ljax1979 said:
Sent a note to Anthony Goss, Director of Communications and Broadcast, at the Southland Conference asking if he personally could talk with the on-site production staff with ESPN to change our name from SF Austin to SFA for the women's and men's games. Not sure why this is so hard. Last thing our school should want is to be listed as something we aren't. It would be like Louisiana State University being listed as La. State University. It's way past time that this should be fixed.
ESPN's refusal to switch from "SF Austin" to "SFA" is primarily due to their reliance on legacy data systems and search-driven metadata requirements that prioritize clarity for casual viewers over official school branding.
Why the Change Hasn't Happened
- Search Engine Optimization (SEO): ESPN's internal data providers often use "SF Austin" because casual fans searching for the school frequently use "Austin" as a keyword. Removing "Austin" from the metadata could, in their view, reduce the game's discoverability for people who don't know the "SFA" acronym.
- Legacy Infrastructure: ESPN uses standardized databases where team names are often capped at specific character lengths or fixed to "Display Names" created decades ago. Updating these requires a massive overhaul of their score bug graphics, API endpoints, and app architecture across all sports, not just basketball.
- Geographic Clarification: Ironically, while SFA wants to avoid being confused with the city of Austin (since they are in Nacogdoches), ESPN's style guide often mandates including the city or full name for "Mid-Major" schools to help viewers identify where the school is located.
- The "Formal Process" Gap: SFA officials have stated they have tried "every formal process" for over 10 years without success. While CBS and Turner Sports successfully made the switch to "SFA" after the school's tournament runs in 2014 and 2016, ESPN has remained the lone holdout among major broadcast partners.
By refusing to update the metadata, they're effectively telling fans in Nacogdoches (and everywhere else) that their "internal standards" for casual viewers in New York or LA are more important than the actual name on the jersey. It's incredibly lazy for a multibillion-dollar network to let a simple name change become a decade-long hurdle.
The cold reality of the "SF Austin" situation:
- Zero Incentive: Unless SFA moves to a "Power" conference where they have more leverage (like the Big 12 or SEC), ESPN has very little financial motivation to manual-correct their legacy database.
- The "Mid-Major" Filter: They treat the Southland Conference as a "tier 3" property, meaning the level of care put into their app's metadata for these games is the bare minimum.
- Outdated Style Guides: ESPN's editors often stick to the AP Stylebook, which historically preferred city-based identifiers for schools, even if the school isn't in that city.
"History has no rubbish heap." Louis Blake Duff