bcla
On our rugged Eastern foothills.....
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2012
- Messages
- 25,754
The Washington Huskies held their spring game on April 30th. This was planned to be a big turn out with "kids activities, photobooths, games, and food trucks." But according to SI's The Spun, Attendance At Washington’s “Spring Game” Is Awful. They said only about 100 were in attendance, yes 100! Their instate rivals, the WA State Cougars, had about 5,000. Yet down I-5 in Euggene, the Oregon Ducks estimated said to have 42,000. Only attracting 100 to a free event says a lot. Is it Covid, is it their poor performance on the field or just pure apathy.
View attachment 666520
That's more than 100.
I knew someone who went to Caltech and played on their club football team. For some games, they actually rented out the Rose Bowl. Interesting who they played, including recreational teams, junior colleges, etc. I see Pasadena Police, athletic clubs, and even prison teams. Some teams from Mexican colleges too. The guy I knew told stories about the time they sat in an empty Rose Bowl waiting for Tijuana Tech to arrive as they had been delayed at the border.
https://www.gocaltech.com/information/RetiredSports/YearByYearResults.pdf
https://www.caltech.edu/about/news/caltech-students-continue-tradition-rose-bowl-4272

I've seen some weird events though. Once there was a Cal at Washington State game that simply wasn't on any broadcast or cable TV. So the athletic dept arranged for a special broadcast of the Washington State video board feed to be transmitted via a Slingbox over the internet to the screen in Memorial Stadium in Berkeley. It was bizarre, but about 3000 showed up and there were a few vendors in the stadium. But it was across two major university internet connections, which wasn't necessarily equivalent to what most home internet was like at the time.
Sling Media pumped the in-house video feed from Martin Stadium in Pullman, Wash., along with a local radio broadcast, into a Slingbox. From there the images and sound were transmitted to a laptop at Memorial Stadium that was connected to the scoreboard.
Initial concerns about bandwidth were quickly overcome. The images lacked any of the choppiness or stalling that can occur when pipes are too small to deliver hefty amounts of data, Buchanan said.
"We streamed basically at 2.5 megabits over a pipe from Washington to Cal and the images looked great," Buchanan said. Someone posted a video of the scoreboard images on YouTube.