Grass Valley Equips Portland Timbers’ Providence Park With HD Tools

The Portland Timbers Major League Soccer team has installed a complete HD production system at its Providence Park stadium based solely on live production equipment from Grass Valley.

The team chose a Grass Valley K2 Dyno replay systems, Korona 2 M/E production switcher and three Focus 75 Live 720p/1080i switchable HD cameras, all of which help the team capture and share game footage with fans in the stadium and those watching at home.



Matt Smith, vice president of broadcasting, Portland Timbers, said it was important to have a production solution that provides the highest quality content for its fans.

“The solution we purchased is ideal for capturing games live and via streaming media, and the fact that our production team is already familiar with the Grass Valley interface means we can get right to work with minimal training for our already busy team,” he said.

The Focus 75 Live cameras each contain three Xensium-FT CMOS imagers with a global shutter.

The Focus 75 Live cameras each contain three Xensium-FT CMOS imagers with a global shutter.

The compact GV Korona features a menu integrated into the panel that enables operators to work quickly and intuitively to produce compelling content for a variety of applications, including tight integration with the Xpression graphics engine. The panel uses the same OLED and color technologies as the larger Grass Valley panels, virtually eliminating any learning curve. Its surface also contains built-in touchscreens in the transition areas that provide status of the M/E bank at a glance.

The K2 Dyno Replay System and Focus 75 Live cameras also offer the sports-centric features the Timbers require.

The K2 Dyno features multi-channel replay, an easy-to-use interface, along with remote access to highlights and clips through ShareFlex. The Focus 75 Live cameras each contain three Xensium-FT CMOS imagers with global shutter that eliminate any of the rolling shutter artifacts seen with other CMOS-based cameras, making them ideal for the Timbers’ fast-paced games.

Grass Valley will display its full portfolio of live production products at the 2017 IBC Show in Amsterdam.

You might also like...

The Back Of The Brain May Soon Rule The Roost

If industry reports are to be believed, Apple is poised to release a mixed-reality headset at some point in 2023. Of course, it’s anyone’s guess when Apple’s Reality Pro will actually see the holographic light of day, but one t…

Learning From The Experts At The BEITC Sessions at 2023 NAB Show

Many NAB Shows visitors don’t realize that some of the most valuable technical information released at NAB Shows emanates from BEITC sessions. The job titles of all but one speaker in the conference are all related to engineering, technology, d…

Interlace: Part 3 - Deinterlacing

Now that interlace is obsolete, we are left only with the problem of dealing with archive material that exists in the interlaced format. The overwhelming majority of video tapes, whether component or composite, analog or digital, would be interlaced.

Compression: Part 6 - Inter Coding

The greatest amount of compression comes from the use of inter coding, which consists of finding redundancy between a series of pictures.

Magicbox Puts Virtual Production Inside An LED Volume On Wheels

Virtual production studios are popping up across the globe as the latest solution for safe and cost/time-effective TV and movie production. This method replaces on location shooting and, by utilizing all-encompassing LED walls (often called “volumes”), is fundamentally changing the…