USA TODAY US Edition

NFL ratings improve after election but still lag 2015

- A.J. Perez @byajperez USA TODAY Sports

Viewership for NFL broadcasts during the regular season dipped, though it wasn’t as precipitou­s as it could have been.

Total viewership, according to the league, fell an average of 8% among its broadcast partners in 2016 compared to the 2015 regular season, a rally from pre-election numbers (Weeks 1-9) that showed overall viewership down 14%.

“Presidenti­al elections have always had an impact on our ratings, so we were prepared for a dip this season,” Brian Rolapp, the NFL’s executive vice president of media, wrote in an email to USA TODAY Sports.

“We’re pleased at how our viewership rebounded after the election and are looking forward to what should be a very competitiv­e and exciting postseason.”

NBC saw an 11% spike in viewers for its Sunday night broadcasts after Donald Trump won the presidenti­al election Nov. 8. CBS saw a 9% bump after the first nine weeks of the season.

“We came out of the box right after the election with a huge Seahawks-Patriots Super Bowl XLIX rematch on Sunday Night

Football,” Fred Gaudelli, NBC’s SNF executive producer, said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports. “The game was terrific. It was the most-watched Week 10 game in nearly two decades.”

Viewership for Weeks 10-17 were off by 1% compared with the same time period a season ago, according to the NFL.

Still, NBC’s Sunday night games saw a 12% ratings drop and a 10% drop in viewers compared to 2015, the best year since the network’s Sunday night package made its debut a decade ago. Compared to 2014, NBC’s ratings are off by about 5% this season.

Fox saw a 6% decline in viewership, and CBS fell by 7% overall year-to-year, but the two networks — they hold the rights to the Sunday afternoon games — still put up impressive numbers. Fox and CBS averaged 23.2 million viewers, which bested NBC’s Sunday (20.3 million) and ESPN’s Monday night (11.7 million) viewership. Monday Night Football experi- enced the largest drop (11%) in the 2016 regular season compared to the previous year. The numbers provided by the network include ESPN, streaming and ESPN Deportes viewers.

Outside the overall viewership data compiled by the league, the informatio­n dispensed to USA TODAY Sports did not include

Thursday Night Football, a package shared by NBC, CBS and NFL Network that was also sometimes simulcast on Twitter.

The focus on the presidenti­al campaign has often been cited as a contributi­ng factor to the ratings decline. The national anthem protests fueled by Colin Kaepernick, frequent commercial interrupti­ons and lackluster matchups in prime-time contests early in the season also have been mentioned.

Some of the ratings highlights from the regular season:

uFox’s late-afternoon doublehead­er games averaged 24.559 million viewers to make the broadcasts the most-watched program on TV for the eighth consecutiv­e year, the network announced. The network’s Week 10 game (Dallas Cowboys vs. Pittsburgh Steelers) scored the highest rating (16.4 with a 30 share).

uCBS’ late-afternoon doublehead­er games averaged 21.8 million viewers. The most-watched contest of the regular season was the New England Patriots vs. the Denver Broncos (25 million viewers with a 14.3 rating and 27 share). uIt appears Sunday Night Football will be the No. 1 primetime show for a sixth consecutiv­e year, edging the CBS sitcom The Big Bang Theory.

uSNF had the best rating among the coveted demographi­c of 18- to 49-year-olds with a 7.0 rating in prime time on Sundays, besting AMC’s The Walking Dead by 25% (5.6 rating).

 ?? DAVID BUTLER II, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? NBC’s Sunday night ratings, including the Seahawks-Patriots in Week 10, went up 11%.
DAVID BUTLER II, USA TODAY SPORTS NBC’s Sunday night ratings, including the Seahawks-Patriots in Week 10, went up 11%.

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