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NHL INNOVATIONS DEBUT THIS WEEKEND; LEAGUE NEEDS MORE STARS?

          ESPN and Fox will introduce several new technologies
     during their coverage of this weekend's NHL All-Star
     Weekend.  ESPN has placed credit-card sized cameras, called
     TargetCams, inside the targets of the accuracy shooting
     SuperSkills segment, during Saturday night's broadcast.  The
     cameras will give viewers a goalie's-eye view of shots. 
     Both Fox and ESPN will use thirteen mics that have been
     frozen into the ice which will pick up sounds of sticks,
     skates and pucks (ESPN).  The two-inch mics won't pick up
     "words or whistles" (BOSTON GLOBE, 1/22).
          GIVE US ALL-STARS? In Baltimore, Milton Kent writes on
     Fox's final year of its NHL deal and notes how the network
     changed the game presentation with technology: "[Fox]
     attempted to take a game that was and still is largely on
     the fringe of the American sports consciousness and bring it
     into the 20th century, only to have virtually every move met
     with criticism from the hockey community" (SUN, 1/22).  In
     Boston, Howard Manly notes that Fox Sports was "blasted" by
     critics for its innovations. Fox Sports Exec Producer Ed
     Goren feels that TV has "done its part to help popularize
     the NHL, but can't do it alone."  Goren: "At some point, the
     league has to look within itself and ask whether they are
     doing enough to create personalities and stars locally and
     nationally" (BOSTON GLOBE, 1/22).  Goren added that he is
     "not sure hockey's drawing power is simply a TV issue." 
     Goren: "Every sport needs characters, and hockey doesn't
     have enough of them.  I'm not saying that say, trash-talking
     is particularly good.  But it may help with this whole
     younger generation" (Michael Hiestand, USA TODAY, 1/22).  

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