January 1st, 2009

FSB Daily 1/1: STATS’ Steve Byrd, Fantasy Over IP, Supercross

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

A roundup of recent posts on the FSB News page.

– STATS executive vice president Steve Byrd says that companies are beginning to learn how to “leverage their brand and interact with their customers using unique sports content and games.”

– John Hermansen of Global IP Solutions thinks that the fantasy league experience would benefit from the addition of voice over IP capabilities.

– Not only is there an outlet for you to play fantasy supercross, but you can win an actual race-used bike.

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WCOFF Decided by Less Than a Point

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

How close was the championship matchup in your league with your buddies? Odds are it wasn’t any closer than the final margin in the World Championship of Fantasy Football.

Poochie Bennish’s Fantasy Papa edged Robbie Brown’s Ray Ray’s Revenge by a mere .85 of a point. One more reception by Bears running back Matt Forte in the season’s final Monday night affair, and the final two would have been reversed.

Although most pay leagues include a significant difference between the payouts to the first- and second-place finishers, this tight race meant a gap of $240,000. The winner took home $300,000. (For the mathematically impaired: The runner-up earned $60,000.)

Of course, both players come away with a hefty return on their investments. The rest of us can merely take heart a bit in the fact that even at the highest levels of our fantasy competitions, among the best-prepared competitors, there’s still room for some luck.

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MLB Network Missing Fantasy Opportunity

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

Baseball fans might have been especially excited to ring in the new year, because Jan. 1 meant the debut of the MLB Network.

Major League Baseball becomes the last of the traditional four “major” American professional sports to launch its own television outlet, but the timing of the debut has reportedly helped it to garner the largest initial audience in the history of cable television.

It is not, however, setting any trends in fantasy sports coverage. We already knew that the opening schedule for the network would include no fantasy-specific programming, so the words of president and CEO Tony Pettiti only that it wasn’t a mere oversight.

Here’s what Pettiti had to say in an interview with BizofBaseball.com:

Bizball: Fantasy baseball is a popular pastime for many fans of MLB. Has there been any consideration to adding any content that may approach the fantasy baseball at any level?

Petitti: There’s two ways to look at that. First, in terms of specific shows prior to the season that will air before people draft their teams and get involved with that. We’re definitely going to do something there. The second piece is that I look at it almost as you are providing information in somewhat of a passive way. All baseball fans care about numbers, it’s just part of a way the game is watched and understood. It’s the way it’s measured in a lot of ways. So numbers are important to all kinds of fans, whether you play fantasy or not. Our show, MLB Tonight, is going to be able to put a lot of those numbers into context. We will have a lot of times stuff like league leaders, and who’s done and what trends there are. So the way I look at it, you’ll get that information and if you care about fantasy that will be important to you and you’ll realize you’re getting it. On top of that, whether you play fantasy or not you’ll still get it. It’s sort of done to include all views of the game. And then from there we’ll see if we need specific segments on fantasy within the course of an MLB Tonight show. I think that our show will provide so much in-depth information that fantasy players will realize and will see that their information is coming.

It’s certainly true that we fantasy players gather pertinent information from wrap-up and analysis shows, but Pettiti and others should pay attention to the growth trend among fantasy players and make an aggressive — not passive, as he says — play for what already is a strong market.

The lack of fantasy-specific programming shouldn’t really be surprising. Football is by far the leader in the fantasy marketplace, yet the still-new and growing NFL Network provides no fantasy-centered shows. It does at least present appearances by NFL.com’s fantasy face Michael Fabiano, however, to carry over the league’s online fantasy presence to its broadcast outlet.

MLB.com features a fantasy homepage, and MLB Radio carries a daily show, Fantasy 411, through the season. Judging by Pettiti’s comments, there doesn’t even seem to be a plan for intersection between those offerings and MLB Network.

In my admittedly biased opinion, it seems almost irresponsible to launch a 24-hour sports network in 2009 without specifically directing at least a small portion of your programming at the active, multiplying and wallet-wielding fantasy consumer. MLB Network has the opportunity take the lead in this area, but it doesn’t even appear ready to take its cuts.

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