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  • NFL Warming up to Social Media

    Posted on September 1st, 2009 admin No comments

    Double D has had some interesting, and crazy funny tweets this off season.

    Double D has had some interesting, and crazy funny tweets this off season.

    After this offseason Twitter explosion of popularity, and training camp antics of the NFL’s usual suspects, the commissioner is trying to head conflict off at the pass by being proactive.

    AP: The NFL said Monday it will allow players to use social media networks this season, but not during games. Players, coaches and football operations personnel can use Twitter, Facebook and other social media up to 90 minutes before kickoff, and after the game following traditional media interviews.
    During games, no updates will be permitted by the individual himself or anyone representing him on his personal Twitter, Facebook or any other social media account, the league said.
    The use of social media by NFL game officials and officiating department personnel will be prohibited at all times. The league, which has always barred play-by-play descriptions of games in progress, also extended that ban to social media platforms.
    Earlier this summer, Chargers cornerback Antonio Cromartie was fined $2,500 by the team for criticizing the food service at training camp on Twitter.
    The Miami Dolphins imposed restrictions on players, reporters and even spectators at their training camp, and several other teams also set up some restrictions on practice fields, including the Broncos, Patriots, Bills, Colts, Saints and Lions.
    Read more at AP

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  • Can Social Media Help Michael Vick?

    Posted on May 20th, 2009 admin No comments

    michael-vick

    Man what a hot button topic. I personal think if he wasn’t Michael Vick, He never would have seen the inside of a prision cell. His fame made him a martyr for the cause. They striped him of his title, yanked his money and locked him away, but I digress…

    Social media can be good for a rep or bad, it just depends how it’s used. I don’t think MV the person needs SM right now. He needs to pick up the pieces, be happy to be free, and repair the relationship in his life in person. SM could be way too over bearing in this case… my two cents.

    mashable.com – There was a time when Michael Vick was one of the most popular athletes on the planet. Of course, today sees Vick in a far different circumstance, as the former Atlanta Falcons quarterback was released from federal prison (and will finish his 23-month sentence under house arrest) and awaits a job making $10/hour in construction.

    For now, Vick’s football career is in doubt, as he remains suspended by the NFL, and signing the athlete would be a huge PR risk for any team. But Vick is already taking steps to try and rebuild his image – in addition to his humble blue collar job, today it was announced that Vick will be working with The Humane Society to help stop dogfighting.

    Read the full story at mashable.com.

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  • NFL and Social Media

    Posted on April 24th, 2009 admin No comments

    nfl-logobrandweek.com – Each April, the National Football League holds the spring Draft, an annual event during which it recruits new players (mainly from colleges) to join its teams. In the past, this selection process was an “institutional event,” where football fans knew the drill and creating buzz around the event was not as necessary. In the age of Twitter, Facebook and mobile technology, however, the NFL is changing up its game. This year, the League is aggressively using social media to promote the two-day Draft, which takes place April 25-26. NFL Online general manager Laura Goldberg spoke with Brandweek about the shift online, how it’s able to better engage fans, and what the NFL is doing differently with this year’s Draft. Excerpts from her conversation are below:

    Brandweek: The NFL is leveraging social media—perhaps more so than ever—in its 74th Draft. Why so?
    Laura Goldberg: I would call it fan engagement. The fans are incredibly engaged in the Draft and all things NFL. Frankly, they want more and more information. They want to know immediately which [team] is picking which player—whether they are sitting in front of their TV on a Saturday afternoon or taking their kids to the park or need to go to a baseball game, they want to be there. The fans are so passionate about the NFL and about their teams and what’s going on that they want to be able to talk about it. They want to be able to interact with personnel and players and that conversation is happening all around the Web, and a lot of that also happens [outside of] NFL.com, but the idea of engaging with social media is to broaden that conversation.
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