CBS Broken Leg Replay - After two initial replays, CBS stopped
showing footage Sunday of Louisville basketball player Kevin Ware
breaking his leg during the first half of his team’s NCAA men’s
tournament game against Duke.
The injury during the nationally televised game, and the shocked
reaction of Ware’s fellow players, called to mind the gruesome broken
leg suffered by Washington Redskins quarterback Joe Theismann in a
Monday Night football game in 1985. During Sunday’s game, Theismann
tweeted his best wishes to Ware.reported...blogs.windsorstar.
Ware had leaped to try and block a shot by Duke’s Tyler Thornton. His
leg landed awkwardly, buckled and flopped as he fell to the ground. The
first hint that the injury was out of the ordinary came from Thornton,
who put his hands to his face and had an anguished look as he ran back
on defence.
CBS commentator Clark Kellogg described the injury was “gruesome.”
“If you can bear to watch it, take a look but it’s a gruesome-looking
injury,” Kellogg said CBS showed the replay twice in slow motion,
although not with a close-up of Ware landing. The network also never
showed a close-up of the injury.
CBS then concentrated on reaction shots. Three of Ware’s teammates were
on the ground near the basket. Wayne Blackshear cried, Chane Behanan
knelt on his hands and knees and Peyton Silva sat, a hand covering his
mouth.
The network aired a close-up of medical officials working on Ware, showing the player only from the face up.
CBS Sports Chairman Sean McManus said that because of the graphic nature
of the injury, the network decided not to show it after the original
replays. People could quickly find replays on YouTube, anyway.
“We did not zoom in on the injury when he was taken off,” McManus said.
“We did not try to highlight it. I think we did the right thing.”
At halftime, Greg Gumbel noted that CBS would not show the injury. Its
highlight package again focused on the reactions, including Louisville
coach Rick Pitino wiping away tears. Pitino answered questions from CBS
during the game about Ware, noting the injured player was exhorting his
teammates to win the regional final. A Louisville spokesman said Ware
was “resting comfortably” at Indianapolis’ Methodist Hospital.
As is often the case, the coverage quickly became a hot topic on
Twitter. Sports writer Jason Whitlock tweeted that “CBS handled this
curveball [Ware injury] masterfully.”
The network’s decision to stop showing the replay only goes so far.
Right after the game ended, the CBS affiliate in Phoenix aired the
footage of Ware being injured in a local sports report.
Coverage of the injury represented the second difficult call of the day
for CBS. Earlier, the network cut away from the dramatic conclusion of
the Sony Open men’s final, switching to the tipoff of the NCAA
tournament game between Michigan and Florida. The network did alert
viewers that if the third set between Andy Murray and David Ferrer went
to a tiebreaker, it would switch coverage of the Tennis Channel.
No comments:
Post a Comment