Yankees and Mariners Play in First-Ever Regional 3-D Baseball Broadcast


Derek Jeter
has never looked cooler.

The YES Network joined forces with DirecTV to broadcast the first-ever 3-D telecast of a Major League Baseball game when the Yankees played the Mariners over the weekend, the New York Daily News reports.

The 3-D broadcasts took place on Saturday and Sunday and were more complicated than HD, requiring seven 3-D cameras (five stationary on the field, one hand-held and one fixed on the announcers), an extra sound and video truck and a second crew of people.

A viewing party was held at Helen Mills Theater in Chelsea on Sunday, where Yankee fans watched the game wearing 3-D glasses. Representatives from Panasonic told the Daily News that the goal was to make the viewers feel like they're really at the game.

"In a movie, it's sort of an 'Oh my God!' effect," YES Network CEO Tracy Dolgin told the New York Post. "This actually makes you feel like you're there. That's a leap forward, as opposed to a step forward."

The 3-D game broadcast technology is still in the beginning stages of its development, and the games ended up costing seven times more than a regular HD broadcast.

"It will always be more expensive, but it won't be seven times more expensive," Dolgin told the Post.

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According to The Associated Press, the games were also broadcast by DirecTV in conjunction with the Mariners' broadcasting partner, Fox Sports Northwest.