GENOA TOWNSHIP, Mich. — Bob Madden's eyes darted from right to left, watching Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Final from a couch with his son, Jonathan, at his side and the family dog, Ruby, at their feet.
Madden, who is deaf, was enjoying the view with access to the commentary delivered in American Sign Language in what is believed to be a first for a major sports league game broadcast.
''I think I'm starting to like this,'' the 68-year-old Madden said Monday night in his home about 50 miles northwest of Detroit. ''It's something new for the Deaf community. When I was a boy, we didn't even have closed captioning.''
Closed captioning has been around since 1980, but the boxes of text in English do not provide true access to viewers in the Deaf community, whose first language is ASL.
The NHL became the first major sports league to offer play by play and analysis in ASL during a live broadcast last week when Florida hosted Edmonton in the Cup Final opener on Saturday night. ESPN+ and Sportsnet+ will feature the groundbreaking platform again Thursday night for Game 3, with the Oilers down 0-2 in the best-of-seven series.
''It's a proud moment for our sport and it's a great example of what can be done to support all communities,'' said Kim Davis, the NHL's senior executive VP of social impact, growth initiatives and legislative affairs. ''Authentically demonstrating that the Deaf community is an important fan base, a fan-in-waiting fan base, is the essence of what inclusion is all about.''
A company that works to improve access to ASL in sports partnered with the NHL to deliver play-by-play and commentary for the underserved community: PXP Chief Operating Officer Jason Altmann, who is deaf, and Noah Blankenship from Denver's Office of Deaf and Hard of Hearing Services appear on the right side of a split screen next to live coverage of the games.
''I grew up watching sports with my dad and it was our way to bond," Altmann said via FaceTime in ASL in an interview with The Associated Press a day after Game 2. "I remember watching ESPN with Chris Berman and Dan Patrick and saying, ‘I wish I could do that, but I am deaf and it would be difficult in this world.' While this is a full-circle moment for me, I don't view it as an opportunity for me. This is an opportunity for the Deaf community to be elevated and provided access.