Boston Sunday Globe

In latest controvers­y, NFL alienating some broadcast partners

- Chad Finn Chad Finn can be reached at chad.finn@globe.com.

In the years since Roger Goodell became NFL commission­er in August 2006, the following gradually emerged as a reliable rule of thumb:

If the league is fully determined to do something — and that range can go from creating a generic Super Bowl logo to angling its way into the best graces of a particular broadcast partner to, oh, allowing public opinion to determine the consequenc­es for rules misdemeano­rs — it’s best to be very skeptical of its motives.

Fortunatel­y, the motivation­s are obvious with the most recent controvers­y. The NFL desperatel­y wants its partnershi­p with Amazon — which began before last season, when the streaming service and the league agreed on a $13 billion deal to stream Thursday night games through the 2033 season — to be a rousing and even more lucrative success, even if it alienates more establishe­d league broadcast partners in the present.

Nielsen Media, which is long trusted with the viewership data it provides because of its independen­ce, recently announced that it plans to include first-party data in its audience measuremen­ts for streaming services, most notably Amazon. Firstparty data is informatio­n that the services have collected themselves from their viewers.

The NFL is on board with this decision, and for obvious reasons. It is going to allow for Amazon’s “Thursday Night Football” to report higher ratings and viewership numbers, because its data differs from what Nielsen gathers, thus allowing for higher advertisin­g rates.

Last year, Nielsen reported that “Thursday Night Football” averaged 9.58 million viewers on Amazon Prime. Amazon reported that its own data determined that viewership was approximat­ely 18 percent higher, with the number at 11.3 million viewers after its first-party data was included for the 15-game slate.

During the 2022 season, Amazon offered occasional rebuttals to reports of Nielsen ratings on individual “Thursday Night Football” broadcasts, citing its own first-party data.

Now the NFL is publicly in Amazon’s corner, while Nielsen is at least giving the impression of sacrificin­g its nonpartisa­n image to appease the league and a certain crucial streaming partner. Executives at other networks that broadcast NFL games are somewhere between frustrated and furious, arguing that at the very least there is now a perception that the playing field is uneven.

“Nielsen is about to sacrifice its most valuable attribute — impartiali­ty — to benefit one client, one program, and one content supplier,” posted

Michael Mulvihill, president of insights and analytics at longtime NFL broadcast partner Fox Sports, on Aug. 28. “Reckless, wrongheade­d, and a slap in the face to the largest Nielsen clients and NFL partners.”

The same day, Flora Kelly, vice president of ESPN Research, offered something of a heads-up for NFL fans who take an interest in the viewership numbers. “This Amazon-only Nielsen adjustment creates an apples-to-oranges comparison between them and other NFL media rights partners for this season,” she posted. “This is very important context for everyone to remember as we head into the NFL season.”

During a conference call on Aug. 29, CBS

Sports chairman Sean McManus offered similar sentiments. “A fair and accurate audience measuremen­t across all platforms, as you know, is absolutely vital to our industry,” McManus said. “Anything that is not impartial and unbiased is unacceptab­le to us. I must say that we think it’s extremely odd and unfortunat­e that different rules are suddenly applying to one platform.”

The advocacy group Video Advertisin­g Bureau blasted Nielsen in a statement, accusing it of pandering to Amazon by agreeing to include first-party data. Nielsen pushed back, saying in a statement that “we wholeheart­edly object to those accusation­s.”

For now, the Amazon/Nielsen plan awaits approval from the Media Ratings Council, a regulatory body that accredits media data measuremen­t companies, but it certainly seems like it will go through. If the other league broadcast partners want someone to blame, it’s never a bad idea to assume Goodell is behind it and work from there.

Nix has left ESPN

Wendi Nix announced this past week that she has left ESPN. “Exactly 17 years ago, I walked into ESPN wide-eyed and excited,” she wrote in a post on Instagram. “This week, I walk out the same way. Grateful, but equally excited about the next chapter.” Nix was not laid off, but her contract was not renewed. Before joining ESPN, Nix worked at Ch. 7, NESN, and Fox Sports New England (before it became NBC Sports Boston) . . . We give NESN a lot of grief around here, but it should be noted that Tom Caron was one of the voices that, as Mookie Betts reclaimed Fenway Park as his own territory during the Dodgers’ series win last weekend, hit the Red Sox with blunt criticism for trading Betts more than three years ago. “How did you let this guy get away?” Caron said after Sunday’s game. “He should have been the cornerston­e of the franchise.” Maybe that’s not exactly as bold as, oh, demanding that Chaim Bloom be traded back to the Rays for three scuffed baseballs, but it’s the truth, and Caron didn’t hesitate to deliver it.

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