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A lesson in covering the Jogo Bonito: FIFA World Cup Brazil 2014

We have covered the last four World Cups but never has there been an event as logistically challenging as the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. However, for this event more than any other, our clients are going to rely heavily on us as they either won't be able to justify having their own crews, or at most may have one'. Brazil is the fifth largest country in the world at 3,287,612 square miles. It spans three time zones, has variable transport infrastructure and is, in places, dangerous. But the 'Jogo Bonito' or 'Beautiful Game' in Portuguese is part of the lifeblood of this country and we know the passion and excitement at this World Cup is going to be palpable.

Press release: A lesson in covering the Jogo Bonito: FIFA World Cup Brazil 2014

Featured in Press Gazette, December 2013. 

sntv, the original sports news agency, was founded in 1996. Since that day, there has never been a breaking sports news story anywhere across the globe that we haven’t covered. From football to badminton, from Olympic Games to regional leagues, sntv has been there. We have covered the last four World Cups but never has there been an event as logistically challenging as the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. However, for this event more than any other, our clients are going to rely heavily on us as they either won't be able to justify having their own crews, or at most may have one'. Brazil is the fifth largest country in the world at 3,287,612 square miles. It spans three time zones, has variable transport infrastructure and is, in places, dangerous. But the ‘Jogo Bonito’ or ‘Beautiful Game’ in Portuguese is part of the lifeblood of this country and we know the passion and excitement at this World Cup is going to be palpable.

More or less as the last ‘Games Maker’ handed back their security pass after the London 2012 Olympics, we started planning for Brazil. In September 2012, we opened our own dedicated bureau in Rio so we could combine remote planning from London with working locally to start covering stories on preparations, controversies and colour pieces like the Dutch team visiting the favelas. For the main event, thousands of hours of work is being done to get 20 of our crews out to Brazil and in place as a story breaks, all under the stewardship of our Managing Editor, Andrew Parkinson. Understanding the cities, the transport connections, the proximity of the stadia and likely team bases, liaison with both FIFA, national football associations and with local organising committees and governments, hotel and flight bookings, securing the right people from our network who have the right kind of access and working closely in planning with the Associated Press and their GMS (Global Media Services) team offering live ‘stand-uppers’ and studio positions across Brazil are just some of the tasks on the list when it comes to covering an event like this.

Our work at the last four World Cups has taught us a lot. Getting there early with as many boots on the ground as possible is key. The first week in particular is breakneck in terms of speed and scale due the number of ‘prep’ stories and all 32 teams with news to cover. You can’t scrimp on important relationships – particularly with each national team, with local fixers and with translators who become critical once you move away from central Rio. The breadth of coverage is important, not just in Brazil but the ‘at home’ stories too – thousands of fans gathered in town centres in Melbourne or Madrid, Munich or Montevideo all celebrating or commiserating their team’s performance. Viral stories also play a big part -the likes of Paul the Octopus increasingly featuring alongside the more ‘serious’ sports news. The final lesson we’ve learnt is the importance of safety. Brazil is a fantastic country but with some real unknowns so every member of the sntv crew will go through rigorous Hostile Environment Training.

More than anything, covering the World Cup is about the predictable and the breaking and being able to cover both in time and with as much of the important detail as possible. We have a multitude of sources for breaking news with our own Rio bureau chief, an extensive and reliable network across the football community and crucially our relationship with the Associated Press. As does any journalist, we follow the wires and social media is key. Technology advances also mean clients with people in Brazil can access all our video on the ground, not just back at HQ.

Once we have the scent of a story, it is all about harnessing our journalistic expertise and using the latest technology to gather and send as soon as possible. Dongles, MiFi, LiveU, AP fibre and satellite truck availability all ensure we get every second of quality World Cup news in HD to our 400 plus broadcast and digital customers across the globe before the sun sets on the Amazon.

About sntv
For content creators who want to connect with sports fans worldwide, SNTV is the dedicated sports news video partner that empowers a consistent output of rich and relevant stories. Thanks to our partnership of The Associated Press and IMG, we have unrivalled access to cover global and local sports events. We get our audience right inside every story, giving our clients news with an edge. And that’s unbeatable sports content on more than 27,000 stories a year that 400+ broadcasters and 800+ digital publishers rely on every day of the year. 

Media Contact: Evelyn Kogler, Marketing Director
Phone: +44 (0) 20 8233 5449
Email: ekogler@sntv.com

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