China Daily

World Series ratings dive despite memorable milestones

- By MURRAY GREIG murraygrei­g@ chinadaily. com. cn

This year’s World Series was unlike any of its 115 predecesso­rs — both in terms of brilliant performanc­es on the field and fan apathy off it.

The Los Angeles Dodgers nailed down their sixth MLB championsh­ip by beating the Tampa Bay Rays 3- 1 on Oct 27, but despite more than a dozen all- time individual and team records being set in the sixgame thriller, it never translated into the TV ratings success expected to carry over from the pandemic-shortened 60- game regular season.

With six games in seven nights, the average World Series viewership rating was 32 percent below the previous low.

Game 6 drew just 12.6 million viewers in the US, according to Associated Press. That made it the most- watched game, but also cemented an ignominiou­s record for this year’s Fall Classic, which ended up averaging 9.7 million viewers per game, shattering the previous record for lowest average viewership: 12.7 million when the San Francisco Giants swept the Detroit Tigers in 2012.

After drawing 9.1 million viewers for Game 1, the Dodgers and Rays attracted audiences ranging from 8.1- 10 million, eclipsing the previous record low ( 9.8 million in 2008) four times.

The woeful numbers have dredged up considerab­le debate on US social media, with theories ranging from “baseball is too boring” to “too many strategies” to explain the lack of fan interest, despite several memorable milestones:

• The Dodgers used seven pitchers in their Game 6 victory, the most ever used by a winning team in a nine- inning World Series clincher and tied with the 1992 Toronto Blue Jays, who won the title in an 11- inning clincher.

• Game 6 also set a record for strikeouts in a nine- inning World Series game ( 27), breaking the mark previously shared by the Mets and Yankees in 2000 and the Dodgers and Yankees in 1963.

• The Dodgers and Rays combined to hit 21 home runs in this year’s series, tied for the third- most in any Fall Classic. The Dodgers blasted 12 round- trippers, tied with the 1956 Yankees for third- most.

Baseball is not alone in seeing fewer viewers tune in.

The National Basketball Associatio­n finals, which wrapped up on Oct 13 with the Los Angeles Lakers’ victory over the Miami Heat, averaged just 7.5 million viewers over the six games on ABC, a 51 percent decline from last year, and viewership for last month’s National Hockey League Stanley Cup Final was down a staggering 61 percent on NBC.

According to AC Nielsen ratings data, 76.2 million Americans were watching TV on the first five nights of the NBA Finals this year — a 10 percent decline from 2019 — with only one in 10 tuned in to the games.

Industry experts say declining TV numbers across all major sports reflect broader trends in entertainm­ent consumptio­n, including consumers canceling cable TV subscripti­ons and watching more on- demand content online.

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