How They Did It: Integrating an NFL Draft Room
The New York Giants have made their picks.
Although the 2024 NFL draft is a wrap, the room where all the Giantsâ decisions were made, with its 42 screens controlled by a best-in-class solution driven by Crestron, will hardly go dark. One of the most critical elements of the room is its flexibility as a meeting space: Itâs a multi-purpose room tailored for the franchiseâs most high-impact meetings. Thatâs why the âdraft roomâ has a raised floor â all the cabling runs beneath that surface so that the roomâs modular furnishing and tabletop control screens can be moved into any configuration a meeting might demand.
And that raised floor was just one of the challenging aspects of the installation. âObviously, youâve got to consider more than putting different pieces of content in different places,â notes Ian Bottiglieri, VP of operations for Image Engineering, the firm that handled integrating the room. âWe met with the facilities guys to understand the infrastructure: What are we looking at from an IT network? What are we looking at for power? What are we looking at for HVAC?â The latter was extremely important: The room was previously outfitted with little more than whiteboards, and now itâs packed with electronics. âThe heat load became massive,â says Bottiglieri.
Naturally, nothing was insurmountable for the Image Engineering team. This wasnât, as the saying goes, their first rodeo.
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The Sporting Life
âOur company is 27 years old, and we started with live event and game day presentations,â says Bottiglieri. The companyâs core competency began with coordinating player introductions: lighting, special effects, pyrotechnics, and the AV elements of displaying the name, position, and likeness of an NFL starter, complete with special effects. As this aspect of the entertainment package progressed, more audiovisual and lighting elements came into play. âWe were asked for things such as LED video or projection in stadium hallways during intros, for example,â says Bottiglieri.
Given Image Engineeringâs long-standing relationship with the Baltimore Ravens on the field, it wasnât long before the Ravens expanded their scope into their offices. âTheyâd seen what we could do on the field and decided they wanted us to handle some behind-the-scenes projects,â says Bottiglieri. In 2016, Image Engineering renovated a video editing suite for the team, and two years later, they were tasked with bringing the Ravensâ draft room up to date.
The traditional system for draft rooms employed by many NFL teams (Giants and Ravens included) until recently consisted of moving magnets around whiteboards. A label with a playerâs name and position was attached to the magnet, and thatâs how franchises tracked picks as the process unfolded. Stats, scouting reports, and other data were handled in a similarly analog fashion â with binders full of notes and so on.
A Room for All Users
What was needed was a system that could display picks in real-time and allow the key decision-makers to see all the relevant data on a player, from scouting reports to game film â in an instant. âWe had done a room for the Ravens, and a few years later, the Giants decided they needed an upgrade, too,â says Bottiglieri. Conversations began with the Giantsâ front office, with input from everyone from Giantsâ General Manager Joe Schoen to Ty Siam, the teamâs director of football data and innovation. While the team needed a space perfectly suited to the unique demands of draft days, it had to be flexible enough to handle a wide variety of use cases. âThis is where we bring value as a boutique AV integrator: These really complex, special use case rooms,â says Bottiglieri.
Image Engineeringâs quarter century of experience working with NFL teams was a big plus during the discovery process. âWe have a vast understanding of what the teams are looking for, what coaches are looking for, what scouts are looking for, and what the teamâs video editing pros might need,â says Bottiglieri. A room such as the Giantsâ draft room serves many users for many functions, and all those variables need to be taken into account. âCoaches and scouts typically prefer an approachable and user-friendly experience, so they need configurations and controls that can be set up and run immediately,â he adds.
âWe have to approach these projects by understanding: One, how can we structure it in a âsimple modeâ so that if Coach wants to come in and run the room on his own, he can do that â but then the second piece is: How do we give Ty all the tools that he needs to drive this thing like a Ferrari?â
Want to read more? Visit the blog here: https://www.crestron.com/News/Blog/May-2024/How-They-Did-It-Integrating-an-NFL-Draft-Room
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