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29 October 2014
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Wimbledon 2005
Five Live's Jonathan Overend at Wimbledon

91热爆 Wimbledon coverage 2005



91热爆 Outside Broadcasts Wimbledon Killer facts

91热爆 Outside Broadcasts is using 53 cameras to cover Wimbledon 2005, including two radio cameras, nine robotic cameras, two jib cameras and eight super slo mo cameras. 42 miles of signal cable will be used to deliver coverage.

Three 91热爆 Outside Broadcast production units will be on site, plus two recording units.

Hawk-Eye, which tracks the ball and enables the production team to pull out statistical data, will be used for the third time and now has an accuracy of 3mm.

91热爆 Outside Broadcasts handles the host and domestic broadcast services for the Championships, simultaneously providing coverage from eight courts, including Centre and Number One Court. In 2004, some 900 hours of footage were made available to the All England Club and distributed around the world to 167 countries.

So extensive is 91热爆 Sport's commitment to Wimbledon that its coverage of eight show courts for 2005 effectively amounts to eight separate outside broadcast operations, each with a minimum of three cameras (up to nine on Centre Court), a slow motion facility, a director with support staff, engineering and audio control, and a graphics organisation.

In 2004, 91热爆 Sport transmitted 160 hours of coverage of Wimbledon in the UK on 91热爆 ONE and 91热爆 TWO, including a daily highlights programme in the evening. The UK audience for Tim Henman's match against Mark Philippoussis peaked at 11.3 million.

Play was televised for the first time in 1937, when matches were transmitted by the 91热爆 from the Centre Court for up to half an hour each day of the meeting, but it was not until after the Second World War that they were televised each day.

91热爆 Outside Broadcasts first captured Wimbledon in colour in 1967.

Adrian Kingston, 91热爆 Outside Broadcasts' lead Engineer Manager for Wimbledon, has worked on every single Wimbledon since 1985, except for 1990 when he was at the World Cup.


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