Miami Herald

Poll reveals reasons for big drop in sports viewership

- BY BARRY JACKSON bjackson@miamiheral­d.com Barry Jackson: 305-376-3491, @flasportsb­uzz

Yes, politics appear to be playing a role in the enormous drop in viewership for some profession­al sports, if you trust those who responded to a Marist Poll released last week.

But it’s not the biggest factor and far from the only factor.

And virtually all sports — including ones with no political messaging such as golf and tennis — have also experience­d big ratings drops.

The most jarring takeaway from the Marist poll: 46 percent of self-described sports fans say they are spending less time watching live sports broadcasts than in the past.

“The antipathy to social causes can’t account for a drop this large; it’s a whole combinatio­n of factors,” says Dr. Zachary Arth, assistant professor of sports communicat­ion at Marist College. “Take baseball, where Democrats [38 percent] and Republican­s [37 percent] identify themselves as fans in roughly the same proportion­s. The sport faces a similar reduction in popularity as basketball, where the fan base is more diverse and more likely to identify as Democrats.”

Asked if athletes speaking out on political issues has made them more or less likely to watch sports, 32 percent said it has made them less likely to watch sports, 21 percent said more likely and 46 percent said it has made no difference.

But there was one — and only one — factor that a greater percentage of people surveyed cited as a reason that has made them less likely to watch sports: coronaviru­s.

Thirty-five percent said concern about getting together with others to watch sports — due to COVID-19 — has made them less likely to watch sports.

After those two issues, the factors cited next most often for why people surveyed are less likely to watch sports now: other programmin­g options besides live sports (21 percent said that made them less likely to watch live sports), all the news coverage about the presidenti­al election (20 percent), changes to the game experience such as new rules (19 percent) and less free time (19 percent).

On the issue of athletes calling for social change, the sports viewership questions — predictabl­y — broke along political lines, according to the Marist poll.

Seventy percent of Republican­s said they are less likely to watch live sports because of athletes’ calls for racial justice.

Conversely, 61 percent of Democrats and 47 percent of Independen­ts say athletes speaking out has not changed their viewing habits, while 31 percent and 24 percent, respective­ly, identified that as the reason for tuning in more often.

Also, 27 percent of Black sports fans said they are watching live sports broadcasts more because athletes are speaking out, compared with 17 percent of white fans.

NASCAR appears to have been impacted most by this; 44 percent of NASCAR fans said they’re watching fewer sporting events because of athletes speaking out on political issues. But NASCAR is the only major pro sport, aside from the NFL, which hasn’t had a major ratings drop.

According to Nielsen Voter Ratings, 28 percent of NBA viewers before the pandemic were Democrats and 11 percent Republican­s, with the others identified as independen­t or unregister­ed.

After the restart, those numbers changed to 30 percent Democrats and 10 percent Republican­s.

And there’s one other political issue impacting sports viewership that has nothing to do with athletes speaking out:

The aggregate primetime audience for Fox News, CNN and MSNBC on the first five nights of the 2020 NBA Finals was 78 percent higher than the first five nights of the

2019 Finals.

Some of those 2019 Finals viewers instead likely opted to watch political news this year.

What’s clear is this: The drop in viewership for sports whose calendars shifted has been precipitou­s.

The 83 NBA postseason games this year averaged 3.0 million viewers, compared with 4.8 million for 82 games last year. That’s a 37 percent drop.

The six-game LakersHeat series averaged 7.5 million viewers, making it the least-watched NBA Finals ever (“beating” the 9.3 million for San Antonio-Cleveland in 2007) and down 49 percent from Toronto-Golden State last year, which averaged 15 million viewers.

Besides the aforementi­oned factors, competitio­n with NFL games on six nights of the NBA’s postseason was particular­ly hurtful; the NBA lost each of those battles, most of them by large margins.

But the NBA was hardly alone. Look at these ratings percentage drops for other sports: Stanley Cup playoffs (38 percent), U.S. Open tennis (45), U.S. Open golf (42) and Kentucky Derby (43).

Baseball’s league championsh­ip series were the lowest-rated ever — down 30 percent from last year — despite both series going seven games. College football was down 30 percent entering last weekend.

NFL ratings were down 13 percent entering last weekend but performed well in Week 6.

Appearing on Megyn Kelly’s podcast, Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban said it’s “nonsense” to suggest politics hurt NBA ratings but conceded one problem: “The only way to get an NBA game was on cable or satellite. We’re right there in popularity. The problem is our largest growing viewership base and the one we want to be our viewership base doesn’t have regular TV to have our games.”

In the NBA’s defense, the average digital audience for nationally televised NBA games increased 34 percent compared with 2019.

NBA commission­er Adam Silver suggested to ESPN that social justice messages aren’t going to be as noticeable next season as they were in recent months. During games in the Disney bubble, “Black Lives Matter” appeared on the court and players wore social justice messages on uniforms.

In Miami-Fort Lauderdale, the Heat’s NBA Finals ratings ranged, on average, from 8.7 to 13 percent of South Florida homes with TV sets, far below the Heat’s NBA Finals ratings during the Big 3 era, which generated numbers in the 30s.

Dolphins ratings remain in the 8-to-11 range, about half of what they were midway through last decade.

One other note on the MLB/NBA comparison nationally: Braves-Dodgers Game 7 on Sunday outdrew every game of the NBA season, including the six NBA Finals games. That’s the first time since 2007 that an LCS game outdrew any NBA Finals game.

AROUND THE DIAL

WSVN-Fox 7’s Steve

Shapiro, who has anchored sports on South Florida television longer than anyone in history (30 years), will sign off on Dec. 30. Shapiro planned to retire at the end of 2019, but WSVN management convinced him to work one more year.

Fox’s Joe Buck — authoritat­ive, alert and prepared on every assignment he handles — is in the midst of calling national telecasts on as many as 14 days in a row, including three NFL games and 11 baseball games.

Mike Emrick, argua

● bly the best NHL play-byplay announcer in history, retired at 74 this week, after calling 3,750 NHL and Olympic hockey games.

Kenny Albert — who calls the NHL for NBC and the NFL for Fox — would be a logical successor on NBC’s NHL games. But Mike Tirico cannot be ruled out.

Former Marlins voice

Dave O’Brien will call Saturday’s Virginia-at-UM ACC Network game from his home office in New Hampshire, while his broadcast partner, Tim Hasselbeck, offers analysis from his home in Nashville. WQAM’s Joe Zagacki and Don Bailey are calling home football games from Hard Rock Stadium and road games off monitors at Mark Light Field.

Keith Olbermann left ESPN once again, but this time on good terms and this time to host a political show on YouTube.

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