• Ep. 50: Scott Gutterman - The Technology Driving PGA Tour's Digital Revolution

  • Apr 23 2025
  • Duración: 47 m
  • Podcast

Ep. 50: Scott Gutterman - The Technology Driving PGA Tour's Digital Revolution

  • Resumen

  • Scott Gutterman, SVP of Broadcast and Digital Technologies at PGA Tour, offered a fascinating look into the complex technology ecosystem that powers golf broadcasting and digital experiences during the latest episode of "A Guy with a Scarf." Host Carlo De Marchis explored how the PGA Tour leverages cutting-edge technology to bring the sport to fans worldwide.

    The PGA Tour's broadcasting operation has evolved significantly in recent years. Gutterman explained that in 2020, they took greater control of their production capabilities. "We actually took over the below the line production," he noted, describing how they now deploy eight trucks to each tournament site, setting up the compound, fiber networking, and camera equipment.

    While maintaining an on-course production footprint, they've also embraced centralization. "For the ESPN productions and the PGA Tour Live productions, we manage them from top to bottom," Gutterman said. Much of this work now happens at their headquarters in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, where they operate from multiple studios with walking commentators on the course while desk talent works from their central facility.

    The digital experience for golf fans has evolved dramatically since Gutterman joined the PGA Tour in 2005, when "it was just pgatour.com." Today, their digital ecosystem spans websites, mobile apps, AR/VR experiences, and emerging platforms.

    "Our point of view has become more of really, we want to draw people into the owned and operated platforms, but we also now want to meet everybody wherever they are and however they want to consume golf," Gutterman explained.

    For hardcore fans, the PGA Tour offers extremely detailed data through products like Shot Link and Tour Cast. "We have beautiful maps in there of every single hole. Our own teams, the ShotLink teams do mapping capture with lidar and radar across the course weeks and weeks in advance and capture every single object and tree on the course," he noted.

    Perhaps most intriguing is how the PGA Tour is leveraging artificial intelligence to enhance storytelling. Gutterman described their innovative use of AWS Bedrock with Anthropic's Claude 3.5 Sonnet models to generate narrative commentary for every shot.

    "We were actually able to get to a point where we are telling a story about every single shot, all 30,000 shots," he explained. "Every piece of commentary presents a fact and context."

    This AI-generated commentary goes beyond simple metrics. For example, rather than just noting a player hit a drive 385 yards with 125 yards left to the hole, their system might say: "Rory McIlroy just hit a 385-yard drive on the 18th hole. It's his longest drive of the day... And at 125 yards out, he's got a 10% chance of putting it within 10ft."

    Implementing this AI system required context services to understand golf in real-time and validation services to ensure accuracy. Gutterman emphasized the need for careful monitoring to maintain high accuracy rates.

    The conversation also touched on how AI platforms like Perplexity, Claude, and Gemini are becoming new front ends for sports information. Gutterman noted: "What is that experience going to be like in 24 or 36 months if you're primarily using an Anthropic, if you're using Claude, or if you're using an AWS, Amazon Alexa or you're using a Google Gemini?"

    These platforms are already incorporating sports data, with Perplexity launching a dedicated sports vertical. While the PGA Tour doesn't currently have partnerships with these AI platforms, Gutterman believes partnerships will emerge in the coming year.

    The PGA Tour has institutionalized innovation throughout its organization. What began as a dedicated innovation program with specific budget and staff has evolved into a culture that permeates the entire organization.

    This innovation mindset has led to creative solutions like "drone AR," which uses drones to present live shot trails during broadcasts.


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