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This is an unofficial live criket bay by ball cricket commentary in English by the fans and for the Fans of cricket.IPL Live Commentary IPL season is the season of excitement and action. Never miss out on any of the action with our minute to minute, ball to ball updates about the match. IPL Live Commentary helps you to stay updated with all the matches news in realtime when you cannot afford to watch it live. Catch live cricket scores of all the matches, how the players are performing, scorecards, match previews, match analysis and match replays.
Delivering a unique, unfiltered, often unorthodox cricket commentary experience for people via HeartRadio is where the Alternative Commentary Collective all began back in 2015, so this is all a bit emotional for the crew.
Jason Winstanley, NZME Chief Radio Officer, says the partnership is a welcome extension for The ACC, who have had a stellar year covering everything from rugby union and rugby league, to netball and horse racing.
So they would have been out there in Sri Lanka. The big question for us then would have been: where would we present from? Historically, that would have been from a studio in London but for the three T20 games that took place in South Africa [in 2020] we presented from the boundary edge. We were going to copy that, but do it via a remote production gallery back at Sky.
This would have meant that the bulk of people working on the production would have been back at Sky but with the commentators, a production manager, technical person, a producer and fixer in Galle. We would also have sent our own ENG camera person who would have worked on the presentation, socially distanced.
For delivery, there would have been a satellite uplink and we would have sent reverse vision back to Ian Ward, as the presenter, probably via the internet. That was the plan and it worked pretty well in South Africa.
BH: It was difficult anyway as there was a lot of negotiating going on. Cricket Sri Lanka have been incredibly helpful but we were negotiating all the time with regards to quarantine and when the guys were going to go out to Sri Lanka and, crucially, what the situation would be if any of them had tested positive or fallen ill. When the new variant of COVID came to fruition, the negatives started to outweigh the benefits. Given the risks, and the need to quarantine on the way there and on the way back, and with it being a short series with only two Test matches, the balance just tipped, hence we decided to keep everybody at home. The safety of our people was the absolute priority and always is.
Staggeringly, we ended up with a Test match happening in Galle with no crowd. Live pictures and audio effects mixed in with fake background noise coming from the world feed provider IPG. We then mixed that with our own commentary in a couple of audio booths at Sky and managed to bring in Bumble working from his bedroom near Manchester and then Mahela and Kumar from their houses in Sri Lanka. Madness!
Alex Judd (AJ): We had already done some groundwork for remote commentary systems in the UK utilising the Tieline ViA commentary systems to connect back into Sky. The Sri Lanka series gave us the opportunity to trial some new technology so we started working on solutions over Christmas.
Bryan and the production team put their faith in us to deliver something the remote commentators could easily work with, without having to deploy full broadcast commentary systems to Sri Lanka where there would be a limited level of technical and operational support.
This forced us to come up with some less traditional ways of working in order to keep latency to a minimum and get the maximum audio quality, while deploying consumer off-the-shelf technology that users would feel familiar with. We also wanted to provide an in-vision feed for any two-ways into Sky, again, mirroring our expectation of quality.
So, for Mahela and Kumar, they each have two iPads, a USB-C sound interface and a headset. One of the iPads has an app called MWplay from Techex to receive encrypted SRT streams for reverse vision, while the other has a LiveU LU-Smart bonded transmission unit for doing the in-vision two-ways, plus an audio-over-IP app called LUCI which is normally used for radio.
AJ: The kits were put together one week prior to the first Test match. [Sky Sports head of production technology] Gordon Roxburgh and I tested them, bringing together all of the trials we had run and the kit we had purchased. The two iPad kits were then hurriedly shipped off to Sri Lanka along with the kit for David Lloyd. We managed to get some good technical rehearsals in with all three prior to the Test match which was an important part of this being successful.
AJ: The audio quality was pretty impressive on the iPads. This was due to the use of broadcast-quality microphones and suitable codec choice. The round trip latency for commentary referencing the live feed was less than 1.5 seconds, which minimised pickup times from the commentary teams.
A lot of what made this so successful was the way in which the stage was set in how the technology was used. We had to make conscious decisions about the way in which commentary would function as part of the production, taking into account the latency. This meant that commentary had to be led from Isleworth because the guys there are seeing pictures fractionally ahead of the remote commentators.
Because of the longer latency for the commentators out in Sri Lanka, the decision was made to bring Mahela and Kumar into the mix in the same way that you would when talking to a guest, rather than leaving their mics on the whole time like you would with localised commentary. This worked really well from a viewer perspective, in my opinion.
AJ: Internet connections and quality of service and then diagnosing internet issues with remote teams. That was tough. We were moving kit on and off hotspots and various home internet connections in order to get stability. Fortunately, everyone was very patient in working through the setup quirks.
Every day of the Test series will be on Channel Seven, with a commentary team led by Ricky Ponting. For fans with a subscription to Foxtel, the series will be broadcast on the dedicated Fox Cricket channel, with no ads during play. It will also be available in 4K definition for those with the necessary equipment. Fox boast a commentary team featuring Adam Gilchrist, Shane Warne and Brett Lee.
For online viewers, every ball will be streamed live through
cricket.com.au and the CA Live app with a Kayo subscription. Available with a 14-day free trial, a Kayo subscription will give streaming access to every men's international Test, ODI and T20 played in Australia, every BBL match, all women's internationals on home soil and all 23 televised WBBL matches. It will also give access to more than 50 sports live and on demand across 180 competitions. A monthly subscription costs $25 per month. For full details on the live streaming options, and a comprehensive FAQ, click here.
If you can't watch or prefer listening to the radio, live coverage of the series will be provided by ABC Grandstand, Crocmedia and the Macquarie networks. The audio will be streamed via
cricket.com.au and the CA Live app, or tune in through your local station.
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