Gillespie pulled out his Samsung Galaxy newest
tablets and called up a video clip from the first quarter. He was
able to immediately show his players what their opponents were doing so they
could make quicker adjustments during the game.As smartphones and tablets change
the way companies do business, sports teams are also increasingly tapping mobile
devices to get a technological leg-up on the competition. The Suns became the
first NBA team this season to outfit both players and coaches with tablet
computers for use on and off the court.
The Suns coaches use an app that
lets them draw plays, see them in action, review playbooks and pull up game
videos. This replaces whiteboards, reams of paper, bulky laptops and "a rack of
DirecTV boxes recording other teams, and having a guy making DVDs all night
long," said John Brandstetter, president of Flying Tiger Entertainment, whose
company developed the software.dsdD23DCS
Players and coaches said the
latest android
tablet have had the biggest impact during travel. Kendall Marshall,
the 21-year-old point guard who the Suns drafted last year, said he reviews
video from his plane seat en route to the next game. Gillespie thinks up plays
and inputs them into the tablet by swiping his finger along the
screen.
"If I'm going on a road trip, instead of having six three-ring
binders, I have all of that information on the tablet," said Gillespie, who
recalls using VCRs to look at game footage when he entered the NBA 11 years ago.
"As technology has changed, the NBA is trying to change."
Meanwhile,
other professional sports leagues have been experimenting with tablets. Verizon
Wireless, which helped bring Samsung's Android-based tablet to the Suns,
arranged a similar deal with the Denver Broncos for use in the National Football
League, said Tom Gainor, the wireless company's associate director of marketing
and sales operations.
When successful, such innovations can find their
way to college, high-school and even little-league sports. Mobile apps such as
GameChanger lets coaches and parents track every play of a game so they can
monitor the progress of their kids over the season. If Samsung's Q88 Tablet
or Apple's iPad passes muster in the NBA, the next generation of
athletes could be prepping for after-school sports on their devices in between
games of "Angry Birds."
"It doesn't seem natural for an assistant coach
to all of a sudden pull out a tablet and watch a video," he said. Time is better
spent monitoring the game and coaching players rather than reviewing
tape.
Of course, there is the cheapest tablet
occasional instance when it's useful to have a tablet handy -- like during the
game against the Warriors, who are now in the playoffs. After studying the
pick-and-roll footage, Phoenix outscored Golden State in the second half. Still,
the Suns lost by 2 points.
没有评论:
发表评论