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  • The virtual yellow line in NFL broadcasts is great.

  • It tells viewers how far the offense needs to advance for a first down.

  • It looks really simple and elegant but creating that line was a massive engineering challenge.

  • It started in the mid 90s when the Fox Sports network tried to make hockey easier to watch.

  • Scientists at Fox Sports laboratories are working on new technology.”

  • "You won't believe your eyes."

  • They embedded infrared transmitters inside the puck and placed sensors around the rink,

  • So that live tv viewers saw a blue glow around the puck at all times and a red comet tail

  • if it traveled over 70 miles per hour. Hockey fans didn’t really embraceglow

  • puckas it came to be known. So the technology was retired when the broadcasting

  • rights for hockey switched to ABC a few years later.

  • But the team of engineers they had assembled for the project was just getting started.

  • They left Fox Sports to create a new company called SportVision.

  • and in 1998, they debuted theFirst and Tenline on ESPN.

  • Until now, this marker was the only reference fans in the stadium and at home had

  • for the first down.” The key challenge in making the yellow line

  • is that the scene is constantly changing, which means the yellow line has to constantly

  • change. Not only are there 3 different cameras used

  • for the wide shots of the field, each camera pans, tilts and zooms to follow the action.

  • So the first thing Sportvision does before the game is create a 3D mathematical model

  • of each football field using laser surveying tools.

  • And during the game they gather data from the cameras about their pan, tilt, and zoom positions

  • for every single frame. So when the operator specifies that the first

  • down is at the 43rd yard line, for example, the computers combine the camera data with

  • their own model of the field to draw the yellow line in the proper perspective

  • ..and to redraw it, for every frame being broadcast to viewers.

  • The final step is what makes the line kind of magical -- removing any part of the line obstructed

  • by players, refs or the ball so that the line looks like it’s underneath them, almost

  • painted on the field. The way the computers know which pixels to

  • remove is by sampling the colors - think of the field as a giant green screen.

  • But anyone who has worked with green or blue screens knows that you need a really uniform

  • and evenly lit background for it to work well. So Sportvision identifies in advance which

  • shades of green and brown are in the field given the lighting conditions -- those are

  • the colors to be covered by the yellow line. And they identify which colors are in the

  • players uniforms and should never be covered by yellow.

  • It works amazingly well. Here’s the Packers, wearing green, in the rain. No problem.

  • It only fails in the most extreme weather, like this 2013 game in Philly. The line ends

  • up all over players, but on the other hand the system was helpfully used to insert the

  • yardage numbers that had been covered up with snow.

  • The whole yellow line process delays the live broadcast by less than a second.

  • And not surprisingly, it was an immediate success. Sportvision won an Emmy for it,

  • and went on to make virtual visual aids for NASCAR, baseball, sailing and the Olympics.

  • And football broadcasts have since added more graphics, like the line of scrimmage and perhaps

  • unnecessary large arrows showing the same information that’s in the scorebox.

  • But if that’s annoying consider this: This type of technology is being used insert

  • ads into stadiums and onto fields for a lot of sports broadcasts.

  • But the NFL doesn’t allow it. In the grand tradition of the yellow line, the graphics

  • on the field are not there to sell you things, but to help you follow the game.

The virtual yellow line in NFL broadcasts is great.

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