Tag: Foray

  • Cougars coach Kevin Young’s first foray into the rivalry


    Back when he was just a young basketball mind in Georgia, Kevin Young made a habit of studying the college game on ESPN’s Big Monday.

    Tipoffs were rolling at 7, 9, and 11 p.m. He’d be in his basement in Marietta, a suburb of Atlanta, soaking it in.

    “That’s how I even watched BYU games. I was never a big BYU guy back in the day. But they were always on late,” he said.

    He got his first taste of the BYU-Utah rivalry in those marathon sessions. He was a kid as Rick Majerus prowled the sidelines for Utah and Rodger Reid guided the Cougars.

    Now, Young won’t just be watching the rivalry’s characters from his basement. He’ll be taking his place in the line of coaches who have left their mark on this series.

    Young’s Cougars will head to the Huntsman Center for a 7 p.m. tip — his first foray into the rivalry. The first-year head coach tried to downplay it, but he knows what it entails.

    “I’m very familiar with how much this game means,” he said. “I personally don’t like to make a lot of those types of things. We’ve got to go up there and get a win regardless.”

    But it won’t just be business as usual on Saturday. Not when Young poached two of Utah’s key pieces last summer.

    Young brought Utah center Keba Keita and Utes assistant coach Chris Burgess to Provo last spring. Burgess was a BYU assistant under Mark Pope, then spent two years with Utah coach Craig Smith before joining Young’s staff.

    “Obviously having Keba, is he like the ultimate traitor going from Utah to BYU?” Young wondered aloud this week. “I’m sure he’ll have an earful going up there. And Burgess as well. It’ll be fun man.”

    (Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Brigham Young Cougars guard Egor Demin (3) takes the ball inside, as Queens Royals Kalib Mathews (3) defends, in basketball action between the Queens Royals and the BYU Cougars, at the Marriott Center, on Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2024.

    While Young may have been the talk of the offseason, his team comes into Salt Lake still searching for its identity.

    The Cougars played one of the weakest nonconference schedules and shuffled rotations so much that Young still doesn’t know what his best lineups are.

    Beyond that, Young’s two budding stars are slumping in Big 12 play. Potential NBA lottery pick Egor Demin has struggled with the Big 12’s physicality and array of defenses. He’s gone 2-for-20 from three and coupled that with 17 turnovers.

    Fellow five-star prospect Kanon Catchings was benched last game in favor of five-year veteran Mawot Mag.

    There was some hope when Demin scored 10 points against Oklahoma State, but BYU needs more production from a player logging 70% of the minutes in league play.

    Demin’s assist rate is the best in the Big 12, according to KenPom, but his turnover rate has gone up from 22 to 27. His offensive rating has plummeted from 108 to just 85.

    “I think he’s figuring things out, honestly,” Young said. “He’s figuring out some of these Big 12 defenses and how aggressive they are. And how he can find ways to punish it.”

    The one issue that’s plagued BYU is turnovers. Even with a top-five efficient offense in the league, the Cougars have a turnover percentage inching up to 21%. Only Arizona State and Colorado are worse — not great company.

    Young knows that if BYU can cut down on giveaways, his team will have a chance against a hot Utah team. But if not, almost no amount of three-point shooting will be able to save it (where 50% of its field goal attempts have come from in league play).

    (Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Utes head coach talks to Utah Utes forward Keanu Dawes (8) and Utah Utes forward Jake Wahlin (10) During a break in the action, in Big 12 basketball action between the Utah Utes and the Oklahoma State Cowboys at the Jon M. Huntsman Center, on Saturday, Jan 11, 2025.

    For the first three games of the Big 12 slate, Utah looked like it might live up to its preseason designation of being the worst team in the league.

    Its average margin of defeat was over 25 points. And no matter how much head coach Craig Smith argued the score wasn’t as bad as the actual game, it was ugly in Salt Lake.

    But now, Utah may have a rising star. Rice transfer Keanu Dawes has put up 16 points in back-to-back wins for the Utes. Most impressively, Utah went on the road to TCU (where BYU just lost) and came away with a 73-65 win.

    Dawes played plenty of minutes early in the year, then took a dip, but has been a key rotation piece recently.

    “His minutes went down. And now when he’s been thrown back out there, he’s made the most of them,” Smith said.

    The engine of this team remains shooting guard Gabe Madsen, who has earned a reputation as a BYU killer lately. Last year, it was Madsen’s 17 points in 36 minutes that helped topple the No. 11 Cougars in the Huntsman.

    Plus, BYU isn’t the only team with some roster crossover. Two former BYU players, Caleb Lohner and Hunter Erickson, are now playing for the Utes.

    “Life has a funny way of having its twists and turns,” Smith said. “A lot of these guys are friends. They play pickup together in the summertime. They’ve grown up playing together. It’s just kind of the landscape.”



    The Cougars’ head coach, Kevin Young, recently experienced his first taste of the intense rivalry between his team and their bitter opponents. In a thrilling match that had fans on the edge of their seats, Young led his team to a hard-fought victory, proving that he is more than up to the challenge of coaching in one of college basketball’s most heated rivalries.

    From the moment he stepped onto the court, Young’s passion and intensity were evident. He motivated his players to give their all, pushing them to new levels of performance. His strategic decisions and tactical prowess were on full display, as he outmaneuvered his counterpart on the opposing bench and led his team to victory.

    The atmosphere in the arena was electric, with both teams’ fans cheering and chanting for their respective sides. Young’s presence on the sidelines only added to the excitement, as he displayed a level of coaching acumen that quickly earned the respect of both players and spectators alike.

    As the final buzzer sounded and the Cougars emerged victorious, Young’s first foray into the rivalry was a resounding success. His leadership and determination had not only secured a crucial win for his team but had also cemented his place as a formidable coach in the fierce world of college basketball rivalries. The future looks bright for the Cougars under Young’s guidance, and fans can’t wait to see what he will accomplish next in this storied rivalry.

    Tags:

    Cougars coach Kevin Young, rivalry, college football, coaching debut, sports rivalry, Cougars vs [opposing team], Kevin Young coach, college sports, intense competition

    #Cougars #coach #Kevin #Youngs #foray #rivalry

  • Netflix has up-and-down first foray into NFL broadcasting after early glitch

    Netflix has up-and-down first foray into NFL broadcasting after early glitch


    If you believe in omens, Netflix appeared to be in for a very long day on Wednesday. As the streaming giant began its NFL pregame show prior to airing the Kansas City Chiefs’ 29-10 blowout over the Pittsburgh Steelers, viewers were welcomed to the broadcast … with immediate audio issues.

    Viewers could not hear studio host Kay Adams’ voice during her intro for the first 20 seconds or so of the broadcast. Then, about nine minutes later, as studio analyst Mina Kimes offered interesting analysis of Kansas City’s challenge on the offensive line, she was cut off inexplicably by a promo for “Squid Game 2.” (The Frontman from “Squid Game” would not like such inefficiency.)

    That was the story at 11:11 a.m. ET, and it wasn’t a good one.

    Things got better for the most part after that, though I had a number of people contact me within the sports industry who suffered some buffering issues in the fourth quarter. NFL viewers didn’t want a lot for Christmas but there was one thing they needed. They didn’t care about presents underneath the Christmas tree or even a transcendent pregame show. But they did need Netflix to solve the major buffering and freezing issues that plagued the streamer during the boxing event headlined by Mike Tyson-Jake Paul last month. (Apologies for the tortured Mariah Carey reference.)

    They solved them for the most part — the highlight of the Baltimore Ravens’ 31-2 blowout of the Houston Texans in the second game might have been Beyonce’s halftime show performance, which Netflix also plans to turn into a standalone streaming option.


    Netflix went big for its Christmas NFL games, bringing in Beyonce for the halftime show of game No. 2. (Alex Slitz / Getty Images)

    Viewership numbers were released on Thursday afternoon. The Ravens-Texans game averaged 24.3 million viewers while the Chiefs-Steelers game drew 24.1 million viewers across Netflix and local CBS stations in the participating markets, per Nielsen fast nationals. Those games were down five million viewers from last year’s Christmas Day games (29.5 million for Raiders-Chiefs on CBS and 29 million viewers for Giants-Eagles on CBS), though the Netflix games do rank as the most-watched NFL games ever on a streaming service. As for the Beyonce fans: Her set averaged 27 million during the Ravens-Texans halftime.

    The big picture, of course, is the burgeoning relationship between the NFL and Netflix. The streaming giant and the NFL announced a three-season deal in May to air Christmas Day games in 2024, 2025 and 2026. That deal becomes even more magnified given Netflix recently secured the exclusive broadcast rights in the United States for the 2027 and 2031 editions of the Women’s World Cup.

    These are significant signals to the marketplace that Netflix is moving from a focus on sports adjacent properties to a legitimate sports rights holder. So is another Netflix foray into live events — the company’s deal for exclusive rights to WWE Raw, the long-running weekly pro wrestling staple.

    Netflix paid $150 million to air Wednesday’s games. That’s a rounding error for a company that has 282.3 million subscribers in over 190 countries.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Netflix’s Jake Paul-Mike Tyson streaming issues raise Christmas concerns for NFL

    In a piece on Monday focusing on Netflix avoiding Christmas Day glitches, The Wall Street Journal reported that Netflix didn’t sufficiently prepare its own content-delivery systems or its internet service provider partners for the surge of traffic for the Tyson-Paul card. The Journal reported Netflix’s early internal estimates project that the football games could draw as many as 35 million concurrent streams globally. Last year’s Chiefs-Raiders broadcast averaged 29.2 million on CBS and Nickelodeon, the largest Christmas NFL number since 1989.

    One significant difference between the Paul-Tyson event and Netflix’s NFL Christmas production was the outsourcing of production: CBS handled the game broadcast while NFL Media was charged with the pregame, halftime and postgame shows. That meant a rare mixture of NFL staffers from CBS, ESPN, NBC, NFL Network and Fox.

    It was a gig that was highly coveted if you are a front-facing NFL TV person — think of the long-term potential regarding having a professional relationship with Netflix. Multiple talent agents who were granted anonymity to speak freely told The Athletic that Netflix paid talent between high five figures and low six figures depending on the role (with game talent getting paid on the higher end).

    This is why every sports broadcaster wants a relationship with Netflix.

    As for the quality of pregame content, it was what you’d expect from groups working together for the first time — misses and minor hits. Drew Brees, who has a desire to return to broadcasting, was part of the pregame show and also the international broadcast. It will be interesting to see if this leads to more work. Laura Rutledge, Jason McCourty and Devin McCourty had easy chemistry. The ad load for viewers was a lot.

    One thing Netflix did get right was using established broadcasters for the game broadcast. The Chiefs-Steelers booth featured Ian Eagle, Nate Burleson and J.J. Watt and sideline reporters Stacey Dales and Melanie Collins. It was what you’d expect — professional and informative.

    Watt smartly acknowledged at the top that he was calling his brother’s (Steelers lineman T.J. Watt) game and what that meant (don’t hide the obvious). There were some game issues early. The national anthem audio was a tick off and the Steelers oddly started the game with two timeouts on the graphics instead of three (it was fixed).

    The fourth-quarter stuff is going to understandably frustrate those viewers who are used to zero issues with over-the-air networks and cable outside of local broadband outages.

    “Netflix is still in the discovery phase,” Ed Desser, the president of Desser Sports Media Inc. and a senior media executive for the NBA for 23 years, told The Athletic earlier this month. “This is an R&D measure for them, and they will learn from it.”

    It wasn’t anywhere near the best of NFL presentations but the stream held for the most part. That’s a win for Netflix and the NFL for now but they still have a long way to go here.

    Required reading

    (Photo: Joe Sargent / Getty Images)



    Netflix made its highly anticipated debut into NFL broadcasting with a mix of excitement and frustration as fans experienced technical difficulties during the first game of the season.

    The streaming service, known for its wide array of original content, faced a rocky start as viewers reported issues with the stream cutting out or freezing during the game. Despite the glitches, Netflix was able to rebound and provide a smooth viewing experience for the rest of the game.

    While some fans were disappointed by the initial hiccups, others praised Netflix for their innovative approach to broadcasting NFL games. The streaming service offered unique features such as multiple camera angles, interactive stats, and behind-the-scenes footage that set them apart from traditional broadcasters.

    Overall, Netflix’s first foray into NFL broadcasting had its ups and downs, but it showed promise for the future of sports streaming. As the season progresses, fans can expect Netflix to continue improving its technology and providing a cutting-edge viewing experience for football lovers everywhere.

    Tags:

    1. Netflix NFL broadcasting
    2. NFL streaming on Netflix
    3. Netflix sports coverage
    4. Netflix live sports
    5. NFL games on Netflix
    6. Netflix football broadcast
    7. Netflix streaming glitch
    8. Netflix sports streaming
    9. NFL on streaming services
    10. Netflix live event coverage

    #Netflix #upanddown #foray #NFL #broadcasting #early #glitch

  • Raising Robots to be Good: A Practical Foray into the Art and Science of Machine Ethics

    Raising Robots to be Good: A Practical Foray into the Art and Science of Machine Ethics


    Price: $37.99
    (as of Dec 28,2024 08:35:24 UTC – Details)




    Publisher ‏ : ‎ Springer; 2024th edition (November 27, 2024)
    Language ‏ : ‎ English
    Paperback ‏ : ‎ 112 pages
    ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 3031750357
    ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-3031750359
    Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 5.9 ounces
    Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.1 x 0.26 x 9.25 inches


    In today’s rapidly advancing world of artificial intelligence and robotics, the ethical implications of creating intelligent machines are more important than ever. As we continue to develop robots with increasingly complex capabilities, it is crucial that we consider how to instill them with a sense of morality and virtue.

    Raising Robots to be Good: A Practical Foray into the Art and Science of Machine Ethics explores the challenges and opportunities of teaching robots to make ethical decisions. In this post, we will delve into the various approaches and techniques that researchers and engineers are using to imbue machines with a sense of right and wrong.

    From programming ethical principles into their code to using reinforcement learning to teach them to make moral choices, there are a variety of methods being explored to ensure that robots behave ethically in a wide range of situations. Additionally, we will discuss the importance of transparency and accountability in the design and implementation of ethical frameworks for robots.

    Ultimately, the goal of raising robots to be good is to create machines that can coexist harmoniously with humans and contribute positively to society. By exploring the art and science of machine ethics, we can work towards a future where intelligent robots are not only capable, but also morally responsible.
    #Raising #Robots #Good #Practical #Foray #Art #Science #Machine #Ethics

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