Sinclair Broadcast Group has unveiled a new 25,000sqft SMPTE ST-2110 media operations centre for its regional sports networks (RSNs) with cloud-hosted disaster recovery channels, and a large-scale ST-2110 production facility for its Tennis Channel featuring a cloud-based environment for pop-up live special events ­– all built around Imagine Communications infrastructure and playout platforms.

A powerful advocate of the SMPTE ST-2110 family of standards, Sinclair has a long history of collaborating with Imagine Communications to develop IP playout and production systems. Following its 2019 acquisition of regional sports networks from Fox/Disney, Sinclair had to quickly develop a new playout strategy and decided to build an IP-based facility from the ground up to serve as a future-proof hub for the new RSNs. The Atlanta, Georgia-based facility was built in partnership with Encompass with Imagine’s Versio integrated playout platform, Selenio network processors and Magellan SDNOcontrol system at the core.

“Armed with our experience with IP and our strong technical relationship with Imagine, we decided that our first step was to develop an on-premises solution for the RSNs,” said Don Roberts, VP of sports engineering and production systems at Sinclair Broadcast Group. “We also developed options to put some functionality ― like the archive and disaster recovery playout ― into the cloud. This enables us to use the Atlanta facility as a stepping-stone, continually refining the workflows and business cases that will help us transition to a hybrid approach that balances capability and cost.”

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The ST-2110 production facility for Sinclair’s Tennis Channel is built around Imagine infrastructure and playout platforms

 At the same time, Sinclair was developing a platform for its Tennis Channel, a service that features comprehensive coverage of the top 100 tournaments in the sport and more. The channel has a master control centre in Santa Monica, California, which uses the Versio platform, both on-premises for primary origination with Imagine’s ADC automation and as software instances hosted in the AWS cloud for pop-up special events under the control of the cloud-optimised Versio automation system.

The Tennis Channel project presented Sinclair with a new set of technical, operational and business challenges. “Tennis is live and unpredictable, so we need our playout capabilities to be agile and responsive,” Roberts explained. “Software solutions like Versio give us that agility ― the ability to make a decision and have it on air virtually instantly. And because it can be hosted in the cloud, we simply spin it up at the beginning of each tournament and close the software when it ends.”

Central to the architecture at the Santa Monica centre is the Selenio network processor, which Roberts defines as “a broadcast Swiss Army Knife ― if you have a problem with a signal, throw an SNP at it.” Each 1RU SNP device hosts four independent, software-defined processing channels. At the Tennis Channel facility, the SNPs act as IP gateways and support format conversion, which allows the facility to be primarily 1080p, but accommodate 4K and HDR UHD when needed, such as for the French Open Tennis from Roland Garros in Paris.

The facility also uses the new SNP-MV multiviewer personality, allowing for tactical multiview displays to be quickly established wherever they are needed in the workflow.

The new Tennis Channel ST-2110 infrastructure debuted in December 2020. Sinclair then went live to and from the cloud during coverage of the 2021 Miami Open in March, marking the first time that any broadcaster had supported such a high-profile live sporting event via live cloud playout.

Imagine Communications president Steve Reynolds said: “We are privileged to work with Sinclair as their technology partner. They understand, as we do, that we are on the curve of a transition that has the potential to change everything. Along that curve there will be on-prem and cloud systems; hybrid connectivity leading to IP. Sinclair embodies those principles: they use SDI when they need to (with Imagine SNPs as gateways); they use software-oriented technology and IP connectivity; they migrate to the cloud when it is right for them.”

Roberts concluded: “Our plans moving forward are all about making production and delivery more efficient, to create a single ecosystem. Each of our RSNs has its own production facilities and as they need a technology refresh, we will bring them into the ST-2110 world. We see Imagine as a key partner in that process.”