Cleveland Cavaliers Score Big with Largest HD Arena Video Board

NBA team adds stars on the court in quest for NBA title, leads league in scoreboard square footage—and flaming swords.

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As the Cleveland Cavaliers advance deeper into the NBA playoffs this spring, you have to wonder how much credit the team’s biggest offseason addition should get.

No, we’re not talking about LeBron James and his return to his hometown team, but rather the 5,550-square-foot LED scoreboard at the center of Quicken Loans Arena.

That monstrosity represents the largest HD scoreboard in any arena in the country and was in the planning stages well before King James brought his talents back from South Beach in the summer, says ANC Sports executive VP of technology sales and service Chris Mascatello.

The four-sided, center-hung scoreboard has four enormous HD video screens that are tilted and curved to provide optimal viewing angles for all fans whether they are seated in the front row or in the balcony. The two sideline screens measure 31.50′ high x 56.69′ wide and feature greater-than-HD video. The two high-resolution baseline screens measure 29.92′ high x 33.07′ wide.

Photos of the Cleveland Cavaliers Scoreboard

The arena is also illuminated with more than 11,682 square feet of new LED displays in the seating bowl and concourses. This included updating the four corner boards and 360-degree fascia ribbon in the seating area and replacing traditional backlit signage on the concourses with high resolution LED technology.

ANC Sports installed the center-hung scoreboard, armed with the fan-favorite flaming sabers, and its new audio/visual systems in time for the 2014-15 season opener in October, and every game the Cavs play this season gives the board another chance at national exposure.

“We had been talking for a long time,” says Mascatello, noting the conversation started a couple of years ago when the old board neared a decade. “The Cavs wanted something unique and large, but you still have to do it in a thoughtful manner.” With the installation, the Cavaliers boast the largest screen in any U.S. arena by about 8 to 10 percent, says Mascatello.

The rectangular board was installed because square boards would’ve been so wide that fans in the front rows wouldn’t have been able to see them, says Mascatello. All four screens have a curve, he says, with the sideline screens more downward than normal.

“Curving the board in like that gives the fans a more immersive experience,” says Mascatello.

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As you might expect with a massive investment of this kind, team owner Dan Gilbert was involved with the process and helped to encourage ANC to incorporate propellants and other devices that create flaming swords during pre-game introductions and at other times during the game as appropriate.

And, even with twice the video square footage of its predecessor, the new Quicken Loans video board didn’t necessitate any ceiling upgrades, such as aluminum reinforcements, says Mascatello. The video board features “a very subtle curve with a 6 mm video screen,” he says.

Although the center boards get the most attention, and deservedly so, ANC also replaced and upgraded the arena’s corner boards, ribbon board and fascia as part of its work.

As with many of ANC Sports’ installation, “the timeline was very, very tight,” says Mascatello. The Cavaliers, arena owners and Gateway Management had to wait for funding on the project as a sin tax passed in Cleveland in May or June last year, he says, and that meant ANC couldn’t start its work until August, only a few months before the 2014-2015 season started.

The arena was in use with concerts, a circus and other games during the summer as ANC kicked off its portion of the job. That meant 18- to 24-hour shifts by the end of the installation, says Mascatello. ANC Sports kept the previous video board intact at the beginning of its work and shrouded the new video board during other events so fans didn’t see it before the Cavs’ opener.

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Quicken Loans Arena also now boasts a new state-of-the-art HD video production control room, featuring a 6 ME Grass Valley video switcher, five cameras (including two wireless cameras for crowd interaction and contests), two Dyno six channel replay units (including super-slow options) and four scoreboard mounted robotic cameras to capture unique views of game action and additional crowd shots. The HD video production system was designed by Comprehensive Technical Group (CTG).

The new technology will be synchronized through ANC’s vSOFT operating system. Under a multi-year partnership, ANC designed, installed, will create all content and is operating the entire display system through vSOFT.

“It was a pretty crazy environment,” says Mascatello.

Here’s some of the craziness from Opening Night in October:

And, while Mascatello is proud of ANC’s work, he doesn’t focus on the record-breaking nature of it.

“It’s big in terms of square footage, but it’s not an overbearing presence,” he says.

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