Nichter Drexel 4.Micah Hanau Army 5.Carter Baer Binghamton 6.Rhise Royster LIU 7.Jared Keslar Pitt 8.Jude Swisher Penn 9.Dylan Evans Pitt 165: 1.#16 Brevin Cassella Binghamton 2.#24 Andrew Cerniglia Navy 3.#26 Josh Kim Harvard 4.Dalton Harkins Army 5.Dom Baker Campbell 6.#6 D2 Brandon Connor Millersville 7.Connor Herceg Lehigh 8.Dakota Morris Army 174: 1.#12 Phil Conigilaro Harvard 2.#21 Danny Wask Navy 3.#26 Austin Murphy Campbell 4.AJ Burkhart Lehigh 5.Josiah Queen Drexel 6.Noah Fox F&M 7.Noah Blake Air Force 8.Will Ebert Binghamton 184: 1.#17 James Conway F&M 2.#22 Jacob Nolan Binghamton 3.#28 David Key Navy 4.Caleb Hopkins Campbell 5.Leo Tarantino Harvard 6.Anthony D’Alesio LIU 7.Colin Fegley Lock Haven 8.#8 D2 Anthony Giampietro Millersville 9.Daniel Lawrence Army 197: 1.#5 Jaxon Smith Maryland 2.#14 Lou Deprez Binghamton 3.#20 Levi Hopkins Campbell 4.#32 John Crawford F&M 5.Martin Cosgrove Penn 6.Christian Knop NC State 7.Wolfgang Frable Army 8.Cael Crebs Navy 285: 1.#2 Wyatt Hendrickson Air Force 2.#8 Taye Ghadiali Campbell 3.#13 Grady Griess Navy 4.#22 Cory Day Binghamton 5.#23 Seth Nevills Maryland 6.Austin Kolhofer Army 7.Josh Harkless Unattached 8.Chase Horne NC State 9.Jamie Ferere Navy
  16. This has been a long time coming. I'm surprised it didn't happen sooner, particularly after the COVID year when a lot of non-Ivies scarfed up bids earned by teams not wrestling that season. Money, of course, is the answer to all of life's questions. I would think one of the ESPN channels would air the finals of net year's tournament live. That won't suck. Still, as other posters have noted, the Ivy League would likely get 3 AQs per weight class. It can only help recruiting when you can tell as kid that if you earn the starting nod you'll have a 50 percent chance of making the tournament in a 6 team league.
  17. Slackman and Ben Goldin were nip and tuck - Goldin beat Slackman at Keystone, but Slackman did get the start over Goldin at Penn State. If my memory is right, both were eventually nicked up either at or right after Midlands, with Goldin returning for EIWAs. Still, as Slackman notes in one of the articles, I cannot underemphasize the impact COVID had in the Ivy League. Penn's entire team essentially withdrew from school to preserve eligibility after the league decided not to compete in sports in 2020-21. (Rightly or wrongly - I believe wrongly - the schools weren't even offering in-person classes. How could they possibly justify playing games?) Gave a lot of kids a lot of time to think. Happy he came to his decision and that it worked out so well for him.
  18. Oh, what could've been. Keep him in your thoughts as he chases his NFL dreams. https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/39137010/ivy-league-football-standout-joey-slackman-transfers-florida https://247sports.com/article/im-not-a-normal-football-recruit-from-the-wrestling-mat-to-cfbs-no-1-transfer-meet-penns-joey-slackman-221633560/ https://pennathletics.com/news/2023/12/18/football-slackman-earns-dolph-schayes-award-for-oustanding-jewish-athlete-of-the-year.aspx
  19. You're only young once. Wrestle as long as you love it or until your body says you cannot. My real competitive wrestling career ended in late 1997 when I moved from Philly to FLA for work. My coaching career ended in 2010 when I was 39 and my orthopedist said, "Dude..."
  20. I won't say I "made" my son swim. I did tell him certain life skills were mandatory: swimming and self-defense. (He has a youth black belt in jiujitsu. I wish he had the mentality for wrestling. He's simply a much nicer person than I am.) My kid 'quit" swimming many times. He would conveniently "forget" his swimsuit for practice when he was first learning to swim; I, of course, would always carry a spare. After a while, we continued to make him swim because he would not play any other sport and, by golly, he was going to do something for exercise. In 8th grade, he made the county all-star team. He told me, "Hey, I think I'm pretty good at this." To which my sarcastic response was, "You think?" Still took him a another year plus to recognize his talent.
  21. My son's swimming background is pretty unique - a former summer only swimmer who was finally convinced to swim club/year round last year as a high school sophomore. His strengths are sprint free and fly. We missed all of the distance rites of passage. He has never, and probably never will, swim anything longer than 200. So, unless I'm officiating, we get to leave meets early, which is very nice.
  22. For those who think sitting through an all-day wrestling tournament is bad, let me invite you to join me at my son's 3-day meet in Raleigh tomorrow thru Sunday. It's an assembly line of heats for hours on end until your kid swims. Then, all he or she has to do is perform at or better than past performance unless you want people to openly ask what's going on with their training, health, home life, etc. Good times. BTW, Big Red, 51.3 is a 90th percentile time in the 100 Free SCY for high school boys even today. Would've gotten you into my son's meet this weekend. You were better than you're letting on. chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.gomotionapp.com/ymca-4598/UserFiles/Image/QuickUpload/2023-capital-classic-time-standards_053238.pdf
  23. Wrestled at Penn 1989-1993. Mostly known for being injured - I broke my foot, blew out my left ACL and broke my jaw during my sophomore, junior and senior years, respectively. College and college wrestling was the most fun I never want to have again. Better GR/FS wrestler than Folk. Dabbled in open meets until my work career took me to FLA in 1998 and effectively ended my wrestling career
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