This is the plan for the tour then:
https://www.eurosport.co.uk/cycling...rance-and-tour-de-fran_sto9003268/story.shtml
The hype on that web page is effing hilarious. The best part is I don't think they realize how close they are to self mockery.
This is the plan for the tour then:
https://www.eurosport.co.uk/cycling...rance-and-tour-de-fran_sto9003268/story.shtml
So, who is doing best non-eurosport english commentary, if it's not Anthony McCrossan world feed?
Is it ITV live commentary?
I liked world feed, because they provide commentary with ambient sound included (50%/50%)
Eurosport provide english commentary with minimal ambient audio (80%/20%)
and separate commentary ambient audio feed on eurosport player (0%/100%)
Does itv have a properly mixed commentary+background audio?
is it possible to hear background sounds with commentary?
Are they still doing this in last kms of the race when something happens?I doubt it; they'll bang on about Ineos as much as Adam Blythe.
Are they still doing this in last kms of the race when something happens?
Who is doing better job on commentary for the last hour of letour stage?
The hype on that web page is effing hilarious. The best part is I don't think they realize how close they are to self mockery.
Guys, Ambient Sound on the Eurosport Player is the way to go. Or put on the commentary of a country whose language you don't understand and which sounds more or less pleasant. Chances are, you will learn just as much as you would with the commentary in your native language.
Normally I'd say SBS, but with McEwen now at Grenadiers Cycling Network and Australia having two genuine top 5 contenders the nationalism will get a bit rich there too. Especially with Ewan and Groenewegen mixing it up in the sprints and Storer stage huntingAre they still doing this in last kms of the race when something happens?
Who is doing better job on commentary for the last hour of letour stage?
Personally I think ITV do the best overall coverage, especially if you're watching the full stage (though a six hour broadcast will include about an hour of ads). Daniel Friebe is easily the best interviewer. However, Ned Boulting is really not great at calling sprints.I don't watch ITV because of the ads but on the few occasions I switched over for a break it didn't seem great.
@kingjr made a good suggestion on the above post.
Always been a big fan of the ITV coverage team. Boardman, Millar, Boulting, Imlach and Rendell all bring different things to the table. Whilst Phil and Paul were iconic and will always be associated with the early years of tour coverage in the UK ITV made the right decision to move on from them after the Armstrong associations.Personally I think ITV do the best overall coverage, especially if you're watching the full stage (though a six hour broadcast will include about an hour of ads). Daniel Friebe is easily the best interviewer. However, Ned Boulting is really not great at calling sprints.
I'm really not a fan of his work, but Kirby is the best at commentating a sprint finish. And, to be really controversial, I think the Liggett-Sherwan duo in their prime were the greatest. The genuine excitement and urgency they brought to stages was terrific, whereas the likes of Rob Hatch often seem to create artificial drama. Above all was their chemistry, when they could bounce back and forth without messing a beat. Nowadays Eurosport have so many different pairings where the commentators don't seem comfortable with one another, and too many awkward pauses.
I think if you can afford to have your own commentary team then it is an advantage because if you use the internatinal feed commentators like Phil and Paul were then you don't have the same control over the broadcast.Always been a big fan of the ITV coverage team. Boardman, Millar, Boulting, Imlach and Rendell all bring different things to the table. Whilst Phil and Paul were iconic and will always be associated with the early years of tour coverage in the UK ITV made the right decision to move on from them after the Armstrong associations.
I think very few of us can afford to pay two people to sit next to us on the sofa telling us what is happening on our screens.I think if you can afford to have your own commentary team then it is an advantage ...
'You' meaning broadcasters!I think very few of us can afford to pay two people to sit next to us on the sofa telling us what is happening on our screens.
I do it myself as 100% guarantee of getting more sense than KirbyI think very few of us can afford to pay two people to sit next to us on the sofa telling us what is happening on our screens.
But can you talk about that glass of wine you had in some small french gite with Sean Kelly about 7 years ago when the race last passed through the region?I do it myself as 100% guarantee of getting more sense than Kirby
Not NBC. These were races from the 1990s/early 2000s.Versus OLN ....Are they still around? Did you mean NBC?
It’s not being able to talk about the night out that’s key. It’s being able to continue to talk about it as Pog & Rig simultaneously abandon and Padun parachutes into the race and rides off the front.But can you talk about that glass of wine you had in some small french gite with Sean Kelly about 7 years ago when the race last passed through the region?
It’s not being able to talk about the night out that’s key. It’s being able to continue to talk about it as Pog & Rig simultaneously abandon and Padun parachutes into the race and rides off the front.
I don’t think I have ever known a cycling commentator with the multitasking ability to deliver an anecdote then in mid sentence pivot to race commentary as soon as a crash/attack happens. Should be simple but seemingly not.Brian Smith is way worse for that but instead of talking about a night out he's usually talking about a crap day when he was a team manager.
I don’t think I have ever known a cycling commentator with the multitasking ability to deliver an anecdote then in mid sentence pivot to race commentary as soon as a crash/attack happens. Should be simple but seemingly not.