The screen shrinks to a 4:3 pillarboxed square in the center of your beautiful widescreen television. The edges are gray or black. And the picture itself? It’s soft, grainy, and smeared. You’re watching “NHRA Drag Racing” or a low-stakes mid-major college basketball game. The scorebug is chunky, the graphics are from the dial-up era, and the player’s faces are watercolor paintings. You think to yourself: Why does the B-team get the bad vision?
The date was March 30, 2008. A Sunday.
The story of ESPN2HD is the story of legitimacy. For years, ESPN2 was the channel you settled for when your game was bumped. But with HD, it became the channel you sought out . The difference between SD and HD was the difference between watching a game and being there. And by 2012, when ESPN finally shut down the old standard-definition simulcast of ESPN2, no one mourned. The blurry square was dead. Long live the widescreen. espn2hd