Microsoft, NBA team up to put virtual fans in basketball
arenas
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[July 25, 2020] By
Stephen Nellis
(Reuters) - When the National Basketball
Association restarts its coronavirus-interrupted season on July 30 in
its "bubble" in Orlando, Florida, the stands could have more than 300
fans - none of whom will actually be in the arena.
Microsoft Corp and the NBA said on Friday they have joined forces to put
"virtual" fans in the stands of each game using Microsoft's Teams app
and giant screens.
The two will equip each game court with 17-foot-tall (5.2 m) LED screens
that wrap three sides of the arena. The virtual stands will be filled
with fans who use the Teams app to log in and sit alongside each other
using a new feature of the app called "Together mode" meant to simulate
a group of people sitting in a room.
The NBA suspended its season in March after a player for the Utah Jazz
tested positive for the novel coronavirus. The league plans to restart
the season in a so-called bubble at Walt Disney World Resort where
players, staff and media will be tested and quarantined in an effort to
keep everyone inside safe from contracting the virus.
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Chicago Bulls' Zach LaVine in action with Orlando Magic's Evan
Fournier REUTERS/Carlos Jasso
NBA officials also said on Friday they were revamping their approach to
televising the games, with cameras positioned closer to the players to emulate
the vantage point of fans sitting in seats near the court. But for player-safety
reasons, "the majority of our cameras near the court will be robotic for the
first time,” Sara Zuckert, head of next-generation telecasts at the NBA, told a
news conference on Friday.
NBA officials said audio from the virtual fans will be played in the arena and
televised. Virtual seats will be limited to 320 fans, a number based on the size
of the venue and screens. Fans will be selected by the home teams, and each team
is working to decide how to handle the selections, Zuckert said.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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