Tagged: ‘French Open’

posted by on May 9, 2013 2:13 PM

SportsCenter, tennis majors anchor Chris McKendry makes the most of being a mom, even when she’s working worlds away from home

SportsCenter anchor Chris McKendry practices tennis with her sons. (John Atashian/ESPN Images)

SportsCenter anchor Chris McKendry practices tennis with her sons. (John Atashian/ESPN Images)

With boys aged 8 and 10 at home, SportsCenter anchor Chris McKendry takes “business trips” — such as two weeks in Paris as a host for the French Open starting on ESPN2 on May 26 — that require much planning and a team/family effort to keep the home front running smoothly.

“I leave incredible amounts of notes for my husband and our sitter — a page per day — with everything from the boys’ activities to the school lunch schedule and friends’ birthday parties with the present already wrapped,” she said. “Then I review it with them by phone every day.” continue reading…

posted by on January 9, 2013 4:10 PM

Forward/Rewind: MLB/Tennis


Tennis


Jamie Reynolds, Vice President, Event Production

#Hashtag of the year for 2012:
#ServingUpDrama. Tennis provided a compelling 2012, starting with Victoria Azarenka serving notice at the Australian Open that she is among the elite with her first major title. We also witnessed the longest championship match in Grand Slam history (Novak Djokovic over Rafael Nadal in nearly six hours). At the French Open, Maria Sharapova completed a career Grand Slam, and at Wimbledon, we witnessed arguably the biggest upset in history and saw an unknown take out a legend (Lukas Rosol over Nadal in the second round).

Jamie Reynolds

Jamie Reynolds

Serena Williams enjoyed a golden summer winning both Wimbledon and the US Open plus Olympic Gold, while Roger Federer returned to No. 1 with a victory in London. At the US Open, Andy Murray’s quest for a major was fulfilled and the retirements of Kim Clijsters and Andy Roddick at the US Open tugged on emotional heartstrings.

#Hashtag of the year for 2013:
#WhoWillRule? In 2012, the Big Four (Nadal, Djokivic, Murray and Roger Federer) ruled the men’s game more than ever with each taking one major. Yet Nadal hasn’t played since June and Federer is 31. The question becomes: Who is ready to break through?

On the woman’s side, a trio of greats pulled away from the pack — Serena Williams, Sharapova and Victoria Azarenka. But a younger group emerged eager to crash the party — French Open finalist Sara Errani, Wimbledon finalist Agnieszka Radwanska, and Angelique Kerber, whose rise in the rankings from No. 32 a year ago to No. 5 today was punctuated by 14 wins at the majors.

A big prediction for your property in 2013:
Our goal is to advance and enhance the franchise elements that have defined ESPN Tennis. Our theme, “Discovery and Access,” takes fans behind the “velvet ropes” to experience the stars at home, at practice or just living on the road. We work with the rightsholders to gain access to places the fans can’t get to.

Through the highly-stylized bumps or teases or “Behind-the-Scenes” elements produced by our Feature Unit, we have terrific “accents” to lace through the hundreds of hours of Slam coverage. Presenting the athletes honestly and fairly, we’ve earned their respect. They trust our team, they recognize our producers and shooters, and we are discovering access gets better with each event. We then use it to create equity across all our ESPN platforms, including social media.

A prediction? Perhaps it’s more of a hope: that after six nominations in the last four years, the tennis family finally earns the Gold and wins a Sports Emmy.–By Dave Nagle

FrontRowDesign_Final

Editor’s Note: With this multi-week series — the Front Row Forward/Rewind, 2013/2012 — ESPN’s Communications Department takes the pulse of content executives throughout ESPN for their views on what’s ahead across ESPN for 2013 and some of what transpired in 2012. The snapshots provide a look at where ESPN has been, where it’s going and how it plans on getting there.

MLB

Mike McQuade, Vice President, Production

Best off camera moment:
The best off camera moments to me always involve humor and things that are unexpected. I remember how Terry Francona was unable to put his headset on properly on Sunday Night Baseball telecasts. Also, the second day we were working with Terry, he ran out of gas driving to the stadium during Spring Training and he and Dan Shulman had to push the car off of the interstate. In terms of the Monday Night Baseball team, Rick Sutcliffe was looking at the players on Manny Acta’s Washington Nationals team and said “Boy, no wonder he couldn’t win with the Nationals.” Tim Kurkjian then said, “Well, he had nothing to work with — there were no Major Leaguers on that team.” Then you hear Aaron Boone say, “Hello, I’m in the room.” Aaron was on the team.

Mike McQuade

Mike McQuade

Favorite segment or interview:
My favorite segment on the game side was when Los Angeles Dodgers’ Scott Van Slyke hit the go ahead three-run home run against the St. Louis Cardinals in the seventh inning on Sunday Night Baseball May 20, 2012. As far as Baseball Tonight, it had to be our “Baseball Tonight at the World Series” postgame show for Game 2. I thought our analysts were especially poignant about how the [Detroit] Tigers needed to score runs and get back into the series. Thought it was one of our best shows. In terms of interviews, it has to be “Kurkjianing”: Every time someone did an impression of Tim last season.

#Hashtag of the year for 2013: continue reading…

posted by on May 29, 2012 8:39 AM

Tweetback: Hot times at Indy 500; NBA Conference Finals underway; NCAA post-season action

Front Row knows you have better things to do all weekend than check your social media feeds, so we do it for you.

Here, from the ESPN PR universe, are some of the Tweets, posts and other commentary you may have missed.

You can thank us later!

continue reading…

posted by on May 27, 2012 9:30 AM

ESPN at French Open: Croissants and crosscourt volleys, now served live

There’s one big change in ESPN2’s presentation of the French Open, which starts today and goes through the women’s semifinals June 7. It will alter how everyone on site in France does everything they do — and might lead to a substantial rise in caffeine consumption on these shores.

The Open is live.

In recent years, ESPN’s action from Paris (six hours ahead of the Eastern Time Zone) generally started at noon, while the sun was setting and the shadows were lengthening across the famed red clay of Roland Garros.

That plan provided for some live matches, then “back-filling” the broadcast window with the best of that day’s play.

“We were upside down,” explains Jamie Reynolds, vice president, event production, and a veteran of ESPN’s French Open efforts back to the mid-80s.

“We put matches on tape, then went live with what we could before returning to tape.

“Now we’re in the business of live tennis,” he says of the new schedule with a start time of 5 a.m. ET most days.

“With the success of WatchESPN and fans knowing scores and news in real time, it is the right time for ESPN2 to be ‘live-live’ along with ESPN3. That’s how we present the other three stops on our Grand Slam world tour and it’s what fans want and deserve. continue reading…

posted by on May 24, 2011 12:00 PM

I Follow: Patrick McEnroe


Editor’s note: “I Follow” is all about ESPN employees on Twitter: what they tweet, whom they follow and how you can interact socially with anyone and everyone. Today, we highlight tennis analyst Patrick McEnroe, who tweets about tennis, of course, but also other sports (in particular the Yankees and Knicks) as well as non-sports topics ranging from popular culture to politics. This week and next, he’s tweeting from Paris, where he is part of ESPN’s tennis coverage at the French Open. Here’s an inside look at his Twitter profile.

Twitter Handle: @PatrickMcEnroe

Followers: *18,297

Following: *44

* Twitter numbers as of 5/23/11

FR: Who is your favorite person to follow?
McEnroe: I like @AndyRoddick because he shows his personality. He doesn’t tweet that often, but when he does he gets on a roll. And that’s Andy. When he’s passionate about something, he can’t keep it bottled up. So when he tweets, I know there’s more coming.

FR: Who is the most famous person who follows you? continue reading…