Abysmal 2024 US Open Ratings

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Men's US Open finals against NFL on ABC Sunday averaged 1.7m viewers. The men's semis Friday night on ESPN (against NFL on Peacock) averaged 1.8m.

The women's championship on Saturday averaged 1.6m on ESPN.


Last year’s women’s final with Gauff vs. Sabalenka: 3.4m
Last year’s men’s final with Djokovic vs. Medvedev: 2.8m
 
Men's US Open finals against NFL on ABC Sunday averaged 1.7m viewers. The men's semis Friday night on ESPN (against NFL on Peacock) averaged 1.8m.

The women's championship on Saturday averaged 1.6m on ESPN.


Last year’s women’s final with Gauff vs. Sabalenka: 3.4m
Last year’s men’s final with Djokovic vs. Medvedev: 2.8m

To be expected, I wonder if those numbers includes people who stream and watch related media or not.

Because no one I know even owns a tv, but we all have TikTok and Reels to watch stuff.
 
Men's US Open finals against NFL on ABC Sunday averaged 1.7m viewers. The men's semis Friday night on ESPN (against NFL on Peacock) averaged 1.8m.

The women's championship on Saturday averaged 1.6m on ESPN.


Last year’s women’s final with Gauff vs. Sabalenka: 3.4m
Last year’s men’s final with Djokovic vs. Medvedev: 2.8m
What's crazy is that ABC is free TV in the US, while ESPN requires a subscription.

Not even an American could save the ratings, smh

Sinner unfortunately has the appeal of a wet paper bag
 
Will never get NFL's popularity. The game itself has no rhythm nor flow. It's so f*cking dull.
Exactly. I can’t stand how long it is and all the stopping, plus the scoring system makes it to where you can be playing just to play bc there’s no way you can catch up in time. Can’t see the appeal. That’s what I love about tennis, every point matters and you can always come back.
 
Exactly. I can’t stand how long it is and all the stopping, plus the scoring system makes it to where you can be playing just to play bc there’s no way you can catch up in time. Can’t see the appeal. That’s what I love about tennis, every point matters and you can always come back.
My suspicion is that it's a perfect match for TV advertising with all the breaks - tennis and soccer have the lowest time spent on ads (8%) vs basketball/football around 32%, so no surprise what end up being the most heavily pushed sports in the United States of Advertising


commercials-by-sport-wsn%402x-100.jpg
 
Men's US Open finals against NFL on ABC Sunday averaged 1.7m viewers. The men's semis Friday night on ESPN (against NFL on Peacock) averaged 1.8m.

The women's championship on Saturday averaged 1.6m on ESPN.


Last year’s women’s final with Gauff vs. Sabalenka: 3.4m
Last year’s men’s final with Djokovic vs. Medvedev: 2.8m
NFL regular season games only get 20-30 million viewers. So it's close.



The 2024 NFL season got off to a strong start last weekend, and while online pundits and media watchers grumbled about Tom Brady’s debut in the Fox booth, the TV turnout for the Sunday windows was beyond reproach.

According to Nielsen live-plus-same-day data, the first five TV windows of the fall campaign averaged 19.86 million viewers, good for a 14% lift versus the year-ago period (17.59 million). While the Sunday afternoon format wasn’t an exact match with the 2023 opener—after three years of staging non-exclusive doubleheaders in Week 1, the NFL reverted to the standard regional/national setup—the overall deliveries suggest that an awful lot of Americans had been jonesing for football after the long hiatus.

NBC won the week with the Ravens-Chiefs Kickoff Game, as the linear broadcast averaged 24.56 million viewers, down 194,000 compared to last season’s Lions-Chiefs scrap. A boost in streaming impressions more than made up for the small lag in TV deliveries; all told, Kansas City’s 27-20 victory averaged 29.16 million viewers, which marked a 6% increase versus the year-ago blended average (27.54 million).

Also putting up big numbers was the Fox late-national window, which featured Dallas and Cleveland with coverage in 94% of all markets. While the game itself was a bit of a snooze—Dak Prescott & Co. romped to a 33-17 win over a Browns team led by a thoroughly washed Deshaun Watson—the Cowboys performed their usual brand of ratings juju. In Brady’s first live game as a broadcaster, Fox averaged 23.93 million viewers. While that was good for a 47% increase over last year’s window (16.27 million for Packers-Bears with 84% coverage), it’s worth noting that Fox last year had to compete with CBS in the late window (Eagles-Patriots, 21.35 million, 69% coverage).

If Brady was less than polished in his first start, the Nielsen data should probably serve as a reminder that booth talent doesn’t dictate ratings performance. Case in point: Monday Night Football averaged 18.48 million viewers per game in 2000, when Dennis Miller was tapped to relieve Boomer Esiason in the ABC huddle. When the great John Madden replaced the comedian in 2002, MNF averaged 16.91 million viewers per game. Determining causality is a heavy lift, but no one with a functioning brain stem believes that more people watched the 2000 season because Miller was better at calling football than John Earl Madden.

At any rate, the NFL’s decision to stop cannibalizing the Week 1 Sunday afternoon showcase worked out for all parties involved, as CBS’ regional singleheader scared up 17.78 million viewers, making it the network’s most-watched 1 p.m. ET opener since it got back in the NFL rotation in 1998. The usual caveats about how out-of-home lifts skew comps to years preceding 2020 aside, the early-afternoon results marked a 39% improvement versus last season’s regional window.

Among the matchups on CBS’ Sunday slate were Pats-Bengals, Cards-Bills and Jags-Dolphins.

Opposite CBS in the early window, Fox averaged 13.03 million viewers, up 28% versus last season. Fox’s matinee included Steelers-Falcons, Vikings-Giants and Titans-Bears.

NBC closed out the first Sunday of the new season with just shy of 20 million TV viewers (19.997 million, to be precise) for its coverage of the Rams-Lions nailbiter in Detroit. The linear deliveries were effectively flat versus the year-ago 20.18 million fans who endured Dallas’ 40-0 thumping of the Giants.

The Sunday Night Football numbers do not include streaming impressions, although Peacock added another 2.7 million viewers to the mix. That said, the Lions’ home win beat out SNF’s 2023 linear-TV average by some 157,000 viewers.

Including the deliveries generated by NBC affiliates in Green Bay, Milwaukee and Philadelphia, Peacock’s presentation of Friday night’s Packers-Eagles game in Brazil averaged approximately 14 million viewers. Philly’s 34-29 victory now stands as the second most-watched live event on the streaming service, nearly doubling the Bills-Chargers exclusive on Dec. 23 of last year (7.33 million) and trailing only the Dolphins-Chiefs AFC Wild Card Game on Jan. 13 (22.86 million).

The Week 1 ratings will be complete once the Monday Night Football numbers on ABC, ESPN and ESPN2 land later Tuesday.
 
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My suspicion is that it's a perfect match for TV advertising with all the breaks - tennis and soccer have the lowest time spent on ads (8%) vs basketball/football around 32%, so no surprise what end up being the most heavily pushed sports in the United States of Advertising
There's 18 minutes of action in baseball? Apparently baseball needs a clock on the wall that keeps running.
 
My suspicion is that it's a perfect match for TV advertising with all the breaks - tennis and soccer have the lowest time spent on ads (8%) vs basketball/football around 32%, so no surprise what end up being the most heavily pushed sports in the United States of Advertising


commercials-by-sport-wsn%402x-100.jpg
The Wall Street Journal calculated how much of the time in an NFL game is actually showing the game. It's a grand total of 11 minutes. An average NFL game broadcast lasts something like 3 hours. Most of that time is commercials, players just standing around, or replays.

I don't get the appeal of this sport

 
My suspicion is that it's a perfect match for TV advertising with all the breaks - tennis and soccer have the lowest time spent on ads (8%) vs basketball/football around 32%, so no surprise what end up being the most heavily pushed sports in the United States of Advertising


commercials-by-sport-wsn%402x-100.jpg
Wrestling and MMA are sports???
 
The Wall Street Journal calculated how much of the time in an NFL game is actually showing the game. It's a grand total of 11 minutes. An average NFL game broadcast lasts something like 3 hours. Most of that time is commercials, players just standing around, or replays.

I don't get the appeal of this sport

Yep, according to this, I now know why I watch tennis and hockey. More bang for your buck. Rugby and F1 are both things I watch and assume would be a good ratio too.
 
NFL regular season games only get 20-30 million viewers. So it's close.
Hold on a second........

Tennis... boasts 1 billion fans worldwide who attend stadiums or tune in to watch tournaments such as the Australian Open, Roland Garros, Wimbledon, and the US Open.


 
My suspicion is that it's a perfect match for TV advertising with all the breaks - tennis and soccer have the lowest time spent on ads (8%) vs basketball/football around 32%, so no surprise what end up being the most heavily pushed sports in the United States of Advertising


commercials-by-sport-wsn%402x-100.jpg

It remains to be seen how long Best Of 5 sets will last. It will probably survive. Or not.
But lets not pretend there is not huge pressure to go to 3 sets.
Craig Tiley is itching to do it in Melbourne.
:rolleyes:
 
Yikes. You'd think with Americans in the final they would be better. I'm a little surprised they are that low but then again...
 
This month I'm in France , and the US Open wasn't shown on regular TV. (They're too busy showing how to cut cheese?)
But I was surprised, because yesterday I found the complete men's final match on YouTube, without advertisements!
When I'm in the U.S., my favorite way for football, is to record the game, and not watch it live. Then later I can see it,
and hit the wonderful fast-forward button at every time out. (My finger is getting stronger, maybe it will help my tennis!)
------ So Be It ⚜ ------
 
Because the sports community at large doesn’t tune in or root for Dopers no matter how much (some of) the tennis community wants to authoritywash Sinner’s 2x positive doping test.
 
No one outside the hardcore tennis world had heard of Taylor Fritz. (To the uninitiated, this sounds like a parody name.) An American is going to have to win something big first, and become semi-famous, and then his appearance in the final will generate viewers.
This is what happens when you take away the key players.

The ATP has done nothing to let the world know that Taylor Fritz, even exists.

Fritz is playing a cheater in the finals.

Why would anyone care about this match?

The US Open deserved this. 100%. It's been coming now for years!
 
The Wall Street Journal calculated how much of the time in an NFL game is actually showing the game. It's a grand total of 11 minutes. An average NFL game broadcast lasts something like 3 hours. Most of that time is commercials, players just standing around, or replays.

I don't get the appeal of this sport

Tennis points from serve to end are only about 10 mins per hour also whether you are playing or watching. The rest of the time is gaps between points and games.
 
Yet they sold more tickets and had more spectators then ever.

Well, supposedly.

Substantially the same exact post every year. Thank you for taking up the task this year.

There is no relationship whatsoever between USO broadcast numbers and attendance — I wish there was because the USO is too crowded. (Though the USTA recently entered into a lucrative long-term broadcast contract. The value of broadcast rights is not solely a numbers issue; demographics is very important.)

The attendance numbers are very real — which you would appreciate if you went — and the financial results are all audited and disclosed. Don’t dump your USTA bonds in a panic like my fav Dr Raul did during the no spectators 2020 event. The USO is a money making machine. This year they sold about $13 million of Honey Deuce cocktails alone. o_O


2024 will beat these numbers:

 
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Sinner is not as much of a draw as Djokovic as only some fans care if he wins or loses in the US. On the other hand, Djokovic is a draw because many tune in to see if he loses. I’m sure many watched last year to see if Medvedev could repeat 2021.
 
Sinner is not as much of a draw as Djokovic as only some fans care if he wins or loses in the US. On the other hand, Djokovic is a draw because many tune in to see if he loses. I’m sure many watched last year to see if Medvedev could repeat 2021.
Doesn't matter as Sinner is still young. As he keeps winning, his aura will continue to grow. He is number 1 for 30 weeks now. By next USOpen, maybe he will be 82 weeks number 1 and rising.
 
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