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Gregg Giannotti: ‘I’m Afraid We Brought Negative Juju to New York Jets Training Camp’

“All these other times that I’ve seen him, he’s been pretty much zen…”

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Boomer & Gio
Courtesy: Audacy

The sports media world is reacting to the second episode of Hard Knocks as the kickoff of the National Football League season rapidly approaches. This year’s edition, which is taking place from New York Jets training camp, has largely been focused on the impact of new quarterback Aaron Rodgers as the team tries to change the narrative and snap a 12-year playoff drought. Boomer Esiason and Gregg Giannotti have watched the first two episodes of the show before their morning program so they are able to react to it on the air.

Tuesday’s edition started with a performance by mentalist Oz Pearlman, who was on hand in the Jets meeting room in Florham Park, N.J. to entertain the team and get inside their heads. Pearlman’s presentation took up about the first seven minutes of the episode, and in the end, he left the team and viewers of the show speechless.

“There’s no way that this man is a sorcerer,” Giannotti said on Wednesday’s edition of Boomer & Gio on WFAN. “There has to be some sort of way that he’s doing it and tricking us and he’s very good at it.”

Esiason, as a former NFL star, discussed the hackneyed nature of training camp, especially for older players. As time goes on, frustration grows as the team becomes more eager to take the field and showcase their skills against an opponent in a legitimate game. Throughout the episode, there were moments of vexation, highlighted by head coach Robert Saleh calling out the team’s offensive line in a meeting. Outside of the episode though, Rodgers demonstrated these sentiments, ironically enough in an interview the day prior with Esiason and Giannotti.

“All these other times that I’ve seen him, he’s been pretty much zen and he’s been kind of calm and he’s doing all these things you would expect from a guy who’s on a spiritual journey,” Giannotti said. “Then the tri-state area traffic kicks him right in the nuts and all that’s out the window.”

Giannotti opened the show by wondering whether or not their show brought the Jets misfortune, discerning that the team struggled on the field and endured various concomitant events. Of course, more of this may be displayed on next week’s edition of Hard Knocks, but for now, the morning show believes it could be part of the problem.

“Alijah Vera-Tucker, who is sitting next to us and I stand up and I put my arm around him – we were comparing sizes because I was a guard at one point in my life – he has an ankle injury some time after the interview, I guess, because he looked totally fine when he was with us,” Giannotti explained.

“I don’t know when that happened. And then Aaron Rodgers goes out after we talk to him and has the worst day he’s had as a Jet at practice this year. I’m blaming the traffic on that one – that to me was all about the traffic – but I’m afraid that we had some negative juju in that building yesterday.”

Esiason, who was the Jets quarterback for three seasons, can understand what Rodgers is going through as an athlete in the No. 1 media market in the world. On top of becoming acclimated with a new team and city, he consistently has cameras following him around and is participating in interviews.

In fact, the show estimated that they were part of a thousand interviews he has had since coming to the Jets. Rodgers demonstrating a sense of annoyance is an aberration from the persona he has brought to New York thus far, but it is evident just by being in the building and metropolitan area that he and his football team are squarely at the center of the sports universe.

“He’s soaking it all in – and I would be doing the same thing if I were him – but ultimately it’s going to come down to that opening night against Buffalo, and it’s going to be real,” Esiason said. “All of this great feeling and all this stuff around him has got to perform on the field. It’s got to show itself on the field, and hopefully they get off to a good start.”

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‘The Dan Patrick Show’ Criticizes Sound on ‘Thursday Night Football’

“You pay all this money for that game [and] you can’t hear that it sounds like crap.”

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The Dan Patrick Show Logo
Courtesy: The Dan Patrick Show

Thursday night’s matchup between the New York Giants and San Francisco 49ers ended up being a compelling game to watch throughout the first several quarters and was enhanced by the stellar images and presentation from Amazon Prime Video. The Thursday Night Football property recently garnered record-setting streaming numbers from its season premiere, according to a custom integrated streaming report by Nielsen Media Research.

Even so, there was critical feedback from many fans watching regarding the sonic experience of watching the game. Viewers complained that there was an inherent lack of crowd noise and field-level sound, making it more difficult to fully immerse themselves in the atmosphere.

“You pay all this money for that game [and] you can’t hear that it sounds like crap,” Patrick “Seton” O’Connor, an executive producer of The Dan Patrick Show, said on Friday. “There’s no atmosphere – you’ve got no crowd sound; the mics are all over the place. It’s terrible.”

Show host Dan Patrick concurred with this point, relaying that his wife walked by the television and thought something was amiss with the sound. When she asked Patrick what was happening, he replied that it was due to the presentation from Prime Video. Although most viewers ended up watching the game anyway, the inadequate soundscape detracted from the aura of the contest and dampened the viewing experience.

“I love [Kirk] Herbstreit [and] I love Al Michaels, but when I have the game on, do you ever have your stereo in your car and you have the bass and the treble set and somehow it gets reset – and everything’s reset to medium?,” Paul Pabst, an executive producer of The Dan Patrick Show, said. “You’re like, ‘Where’s the highs? Where’s the lows? It has that feeling.’”

The lack of dynamic contrast and aggregate timbre caused some viewers to connote that the broadcast sounds flat despite the stellar, highly-experienced commentary team. Improving on the sound and other customer feedback will be critical in incentivizing non-ardent fans to return to the property or try it altogether.

“We’ve created the atmosphere that is so good that you don’t even have to go to a game,” Patrick said. “With the sound of it, the TVs, [and] the quality… it’s almost a better experience sometimes when you’re sitting at home.”

In addition to watching the National Football League, Pabst frequently consumes college football on Saturdays, including the prime-time presentations. When he is viewing those games, he can feel the noise of the crowd permeating through the speakers and be part of the crowd.

“It’s thunderous,” Pabst said. “The crowd noise almost overwhelms [Chris] Fowler, sometimes in a good way, and it’s hard to tell what’s going on there.”

Finding games on Amazon Prime Video has been a difficult proposition for some users, evidenced by O’Connor describing how it took him 10 minutes to begin watching the Giants-49ers game last night. The game was broadcast regionally on FOX for those in the New York metropolitan area, but for O’Connor, he noticed that the network had the baseball contest between the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies on instead.

“I look and I’m like, ‘I swear there was a game tonight,’ and I see it’s in the first quarter.’ What the hell is going on?,” thought O’Connor. “Oh, that’s right. I forgot Amazon was a thing; it’s just not a TV destination all the time for me.”

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Gregg Giannotti on Taylor Rooks: ‘Send in a 10’ to Get Players Talking

“I also thought, ‘Why don’t we use more attractive women in interrogation scenarios?'”

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Taylor Rooks; Gregg Giannotti
Taylor Rooks - Courtesy: Jason Hanna, Amazon Sports | Gregg Giannotti - Courtesy: Peter Ackerman, Asbury Park Press

This week’s Thursday Night Football matchup between the New York Giants and San Francisco 49ers came off a record-setting week for Prime Video, according to an integrated streaming report by Nielsen Media Research. There were questions surrounding the impending contest off the field pertaining to injuries, and the TNF Tonight pregame show did its best to address pertinent information.

New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley headlined the team’s injury report after suffering an ankle injury last week, something the team publicly called a sprain. New information was divulged on Thursday night from Barkley himself after features reporter Taylor Rooks asked him about his injury. He then proceeded to reveal that he was dealing with a mild high ankle sprain, an impediment more serious than originally thought.

WFAN host Gregg Giannotti watched the entire pregame show and watched the desk discuss the state of New York football, including New York Jets quarterback Zach Wilson. The report from Rooks, a reputable source of information who formerly worked for SportsNet New York (SNY) occurred shortly thereafter. While she has a network of contacts and insider information about the league, Giannotti believes there was another reason she got the exclusive story.

“It’s funny because all we heard was, ‘It’s a regular ankle sprain; not a high ankle sprain,’” Giannotti explained Friday morning on WFAN. “Then Taylor Rooks gets over there and finds out it’s a high ankle sprain. I was thinking, ‘You know what? I’d tell her anything too. Whatever you need to know, Taylor, about me, I will tell you.’”

Giannotti watched the Giants lose the contest 30-12 and fall to a 1-2 overall record, but he also began to ponder over the manner in which Rooks was able to effectively do her job. It led him to make a proposition on the air that challenges the effectiveness of the team’s beat writers because of their collective age and appearance.

“I also thought, ‘Why don’t we use more attractive women in interrogation scenarios?,’” Giannotti said. “This is what I was thinking about after I saw this last night. Art Stapleton couldn’t get that out of Saquon Barkley – I love Art Stapleton, but there’s no way. Taylor Rooks got it out of him right away, so why don’t we send in some of these interrogation scenarios where people are just totally zipped up – send in a ‘10’ in there, [and the] next thing you know, ‘Yeah, it was him. He did it, and I did it. We did it together!’”

Giannotti’s co-host Boomer Esiason was surprised to hear Rooks get that information from Barkley, and has not seen anyone in the media react to the occurrence. The injury update changes the way in which people consider his timeline for a return and was a part of the Prime Video broadcast that Giannotti valued.

“Yeah, of course, great reporting,” Giannotti said. “I’m just thinking about all the Giants beat writers sitting around – old guys who look like me just stewing and trying to hide farts in the locker room.”

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Arizona Sports Extends Deal With Coyotes

“We look forward to an exciting season delivering Coyotes coverage on-air, online and on the Arizona Sports app.”

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Arizona Sports Coyotes

Arizona Coyotes fans can keep their presets the same. The team has extended its relationship with Bonneville in Phoenix.

The new deal is a one-year extension to keep the Coyotes on the company’s two Phoenix-area radio stations, 98.7 Arizona Sports and ESPN 620 AM and on the statiations’ website and app.

“We are excited to continue our partnership with the Arizona Coyotes and the Meruelo Group,” Bonneville Phoenix senior vice president and market manager Ryan Hatch said in a statement. “We look forward to an exciting season delivering Coyotes coverage on-air, online and on the Arizona Sports app.”

As part of the extension, Burns & Gambo will welcome Coyotes president and CEO Xavier A. Gutierrez and general manager Bill Armstrong for weekly segments. Wolfe & Luke will be joined weekly by head coach André Tourigny.

“We are very pleased to extend our partnership with Bonneville Phoenix and are thrilled to have Arizona Sports 98.7 and ESPN 620 broadcast all Coyotes games this season,” Gutierrez added. “There is a tremendous amount of excitement about our team, and we look forward to Arizona Sports 98.7, the Valley’s sports leader, providing our fans with outstanding Coyotes coverage all season long.”

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