The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NFL ratings down slightly, likely to rise post-election

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The NFL was not expected to be immune from the ratings declines that have hit all sports this year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic and presidenti­al election. But the declines are not as steep as feared at the beginning of the season.

Games are averaging 15.1 million television and digital viewers, according to the league and Nielsen, a 6% decline from last year. Despite the decreases, all but four of the top 30 shows since the season began have been NFL games.

“Considerin­g all the issues the NFL has had to deal with, the ratings are OK,” said Neal Pilson, the former president of CBS Sports who now runs his own sports television consulting company. “It hasn’t been a great year for ratings considerin­g everything that has happened, but they aren’t in the toilet either.”

Sports consultant Marc Ganis cited the lack of preseason games to build up fan interest and all four major profession­al sports playing in September as other reasons for this year’s slow start.

The ratings also didn’t suffer precipitou­s declines compared to the last presidenti­al election cycle in 2016, when they were down 14% compared to 2015.

“I know there have been lots of, well, ‘NFL ratings are down.’ Not really. Election years, they’ve been going down for the last three election cycles, not just the last one,” Ganis said. “The NFL ratings have actually been quite good. They’re going to get better now that the election is over. The gap between the NFL and all the other sports in terms of TV ratings has grown. So the NFL has gotten stronger vis a vis other sports.”

The Thursday and Sunday night packages have suffered the biggest declines with each package down 16%.

NBC’S “Sunday Night Football” is averaging 17.2 million viewers and remains on pace to be prime time’s top show for the 10th straight year. There were five straight weeks when NBC’S games faced competitio­n from NBA or MLB playoff games.

NBC has had tough luck the past two weeks. It had Dallas-philadelph­ia on Nov. 1 while the New Orleans-tampa Bay matchup last Sunday was a blowout by halftime. The first half this past week averaged 18.9 million viewers, which was the highest since the Cowboys-rams game in Week 1.

Fox is averaging 12.8 million for “Thursday Night Football.” Some factors in its lower audiences include one of the games being moved to a late Monday afternoon (Kansas City-buffalo) and another going against the final presidenti­al debate (Giants-eagles).

“I think the election was kind of a pivotal moment,” NBC Sports Group chairman Pete Bevacqua said. “We have seen the skyrocketi­ng of cable news ratings. Now that the election (story) is nearing an end, I think people will go back to kind of normal consumptio­n patterns, so we think we have weathered the storm. We really believe with the schedule, particular­ly with us having the ability to flex games, should be unbelievab­ly strong as we enter into the second half of the season.”

 ?? MARK LOMOGLIO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Saints defensive end Trey Hendrickso­n (left) sacks Bucs quarterbac­k Tom Brady during the second half Sunday night in Tampa. Ratings for NBC’S telecast of the game dropped off precipitou­sly after New Orleans rolled to a 31-0 lead by halftime.
MARK LOMOGLIO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Saints defensive end Trey Hendrickso­n (left) sacks Bucs quarterbac­k Tom Brady during the second half Sunday night in Tampa. Ratings for NBC’S telecast of the game dropped off precipitou­sly after New Orleans rolled to a 31-0 lead by halftime.

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