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SAN FRANCISCO — On game days, most of the action fans see at the Warriors’ new Chase Center is on the court. But up on the eighth floor, a different team works behind the scenes with the technology that delivers what’s seen live by thousands of people on screens all around the arena.

As players warm up on the court tonight, the scoreboard operations team will attend a show meeting. They’ll go over the game-day script to make sure they have the right line-up of promotions, player introductions and statistics to roll out during breaks — and that the Kiss Cam is ready to go.

Talk about pressure: their work is seen on 64 Samsung LED displays throughout the new arena, which seats more than 18,000 people. That includes the Warriors’ gigantic scoreboard (a.k.a. the jumbotron), which is about 83 feet by 48 feet, along with other displays that total 9,699 square feet — the most screen space in an NBA arena. Not to mention the slightly smaller but still humongous screen in the outdoor plaza of the west side of Chase Center, where fans can watch the game without buying tickets.

For Scott Heitman, director of scoreboard operations, the start of each game is always the most nerve-wracking. He oversees the technology used by a team of about 25, including the staff in the main control room, the camera operators on the court, and the people in separate rooms who control the lights and the ribbon LED displays that wrap the perimeter of the court, plus what’s shown on more than 1,100 TV screens throughout the building.

“Once everything gets going, then I feel better,” said Heitman, who has been with the Warriors since February. A broadcast engineer formerly with the Pac-12 Networks, he’s stoked about the state-of-the-art technology that powers the Warriors’ scoreboard and other displays at Chase. “It was exciting to see everything being built from the ground up,” he said before Monday night’s game.

That technology, which according to Heitman includes a system that lets the team route audio and video to anywhere in the building, makes directing a game at Chase Center vs. at Oracle Arena “like night and day,” said Kevin Skillings, who has been the Warriors’ show director for the past 22 years. On game day, the camera operators, replay operators, a graphics operator, a stats producer and others take their cues from him.

While the technology at their fingertips has doubled the amount of things Skillings and his team have to keep track of — more stats, more displays, more cameras — he’s thrilled.

“We call this the NASA control room,” he said, gesturing at the multitude of screens around him, plus all the buttons, switches, controls, DreamCatchers (the machines for video production of replays) and more.

With the latest technology, including a real-time feed from the NBA, the team can show more stats to fans a lot faster. Before, “a lot of stuff had to be looked at by a statistician first,” Skillings said. Now, “it’s at a speed that blows my mind. And it’s so much more accurate.”

Another big difference is that the Warriors own all the equipment at Chase. At Oracle, they didn’t. That gives the team more control, but “it’s on us if something goes wrong,” Heitman said.

Everything went fairly smoothly Monday. The show team recovered quickly from accidentally showing a graphic — for just a second — that said “Warriors win” early in the game. The Warriors ended up losing to the Utah Jazz, 122-108.

“We usually don’t make that mistake,” Skillings said. “But it will happen… the goal is to correct it and keep everything calm.”

Besides, there was more to do, like put the spotlight on unsuspecting couples for the Kiss Cam.

Brett Yamaguchi, senior director of game operations, is on the floor and in contact with Skillings during games. Yamaguchi calls the shots about most everything that Coach Steve Kerr doesn’t — when the T-shirt cannon comes out, when the dance teams perform, or when the emcees or DJ hype up the crowd. He puts together the game-day scripts — and also rates the couples on the Kiss Cam.

“It’s an interesting responsibility that’s fallen on my shoulders,” Yamaguchi said. He rates the kisses “mild,” “medium” or “spicy” — the Kiss Cam is sponsored by Mezzetta, which among other things sells peppers — and the graphics operator upstairs slaps Yamaguchi’s label on video of the lovebirds in real time.

Have some couples ever gotten too spicy?

“Sometimes they don’t want to kiss, but sometimes it’s full throttle,” Skillings said. “It can get a little uncomfortable… you can tell everyone’s cringing and then we move on.”

The big 49ers vs. Seahawks game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara was going on at the same time as Monday’s Warriors game, so the scoreboard ops team also showed football highlights to the fans at Chase, wherever they happened to be, including out on the concourse buying food or drinks. The replay operators quickly showed a clip of the Niners’ field goal that sent that game to overtime — and eventually, Seattle’s game-winning field goal, which handed the 49ers their first loss this season.

“There’s a lot going on,” Skillings said. “Including basketball.”