Filming

ESPN to have most Euro matches called from Bristol studio


NEW YORK (AP) — Jon Champion has had to adjust to broadcasting soccer off a television screen during the pandemic.

ESPN will have just one of five commentary crews on site for the European Championship, sending Britain-based Ian Darke and Stewart Robson to some of the eight matches at Wembley in London while calling up to 43 games from its studios in Bristol, Connecticut, due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Champion will be paired with Taylor Twellman in Bristol and will work nine group-stage matches, up from an original six.

“It’s a bit like putting a straightjacket on really in terms of what you can do,” Champion said Tuesday. “You never quite trust what you’re seeing on a TV screen in the same way that you trust what you’re seeing with your own eyes.

“And that manifests itself particularly in the calling of goals, because if you have, say, a cross from the right-hand side and three players go up to try to hit the ball and one of them makes contact and the goal is scored, if you’re there at the stadium, part of your skill and preparation as a match announcer is being able to identify in an instant who scored, but if you’re seeing it on a TV monitor, it’s less distinct and you might be 80% certain.”

For the 2016 Euros in France, ESPN called 28 matches on site and 23 from Bristol.

Champion was paired with Robson at the 2014 World Cup and 2016 European Championship, and they originally had been slated to work together again.





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