Changing the paradigm for fan engagement

Changing the paradigm for fan engagement

Monday, November 9, 2020

11/9/20

Pressoffice


3 November 2020 was a transformational day, and not just for the football club AFC Wimbledon. It marked the day they went “Back to Plough Lane” 29 years after Wimbledon FC left a stadium on the same road. Fans reformed as phoenix club AFC Wimbledon in 2002, after the original club was controversially allowed to relocated 120km north and rebrand as MK Dons in a widely unpopular move.   



AFC Wimbledon remains a fan-owned club and had already achieved six promotions to climb from the lowest rung of English football to League One of the English Football League. After years of lobbying, planning and construction, the unveiling of their new stadium (back on Plough Lane, but on the site of the old greyhound stadium yards from their original home) was another landmark day for the club and its supporters. 



https://youtu.be/ZZydQfkhDCM?t=50

How it was done as featured in the Broadcast Solutions Innovation day 2020



The opening game in the new stadium should have been a huge event in the club’s history, but of course Covid-19 stepped in. With no chance of fans in the ground, the club turned to digital routes to keep its fans engaged in the occasion. 



Charlie Talbot is both an experienced events producer and AFC Wimbledon advisor and it fell to him to pull everything together. He is a long-standing Wimbledon fan who saw the club play at the old Plough Lane ground, and was one of a small team responsible for the Plough Lane Bond, which raised 5m from fans to enable the construction work to be completed. 



“We had to make this seem like an occasion,” he said. “We wanted to create the full-scale build-up show, but we had a stadium which was still in large parts a building site. We had no infrastructure, and what we put in had to be cleared out for the builders to start again the next morning. And, of course, we could have virtually no people on site.” 



Talbot worked with Malcolm Robinson of Broadcast Solutions. In turn, they brought in live production technology specialists nxtedition, and together they developed a plan to create a live stream, to run an hour and 45 minutes, leading up to the kick-off of the first match at Plough Lane. 



A person opereating a camera at a football stadium



The programme was a mixture of contributions from fans, ex-players and former managers, together with live interviews and behind the scenes footage from the ground. Robinson handled the technology on the ground, including Dream Chip Cameras, Sennheiser Microphones, Trilogy Virtual comms panels and a Mobile Viewpoint live camera bonded link over cellular. A Dream Chip Barracuda SRT encoder sent the camera signals over public internet to a Dream Chip Barracuda SRT decoder in Malmö where the cameras where decoded to HD-SDI with dembedded audio and fed into the mixer equipment controlled by nxteditions automation. 



Key to everything was the nxtedition software. Talbot first saw the technology six days before the live broadcast, when he was given an access key to the private cloud software and a pdf instruction manual. 



Adam Leah of nxtedition said “Charlie got access to the system on Wednesday; I logged in on Sunday and he had created the complete show as a rundown, which was ready to go. What he had built was solid, but it also provided the opportunities to add content later and even live.” 



On the night Talbot and Robinson were the entire production crew in Plough Lane while Adam Leah directed the show, from his home office in Marieholm in Sweden, with the content in nxtedition’s private cloud in Malmö, 30km from Marieholm and 1000km from Wimbledon. 



So secure was the rundown that Talbot was able to add content right up to the time of transmission, as well as going live to locations around the ground via the Mobile Viewpoint cellular system. The club’s social media specialists also monitored videos on tweets and uploaded the best into the rundown to be added to the transmission. 



“We crowdsourced content without losing any professional quality. We could go into the dressing rooms. We got instantaneous reaction from the fans. We discovered that, with this technology, we could easily fold in more content, more ways of making the fans feel connected to the club and to each other, even at a time when that real-world stadium experience is impossible.” 

Charlie Talbot, Talbot Productions



“Even I did not appreciate the power of transcodeless playout,” said nxtedition’s Leah. “The system just ticked down the playlist, jumping from one item to the next. It looked like it had been well assembled in a pre-cut edit, but it was live transcodeless playout. We played the file that was recorded and sent from the fans phone.”



A multiviewer, nxtedition shotbox and computer running the nxtedition app



The programme really hit its audience target. The number of streaming viewers stayed pretty stable at around 2700 throughout the broadcast. “Given that people were watching in families and small groups, we think that is the equivalent of a sell-out of our 9000 seat stadium,” Talbot said. The pre and post match shows and build up also added 800 subscribers to the YouTube channel – an astonishing number. Fans were also encouraged to support the team during the match itself as the volume of crowd noise over the PA system increased when they pressed buttons on the MyApplause app (a technical solution pioneered in German to preserve virtual fan engagement in stadiums empty through COVID-19 regulations).  



All involved saw it as more than just the celebration of a special occasion. It was clear that this changes the paradigm of fan engagement.  



“We crowdsourced content without losing any professional quality,” Talbot explained. “We could go into the dressing rooms. We got instantaneous reaction from the fans. We discovered that, with this technology, we could easily fold in more content, more ways of making the fans feel connected to the club and to each other, even at a time when that real-world stadium experience is impossible.” 



“We landed a nearly two hour show that had a spontaneous, live feel because of the fresh content coming, and we got out on time because we had to be clear for the team to run out and thank the fans before the first kick-off. 



“And we did all that with a crew of three people,” Talbot concluded. “My mind is already racing on the possibilities of what we can do in the future.”



https://youtu.be/__Sn1TlX1J8

Watch the live broadcast here



nxtedition would like to thank AFC Wimbledon, Talbot Productions, Broadcast Solutions,  Sennheiser, Dream Chip Cameras, Trilogy and Mobile Viewpoint for their assistance with the equipment and setup.



3 November 2020 was a transformational day, and not just for the football club AFC Wimbledon. It marked the day they went “Back to Plough Lane” 29 years after Wimbledon FC left a stadium on the same road. Fans reformed as phoenix club AFC Wimbledon in 2002, after the original club was controversially allowed to relocated 120km north and rebrand as MK Dons in a widely unpopular move.   



AFC Wimbledon remains a fan-owned club and had already achieved six promotions to climb from the lowest rung of English football to League One of the English Football League. After years of lobbying, planning and construction, the unveiling of their new stadium (back on Plough Lane, but on the site of the old greyhound stadium yards from their original home) was another landmark day for the club and its supporters. 



https://youtu.be/ZZydQfkhDCM?t=50

How it was done as featured in the Broadcast Solutions Innovation day 2020



The opening game in the new stadium should have been a huge event in the club’s history, but of course Covid-19 stepped in. With no chance of fans in the ground, the club turned to digital routes to keep its fans engaged in the occasion. 



Charlie Talbot is both an experienced events producer and AFC Wimbledon advisor and it fell to him to pull everything together. He is a long-standing Wimbledon fan who saw the club play at the old Plough Lane ground, and was one of a small team responsible for the Plough Lane Bond, which raised 5m from fans to enable the construction work to be completed. 



“We had to make this seem like an occasion,” he said. “We wanted to create the full-scale build-up show, but we had a stadium which was still in large parts a building site. We had no infrastructure, and what we put in had to be cleared out for the builders to start again the next morning. And, of course, we could have virtually no people on site.” 



Talbot worked with Malcolm Robinson of Broadcast Solutions. In turn, they brought in live production technology specialists nxtedition, and together they developed a plan to create a live stream, to run an hour and 45 minutes, leading up to the kick-off of the first match at Plough Lane. 



A person opereating a camera at a football stadium



The programme was a mixture of contributions from fans, ex-players and former managers, together with live interviews and behind the scenes footage from the ground. Robinson handled the technology on the ground, including Dream Chip Cameras, Sennheiser Microphones, Trilogy Virtual comms panels and a Mobile Viewpoint live camera bonded link over cellular. A Dream Chip Barracuda SRT encoder sent the camera signals over public internet to a Dream Chip Barracuda SRT decoder in Malmö where the cameras where decoded to HD-SDI with dembedded audio and fed into the mixer equipment controlled by nxteditions automation. 



Key to everything was the nxtedition software. Talbot first saw the technology six days before the live broadcast, when he was given an access key to the private cloud software and a pdf instruction manual. 



Adam Leah of nxtedition said “Charlie got access to the system on Wednesday; I logged in on Sunday and he had created the complete show as a rundown, which was ready to go. What he had built was solid, but it also provided the opportunities to add content later and even live.” 



On the night Talbot and Robinson were the entire production crew in Plough Lane while Adam Leah directed the show, from his home office in Marieholm in Sweden, with the content in nxtedition’s private cloud in Malmö, 30km from Marieholm and 1000km from Wimbledon. 



So secure was the rundown that Talbot was able to add content right up to the time of transmission, as well as going live to locations around the ground via the Mobile Viewpoint cellular system. The club’s social media specialists also monitored videos on tweets and uploaded the best into the rundown to be added to the transmission. 



“We crowdsourced content without losing any professional quality. We could go into the dressing rooms. We got instantaneous reaction from the fans. We discovered that, with this technology, we could easily fold in more content, more ways of making the fans feel connected to the club and to each other, even at a time when that real-world stadium experience is impossible.” 

Charlie Talbot, Talbot Productions



“Even I did not appreciate the power of transcodeless playout,” said nxtedition’s Leah. “The system just ticked down the playlist, jumping from one item to the next. It looked like it had been well assembled in a pre-cut edit, but it was live transcodeless playout. We played the file that was recorded and sent from the fans phone.”



A multiviewer, nxtedition shotbox and computer running the nxtedition app



The programme really hit its audience target. The number of streaming viewers stayed pretty stable at around 2700 throughout the broadcast. “Given that people were watching in families and small groups, we think that is the equivalent of a sell-out of our 9000 seat stadium,” Talbot said. The pre and post match shows and build up also added 800 subscribers to the YouTube channel – an astonishing number. Fans were also encouraged to support the team during the match itself as the volume of crowd noise over the PA system increased when they pressed buttons on the MyApplause app (a technical solution pioneered in German to preserve virtual fan engagement in stadiums empty through COVID-19 regulations).  



All involved saw it as more than just the celebration of a special occasion. It was clear that this changes the paradigm of fan engagement.  



“We crowdsourced content without losing any professional quality,” Talbot explained. “We could go into the dressing rooms. We got instantaneous reaction from the fans. We discovered that, with this technology, we could easily fold in more content, more ways of making the fans feel connected to the club and to each other, even at a time when that real-world stadium experience is impossible.” 



“We landed a nearly two hour show that had a spontaneous, live feel because of the fresh content coming, and we got out on time because we had to be clear for the team to run out and thank the fans before the first kick-off. 



“And we did all that with a crew of three people,” Talbot concluded. “My mind is already racing on the possibilities of what we can do in the future.”



https://youtu.be/__Sn1TlX1J8

Watch the live broadcast here



nxtedition would like to thank AFC Wimbledon, Talbot Productions, Broadcast Solutions,  Sennheiser, Dream Chip Cameras, Trilogy and Mobile Viewpoint for their assistance with the equipment and setup.