Move over, Swifties. The football season is almost here and a lot of sports fans will be firing up their phones at stadiums across the country.
At Caesars Superdome in New Orleans, fans of the Saints will get a chance to experience upgrades to the wireless network during the team’s preseason home opener this weekend. It’s part of a broader $560 million project to update the Superdome, which also happens to be hosting the next Super Bowl in February 2025.
All three of the biggest national wireless carriers are reaping the benefits of the wireless upgrades, which include a neutral host/distributed antenna system (DAS) network that was spearheaded by AT&T, according to antenna vendor MatSing. Long-time NFL partner Verizon is in the mix, as well as T-Mobile.
MatSing’s installation, which involved 30 multibeam lens antennas, started earlier this year and was operational in time for the July 4 Essence Festival of Culture, said MatSing Head of Marketing Manish Matta.
These are not your everyday flat-panel antennas, which traditionally are built on phased array technology. They’re spherical antennas that are attached to the ceiling.
“It works kind of like your eye,” but instead of light waves, the antenna captures radio frequency waves, said MatSing EVP and co-founder Leo Matytsine. “Just like your eye can send and receive light from multiple directions, you can send and receive radio frequency waves at the same time and from multiple directions.”
One lens antenna can replace dozens of flat panel antennas, so the venue can get the benefits of additional capacity – to serve all those selfies and game highlights streaming on social media – while taking up less space. MatSing’s approach also is an alternative to putting small antennas underneath the seats of a stadium, which can be costly. (Plus, not everyone wants to sit on top of an antenna.)
“It’s a very different technology from all the other antenna companies,” Matytsine said.