Main Hall to Main St.

September 2002

 
Monte dances on the field and on the big screen.
An image of dancing Monte appears on UM's new video scoreboard.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A student aims a camera up into the crowded stadium.
Griz Vision camerawork is provided by students such as Ron Russell.

 

 

Huge video screen added
to Griz football stadium

Question: What do Times Square and Washington-Grizzly Stadium have in common?

Answer: The same type of massive video screen.

In a dream come true for University of Montana football fans, a new video scoreboard with a huge 36-by-26-foot full-color screen was installed at the stadium just in time for the Sept. 21 Homecoming game.

The screen, which until recently displayed ads for people thronging New York City's Times Square, is the largest used at a I-AA university and the fifth-largest screen in all of college football, according to Chuck Maes, UM associate athletic director.

It's definitely the biggest television in Montana - visible for miles outside the stadium - and the best part is that it came to the University basically free of charge.

Maes said no taxpayer dollars were used to bring the huge screen to Montana. Instead it will be paid for by advertising on the scoreboard and at fixed locations in the stadium. The estimated cost for the scoreboard and its installation is about $2.3 million.

In addition, Virtu Consulting, the company that procured the scoreboard for UM, has agreed to pay the University $570,000 annually from advertising revenues -- an amount that equals all proceeds generated by past stadium scoreboard advertising agreements.

Virtu Consulting is managed by Terry Pugh, a UM alumnus who played linebacker for the Griz during the late '60s and early '70s. His company maintains similar video scoreboards at the University of Arizona, Florida State University, Ohio State University and other campuses. It was his idea to buy the screen from investors in New York City, where the screen was making less money because of the Sept. 11 attacks and the current economic slowdown. Virtu also intends to install another electronic scoreboard in the Adams Center.

UM players actually saw the screen hanging in Times Square when they flew to New York to tackle Hofstra on Aug. 29. Maes said the screen's trip to Montana was slowed by heightened security measures in New York City and getting the proper permits to remove the huge apparatus from one of the busiest chunks of real estate in North America. Missoula-area trucking firms eventually hauled the scoreboard components to Montana, where workers had three days to get it up and running in time for Homecoming. Maes said the screen took two weeks to become operational at Times Square when it was first installed.

"We worked on the screen all night," UM athletic director Wayne Hogan said on the sidelines during the Homecoming game. "We got it running 10 minutes before the game."

The screen offered huge images of the game, the fans and more. When two Air Force jets buzzed the stadium during the national anthem, they were first seen coming on the big screen. The scoreboard also offered entertaining images such as Godzilla and King Kong stomping and pounding or a rowdy locker room scene from the football movie "Varsity Blues." Monte the mascot's antics could be watched in three-story grandeur, and the "Kiss Cam" let couples express their love before 19,589 screaming Griz fans, a stadium record.

The screen also has created the phenomenon of Griz players glancing upward to see a crisp instant replay of their last play. And it puts more pressure on the refs, since the screen often shows if a flag was warranted.

The camerawork for the new screen is provided by Griz Vision, a group of about a dozen UM radio-television journalism students. They earn $7.75 per hour and valuable job experience as they produce the intense, four-hour program each game day. Many of the students have no experience shooting sports, but fans say their telecasts have looked highly professional.
Maes said the scoreboard adds an exciting element to one of the most vibrant stadiums in I-AA football.

< PREVIOUS | HOME | NEXT >

The University of Montana