Jump to: site navigation, content.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Sundance Square in Fort Worth to host ESPN during Super Bowl XLV


ESPN will construct a large outdoor set in the Chisholm Trail lot at the heart of Sundance Square with Richard Haas’ three-story trompe l’oeil The Chisholm Trail mural as the backdrop.

Chisholm Trail mural in Fort Worth's Sundance Square

Flickr user Robert W. Howington

Chisholm Trail mural in Fort Worth's Sundance Square

— Fort Worth Mayor Mike Moncrief and Ed Bass, developer of Sundance Square, announced Wednesday that ESPN, Inc. has chosen downtown Fort Worth’s Sundance Square as its production headquarters for Super Bowl XLV. More than 80 hours of ESPN television coverage, as well as ESPN Radio shows, and other related content across ESPN’s multimedia platforms will be based out of Sundance Square. On-site telecasts will begin Monday, January 31, 2011 and all shows will be open for free public viewing.

“I can not think of a better partner for Fort Worth than ESPN,” said Moncrief. “Super Bowl week is going to be very special for our citizens and ESPN will add to the excitement. We welcome the ESPN team into our family.”

ESPN selected Sundance Square for its ability to showcase the historic Tarrant County Courthouse, skyscrapers, and the notable settings in and around Sundance Square. ESPN will construct a large outdoor set in the Chisholm Trail lot at the heart of Sundance Square with Richard Haas’ three-story trompe l’oeil The Chisholm Trail mural as the backdrop. A separate ESPN Radio set and a demonstration field will also be built in this area. Equipment and production trucks will sit adjacent to the Chisholm Trail lot on the parking lot near the Flying Saucer.

Some of ESPN’s most popular programs will originate from Sundance Square throughout the week, including daily editions of Mike & Mike in the Morning, SportsCenter, NFL Live, a special three-hour edition of Sunday NFL Countdown on Super Bowl Sunday, and more. Chris Berman, Mike Ditka, Tom Jackson, Ron Jaworski, Keyshawn Johnson, Suzy Kolber, Stuart Scott, Hannah Storm, Trey Wingo, and Steve Young are among the many on-air commentators expected to be featured throughout Super Bowl week, along with top guests from the world of sports and entertainment. Program schedules will be released at a later date and all shows will be open for public viewing.

“This is one of the biggest broadcasting opportunities we have ever hosted,” said Ed Bass, Sundance Square developer. “As the cultural heart of the city, Sundance Square offers the perfect location, availability of space, and built-in audience where ESPN can interact with our visitors. ESPN will benefit from this dynamic urban environment and Fort Worth will be showcased as a vibrant, authentic, and diverse city to millions of people across the country.”

ESPN the Magazine has also chosen Fort Worth as the site for its annual NEXT event, one of Super Bowl week’s top parties. ESPN the Magazine will announce the event venue later this year.

ESPN’s Super Bowl week coverage from Fort Worth will be seen and heard across ESPN’s many domestic networks -- including in Spanish on ESPN Deportes -- and available in more than 100 countries and territories via ESPN International. In addition, ESPN Radio 103.3, the wholly-owned ESPN property based in Dallas-Ft. Worth and one of 750 ESPN Radio affiliates nationwide, will broadcast from Sundance Square during the week.

“The city and business leaders from Fort Worth and Sundance Square have welcomed ESPN with open arms, and we are thrilled that our production headquarters, ESPN The Magazine’s NEXT party and other related events will originate from this world-class destination throughout the week of Super Bowl XLV,” said ESPN Executive Vice President John Skipper.

Super Bowl XLV will be held at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington on February 6, 2011.


Source: Sundance Square



Share: 
del.icio.us Digg DZone Facebook Fark Google Google Reader Reddit Slashdot StumbleUpon Technorati Twitter YahooBuzz YahooMyWeb YCombinator


Travis Bush, verified:

Just another example of epic failure on Dallas' part..we have no new stadium, we don't even host one of the biggest parties on the planet..why couldn't of Dallas suggested Fair Park? More lingering failure from the reign of Laura Miller..

2 years, 10 months ago
Link to this comment | Suggest removal

Alex Bentley, staff:

Travis, in reading other stories, a big factor in choosing Sundance Square was the amount of people that are already around in downtown Fort Worth, which would look impressive for the cameras. Not sure I can think of a place that would be similar in Dallas.

2 years, 10 months ago
Link to this comment | Suggest removal

Travis Bush, verified:

I can see that...still makes Dallas look pretty lame.

2 years, 10 months ago
Link to this comment | Suggest removal

Sarah Blaskovich, staff:

Instead of just spending a week hosting ESPN in Fort Worth, the S-T reports that ESPN is calling it a "relocation" -- with the whole corporate HQ moving down.

Seems like semantics to me: The fact that the president of ESPN is coming to North Texas the week of the Super Bowl, when the Super Bowl happens to be in North Texas, would seem like a no-brainer. Wouldn't he come even if it wasn't coined a "relocation"?

2 years, 5 months ago
Link to this comment | Suggest removal

What do you think?

:

:

 Find out how to share this comment with Facebook

See more stories in:


Faved or commented on by...

Latest comments...

Bike the Santa Fe Trail to these 10 landmarks and eateries

Any way to tell what streets this map is following? And where it starts? I am not from Dallas but


Sample 150 craft beers from local homebrewers at Oak Cliff's Brew Riot

So how was this? Unfortunately I already had plans, looks awesome though.


Stay connected