TV ratings for sports other than hockey

Kirk Van Houten

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May 7, 2019
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1,628

Friday’s Padres-Dodgers NLDS Game 5 averaged 7.24 million viewers on FOX, per Nielsen fast-nationals (7.5 million including Fox Deportes and streaming) — the largest LDS audience since Yankees-Indians Game 5 on FS1 in 2017 (7.26M) and the largest NLDS audience since Mets-Dodgers Game 5 on TBS in 2015 (7.38M). Compared to the previous NLDS Game 5, Dodgers-Giants on TBS three years ago, viewership increased 9% from 6.64 million.

The Dodgers-Padres series generated two of the three largest audiences of this year’s LDS, with Game 3 ranking third. FOX and FS1 averaged 4.10 million viewers for the NLDS, up 9% from last year on TBS (3.74M) and the most-watched LDS on any network since the 2015 NLDS on TBS. Prior to this year, the last time FOX carried a deciding LDS Game 5 was 2005, when a Monday night Yankees-Angels game averaged 13.7 million.

San Diego led all markets Friday night with a 19.6 and whopping 59 share, meaning that 59 percent of homes using television were tuned to the game. Los Angeles followed with an 11.1 and 41. (It should be noted that 11% of homes in Los Angeles equals a far larger figure than 20% of homes in San Diego.) Kansas City was the top neutral market with a 4.7/15, followed by New York City at a 4.6/15 and St. Louis at a 4.4/14.
 

Kirk Van Houten

Registered User
May 7, 2019
1,473
1,628

Sunday’s Mets-Dodgers National League Championship Series Game 1 averaged a 4.0 rating and 8.26 million viewers on FOX (8.5M including Fox Deportes and streaming), marking the largest LCS Game 1 audience since 2009, when Angels-Yankees opened with 8.44 million in a Saturday night window on FOX. The previous high over that span was 7.89 million for Cubs-Mets in 2015, a figure that would likely have surpassed this year had out-of-home viewing been tracked in Nielsen estimates back then.

Overall, Mets-Dodgers ranks as the fourth-most watched LCS Game 1 dating back to the 2006 season, behind Angels-Yankees in ’09, Cardinals-Mets in ’06 and Tigers-Athletics that same year (8.59M). (Going back further brings back some considerably stronger audiences, though a few openers in those years aired as part of split-national windows and are thus not comparable.) Mets-Dodgers more-than-doubled last year’s Diamondbacks-Phillies NLCS opener on TBS and truTV (2.0, 3.83M) and increased 10% and 18% respectively from last year’s Rangers-Astros ALCS Game 1 on FOX, which like this year’s game aired in a post-NFL Sunday night window (3.7, 7.02M).

Los Angeles led all markets Sunday with a 12.9 rating and 42 share, followed by New York at a 7.3/20. (The Mets had to compete with a Giants Sunday Night Football game.) San Diego — whose Padres were eliminated by the Dodgers on Friday night — placed third at a 5.8/20. Philadelphia, whose Mets were eliminated by the Phillies, ranked fifth (5.0/13).



 

Kirk Van Houten

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May 7, 2019
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1,628
Maybe if you are not in Big10 or SEC.
FOX was smart for creating the Friday Night Games slate since ABC got the SEC just like before they were smart creating BIG NOON but still ABC has the SEC to dominate every time on saturday expect the 10PM window.


The latest edition of NFL Thursday Night Football (Broncos-Saints) averaged 9.81 million viewers on Amazon Prime Video, marking the least-watched TNF game this season. The first five windows had each topped the 12 million mark, the longest-such streak for TNF in the Amazon era. TNF is now averaging 13.31 million viewers this season, up 3% from the same point last year (12.91M) and the highest average for TNF at this point of the season since CBS and NFL Network averaged 13.60 million in 2016. Broncos-Saints dominated the competing Major League Baseball games, Yankees-Guardians on TBS and truTV (4.3M) and Dodgers-Mets on FS1 (4.0M). The baseball competition was not dramatically stronger than the prior week, when TNF had a substantially stronger 13.18 million opposite Yankees-Royals (3.5M) and Guardians-Tigers (3.4M).


Thursday’s Dodgers-Mets National League Championship Series Game 4 averaged a 1.9 rating and 3.96 million viewers on FS1, marking the least-watched NLCS Game 4 since Diamondbacks-Rockies on TBS in 2007, a game that started after 10 PM ET (3.80M). The Dodgers’ rout declined 30% in ratings and 27% in viewership from Phillies-Diamondbacks on TBS and truTV last year (2.7, 5.45M) and 34 and 31% respectively from Padres-Phillies on FOX in 2022 (2.9, 5.74M), but neither of those games faced NFL competition.

It was no match for Broncos-Saints on Thursday Night Football (9.8M) and also trailed the competing Game 3 of the Yankees-Guardians ALCS Game 3 on TBS and truTV, which it overlapped with for more than an hour (4.3M). The Guardians’ extra-inning comeback win, declined 7% from Astros-Rangers on a Wednesday night last year (4.64M) and 8% from the Yankees’ previous LCS Game 3 in 2022, a Saturday afternoon matchup with Houston (4.66M). Versus last year’s Phillies-Diamondbacks NLCS Game 3, which aired in the same Thursday evening window, viewership increased 4% from 4.14 million. Game 3 was not the least-watched game of the series, as Monday’s series-opener averaged 3.94 million opposite Monday Night Football.
 

Kirk Van Houten

Registered User
May 7, 2019
1,473
1,628

ABC averaged 12.9 million viewers for Georgia-Texas and 10.7 million for Alabama-Tennessee in a Saturday SEC doubleheader, per Nielsen fast-nationals and Adobe Analytics — marking the largest and third-largest audiences of the college football season, respectively. The “SEC on ABC” now accounts for the three largest audiences of the season, with Alabama-Georgia last month ranking second (11.99M per Nielsen). According to ESPN, Saturday marked the first time since 1996 that a single network had two games top the ten million mark in a single day. Excluding the SEC Championship, the Bulldogs’ win was the most-watched SEC conference game in about two years, since CBS drew 13.06 million for Tennessee-Georgia in November of 2022.

ABC now owns 11 of the top 14 college football audiences this season, pending final results from the weekend. Four of the 12 most-watched games this season were created by the latest round of realignment — Georgia-Texas, Ohio State-Oregon on NBC the prior week (10.4M across Nielsen and Adobe Analytics), USC-Michigan on CBS last month (6.32M per Nielsen) and Tennessee-Oklahoma on ABC last month (6.27M per Nielsen).
 

Kirk Van Houten

Registered User
May 7, 2019
1,473
1,628
Colorado hits Deion-era broadcast TV low

Saturday’s Colorado-Arizona college football game averaged 2.02 million viewers on FOX, marking the least-watched Buffaloes game on broadcast television in the Deion Sanders era. Across all networks, only one Deion-era Buffaloes game has averaged fewer viewers, a Friday night matchup against Washington State on FS1 last season (727K). Colorado games have averaged 3.84 million viewers this season, down 49% from the first eight weeks of last season (7.59M). The team’s top game this season was their blowout loss to Nebraska on NBC in Week 2 (5.67M), while five of their six Nielsen-rated games at this point last season topped the seven million mark. The Buffaloes’ blowout win declined 34% from Texas-Houston in the same window last year (3.08M) and was the least-watched game of the FOX tripleheader, behind Nebraska-Indiana on “Big Noon Saturday” (3.18M) and Kansas State-West Virginia in primetime (1.14M). The two other games posted steeper declines, sinking 68 and 66 percent respectively from last year’s higher-profile windows, Penn State-Ohio State (9.96M) and Utah-USC (3.23M).
 

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