Crestron PRO3 Bedienungsanleitung


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EUGENE, OR
4K and Football: A Winning Play
Oregon’s new practice and education complex gives the Ducks a crucial edge
in coaching & recruiting
What would you say is the most tech-savvy sports facility in the world?
According to the
Washington Times
®, it’s the Hatfield-Dowlin Football Complex in
Eugene, Oregon, the home of the University of Oregon
® Ducks.
The Hatfield-Dowlin Complex is not a stadium, but a six-story player practice,
education and recruiting center. It was made possible by a gift from Nike founder Phil
Knight and his wife Penny, whose standards were exceptionally high. The granite,
steel and glass structure includes lockers from Germany, Portuguese marble floors,
walnut millwork that was sourced at the mill at a 96% rejection rate, a basalt wall
for a fortress-like facade and a plaza adorned with water features and surprisingly
comfortable stone benches. The Hall of Champions at the entrance, engineered by
a world-renowned acoustician, is outfitted with a Dutch acoustical ceiling, state-of-
the-art 3D sound and a 64-screen video wall that greets visitors with a mosaic of
inspirational 4K videos and stills plus live sports broadcasts.
At the heart of the facility’s video systems is Crestron DigitalMedia™ and Crestron
control technology.
Challenge
Create a football practice and
educational facility that will be the best
of the best, helping to build player
performance and aid recruiting efforts.
Solution
Exceptional designs and appointments,
including video systems based on
Crestron DigitalMedia™ and Crestron
control.
University of Oregon Football
Our new center is probably
the most effective and
efficient building in either
college or pro football.
The video presentation
systems, based on
Crestron technology, are
a big part of making that
possible.”
— Jeff Hawkins
University of Oregon Football
C A S E S T U D Y | E D U C AT I O N
“
crestron.com | 800.237.2041
crestron.com | 800.237.2041
O R E G O N D U C K S | E D U C A T I O N
The coaches in any university football program face
the significant challenge of turning raw high school
recruits into championship players, competing at an
extremely high level as early as their freshman year.
This is especially true for the coaches at Oregon, in a
program that has ranked consistently in the top 10 in
college football polls but is in pursuit of the number
one spot.
As in other football programs, Oregon coaches and
players spend a great deal of time on the practice
field – but they also spend many hours each week
in the classroom. According to Eric Day, Assistant
Video Coordinator for Oregon Football, they spend
most of the classroom time reviewing game and
practice videos, using those videos to show players
how the game is played and how it should be played.
“We shoot every game and every practice, and then
edit the video into play clips here in the facility,” he
explains. “The typical clip shows a play from two
angles and is about 10 to 20 seconds long.”
The video staff supplements the footage they shoot
with material provided by other Pac-12 conference
teams and organize it using XOS Thunder™ software,
the most widely used platform to edit, store and
display sports video. Over the years, they have built up
a collection of hundreds of thousands of clips, which
coaches can access from their laptops to illustrate
virtually any play, its proper execution and proper
defense.
“The coaches annotate the clips as they talk about
them, much as John Madden might on TV, pausing
the video and then drawing a diagram over it using
X’s and O’s,” Day adds. They also use a software
product called Hudl to create diagrams without a video
background, which is especially useful in presenting
new plays and new defensive schemes. Those who
prefer can draw them up on paper and project them
via a document camera.
In addition, the video staff creates an inspirational
video each week from game and practice film, which
is shown before players dress on game days as well
Developing talent
Coaches are busy people, so we
use the Crestron screens to keep
everything as simple as possible.
They have enough on their plate
without having to learn the details of
the video system.”
— Eric Boyd
CompView Audio Visual
“
O R E G O N D U C K S | E D U C A T I O N
crestron.com | 800.237.2041
as on the lobby video wall. “It has quite a dramatic
impact,” Day says. The staff also creates recruiting
videos, including a full-season highlight film each year.
A Crestron DigitalMedia network uses fiber optics and
ten DM® matrix switchers, ranging from 8x8 to 32x32,
to bring raw video and audio into the editing suites
and video servers. From there, AV can be distributed
to two team theaters, nine position meeting rooms, 12
coaches offices and three coaches’ meeting rooms,
as well as a large dining room, players’ and coaches’
locker rooms, a recruitment center, players’ and
recruitment lounges, a media interview room, and a
25,000 square-foot weight and fitness room. Much
of the video the staff shoots is 4K; the DM network
is fully 4K-compatible and transmits that video to the
editing suite, video servers, and then to the video wall.
Details of the systems
According to Jerry Nuckolls, Systems Designer at
integrator CompView Audio Visual, any room at
the Hatfield-Dowlin Complex can, and is, used for
instruction. That’s especially true of the coaches’ offices
as well as the theaters and position rooms, all of which
can access and control the video content.
Most rooms have more than one large-screen display.
The coaches’ “War Room,” designed for full-staff
strategy sessions, includes seven 80” flat-screen
displays and a Christie® projector. Coaches use all of
these screens at once for side-by-side comparisons of
scouting video of potential recruits, as well as to review
game film, TV broadcasts of live games, and play
diagrams.
The players’ lounge includes two video walls dedicated
to Xbox® and PlayStation® consoles plus six large-
screen televisions. “We want to encourage players to
stay here and interact with their teammates, rather than
going back to their rooms,” Day says.
Even the theaters and position meeting rooms all
have two or three screens, used for side-by-side
display of game film, play diagrams, and word slides
or other material. The facility includes five 1920 x
1200 projectors and more than 250 Planar
® flat-panel
displays, many with touch capability. Each coach can
control all AV components via the Crestron Mobile
Pro® app on his iPad® or wall-mounted Crestron touch
screens.
“Coaches are busy people, so we use the Crestron
screens to keep everything as simple as possible,”
explains Eric Boyd, Systems Integration Manager for
CompView. “They have enough on their plate without
having to learn the details of the video system.”
Boyd says the CompView team worked hard to create
an interface that places all important functions within
two button-presses of the home screen. The Crestron
systems control all video and audio routing, plus
channel selection for live TV, volume levels, and, on the
lobby video wall, source selection and layout presets.


Produktspezifikationen

Marke: Crestron
Kategorie: Nicht kategorisiert
Modell: PRO3

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