Kirk Van Houten
Registered User
- May 7, 2019
- 1,487
- 1,635
Strong audience for Colorado's blowout loss to Nebraska
Saturday’s Colorado-Nebraska college football game averaged 6.3 million viewers on NBC and Peacock, according to Nielsen fast-nationals and Adobe Analytics — easily the most-watched game in the network’s “Big Ten Saturday Night” franchise. As was the case for their closer-than-expected opener against North Dakota State (4.76M), Colorado did not draw quite as well as for the equivalent game last season, which also put the Buffaloes against Nebraska. Viewership declined 28% from that year-ago matchup, which averaged a Nielsen-only audience of 8.7 million in the FOX “Big Noon Saturday” window. Last season, it took until mid-October before a single Colorado game averaged fewer than seven million viewers. Coming off of a near-disaster against FCS North Dakota State and a blowout loss to the Cornhuskers in which they trailed 28-0 at halftime, it may be the case that Colorado does not get to that mark once this season. Even so, audiences of four and six million for Colorado football would have been unthinkable two years ago, when the team played one game all year with a seven-figure audience (its season-opener against TCU averaged 1.25 million).
Saturday’s Colorado-Nebraska college football game averaged 6.3 million viewers on NBC and Peacock, according to Nielsen fast-nationals and Adobe Analytics — easily the most-watched game in the network’s “Big Ten Saturday Night” franchise. As was the case for their closer-than-expected opener against North Dakota State (4.76M), Colorado did not draw quite as well as for the equivalent game last season, which also put the Buffaloes against Nebraska. Viewership declined 28% from that year-ago matchup, which averaged a Nielsen-only audience of 8.7 million in the FOX “Big Noon Saturday” window. Last season, it took until mid-October before a single Colorado game averaged fewer than seven million viewers. Coming off of a near-disaster against FCS North Dakota State and a blowout loss to the Cornhuskers in which they trailed 28-0 at halftime, it may be the case that Colorado does not get to that mark once this season. Even so, audiences of four and six million for Colorado football would have been unthinkable two years ago, when the team played one game all year with a seven-figure audience (its season-opener against TCU averaged 1.25 million).