All that can be said about this move during the Allstate Sugar Bowl is that ESPN got caught doing ESPN things.
The college football playoff game between the Notre Dame Fighting Irish
and the Georgia Bulldogs was held in New Orleans, postponed after 14
people were killed in an ISIS-inspired terror attack committed by
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, 42, a Texas native, who used a Ford truck to run
over pedestrians on a crowded Bourbon Street before opening fire on
other bystanders. Police killed him.
The game was supposed to be held on New Year’s Day but postponed
until Thursday afternoon. There was a moment of silence held for the
victims of this tragedy, along with the national anthem, but ESPN opted
not to broadcast (via NY Post):
All
eyes were on ESPN on Thursday as the Sugar Bowl took place a little
more than 24 hours after an ISIS-inspired terrorist created mayhem on
Bourbon Street in New Orleans that left 14 people dead and injured
dozens more.
But noticeably absent from the pregame broadcast on
the main network was the national anthem and the moment of silence held
in honor of the tragedy that occurred about 1 mile away from the
Caesars Superdome where Notre Dame and Georgia squared off.
The
exclusion of both moments from the ESPN telecast angered some football
fans and led to criticism of the network on social media.
“SportsCenter,”
which had served as the pregame show due to the unusual circumstances,
had wrapped on an interview with Tim Tebow and went to a commercial
break before the moment of silence and returned in the middle of the
anthem, “making it awkward to cut it” at that moment, the source
explained.
ESPN did open its broadcast of the Sugar Bowl with a
pre-recorded message from President Joe Biden, and play-by-play
broadcaster Sean McDonough spoke about the tragedy in his open while a
montage of fans, police and the city of New Orleans played on the
screen.
“SEC Nation,” which airs on the ESPN-owned SEC Network,
was broadcast live from the Superdome and aired the moment of silence
and national anthem in their entirety.
Still, not airing the tributes on ESPN following the tragedy stirred a lot of emotions for fans online.
Another unforced error by the network.
Here's the SEC Network's broadcast of the moment:
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