New York Post

HOOP TOP OF HEAP

Basketball ratings annihilate NFL’s

- By RICHARD MORGAN rmorgan@nypost.com

While the NFL gets socked with ratings declines, the NBA is off to its second-most watched season ever.

ESPN, which has telecast 30 games since the season’s Oct. 17 opener, said Thursday that average viewership has soared 18 percent, to 1.8 million a game, from this point last year.

TNT, with 16 NBA telecasts to date, said its average is up 25 percent, to 2.1 million viewers. Even NBA TV, with 41 telecasts, is up 25 percent, to 365,000.

The averages, taken collective­ly, make for the hottest start since the 2010-11 season — the year LeBron James abandoned the Cleveland Cavaliers for the Miami Heat.

Central to the NBA’s rise is its success in focusing the league’s many dramas on the game itself — an area where the NFL has failed miserably, experts say.

“NBA stars don’t wear helmets, so fans think they know them better by watching their features and their gestures,” said Ben Sturner, president of sports-marketer Leverage Agency. “This sense of familiarit­y plays really well with the social media set.”

Meanwhile, the NFL is being penalized for a lack of fo- cus, according to Sturner.

Its story lines these days encompass a panoramic sweep of protest rights, brain-damage risks, squabbling owners, media oversatura­tion, even subpar play.

“You don’t get any of that at basketball games,” Sturner said. “You just get action.”

Given all the cord-cutting in the intervenin­g years, not to mention the indifferen­ce of millennial­s to traditiona­l TV, the NBA is clearly doing more than a few things right.

Experts point to last season’s rousing finale — a fivegame face-off between the Golden State Warriors and the Cleveland Cavaliers — which gave the NBA its best ratings since Michael Jordan quit the game in 1998.

The league followed its early-June finals with the “2017 NBA Draft” on June 22 at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center.

ESPN’s telecast of the event drew 15 percent more viewers than the previous year’s version, making it the second-most-watched NBA draft on record.

In July, the NBA’s expanded Summer League started introducin­g drafted players to a broadening fan base.

ESPN telecast 25 of the summer games, generating an average viewership of 437,000 — up 51 percent from the previous summer.

Meanwhile, a host of offseason trades extended the NBA narrative.

Nine-time All Star Chris Paul was traded to the Houston Rockets in June in a deal that gave the Los Angeles Clippers seven players in return.

Point guard Kyrie Irving jumped to the Boston Celtics in August after inexplicab­ly asking to exit the Cleveland Cavs in July.

“Every day seemed to bring another story line for fans to follow,” ESPN spokesman Ben Cafardo said.

The NBA’s off-season happenings have given the league an all-year presence, creating a virtuous circle other pro sports can only dream about.

“We’ve gone from mostwatche­d finals on ABC, to second-most watched draft, to most-watched Summer League and now to secondmost-watched start,” Cafardo told The Post.

 ??  ?? Football rivals may not have any answers to Tom Brady and the New England Patriots — but LeBron James’ NBA is on a viewer-spiking drive that is sending them and their controvers­y-stained league back on their heels.
Football rivals may not have any answers to Tom Brady and the New England Patriots — but LeBron James’ NBA is on a viewer-spiking drive that is sending them and their controvers­y-stained league back on their heels.

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