ESPN Concludes Eastern Conference Finals With Yet Another Ratings Record
Published June 11, 2012Celtics-Heat Game Seven set a local record for an NBA game in Boston with a 21.7
BLOWING THE WHISTLE: SI.com’s Richard Deitsch wrote former NBA referee Steve Javie has been “hired by ESPN as a rules analyst for pregame and postgame coverage of the NBA Finals, as well as ‘SportsCenter.’” Javie “hopes to follow in the footsteps” of former NFL VP/Officiating Mike Pereira, who now explains rules during Fox' NFL broadcasts. Javie said that Pereira's success “inspired him to pitch ESPN on a similar position months ago.” ESPN Senior VP/Talent Development & Planning Laurie Orlando “reached out to Javie to do a segment on ‘SportsCenter’ on the officiating of the Heat-Celtics series.” Network officials were “pleased with what they saw and have now invited him to work the NBA Finals.” Javie said, “I'm hoping for positive feedback because I believe it's something that's been missing. I hope people come away and say, ‘Boy, I didn't even look at it that way, and I never knew that.’” He added, “I'm not going to be a jerk about it because these are my guys. But I want to be the voice of the official and tell people, ‘Look at this play. Maybe you should have had a whistle here, but here is the reason why they didn't blow it’” (SI.com, 6/10).
NOT VERY MAGICAL: In N.Y., Bob Raissman wrote NBA Commissioner David Stern “should actually swap out" ESPN's "Kia NBA Countdown" pregame show for TNT's "Inside The NBA." Even with the "inconsistent, semi-horrendous performances by Shaquille O’Neal, the rest of the cast -- Kenny Smith, Ernie Johnson Jr. and Charles Barkley -- combines to form the best studio show, in any sport.” The ESPN studio offering, featuring Magic Johnson, Jon Barry, Michael Wilbon and Chris Broussard, “suffers because it doesn’t have a legit host to play traffic cop.” ESPN has tried to make Johnson "its go-to guy,” but he "blows stale air while relating most everything to himself and his playing days” (N.Y. DAILY NEWS, 6/10). In Tampa, Tom Jones writes the “good news about ABC carrying the NBA Finals is we get to listen to game analyst Jeff Van Gundy.” The “bad news is we don't get to hear” Barkley (TAMPA BAY TIMES, 6/11).
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