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  • Sports Data From Nielsen: TV Viewership for College Conferences

    Posted: February 27, 2012


    This blog has been a hub of activity for conference realignment discussion and other issues in the business of sports for the past couple of years, but it has sometimes been difficult to get quantitative data to back up what many of us observe qualitatively (such as the popularity of fan bases and conferences).

    So, the following presentation direct from Nielsen (the TV ratings firm) about the 2011 sports year provides a treasure trove of previously unknown (at least to me) and fascinating statistics about pro and college sports TV viewership, social networking buzz and ad spending:

    State of the Media 2011 Year in Sports


    [ame="http://www.slideshare.net/ceobroadband/state-of-the-media-2011-year-in-sports-11339432"]State of the Media 2011 Year in Sports[/ame] View more documents from ceobroadband



    This slide presentation was uploaded by ceo broadband at slideshare.net.

    Nielsen analyzed everything from the four major pro sports leagues to the rising viewership of the English Premier League in the US, so there’s something here for every type of sports fan. It’s key that this analysis is coming directly from Nielsen itself, whereas a lot of other viewership figures that get reported these days come from leagues, conferences and TV networks themselves and are spun to put them in the most favorable light. As a result, the slide presentation is about as unbiased as you can reasonably get on the subject matters at hand.

    One of the more interesting charts is on slide 4, where Nielsen tracked the social media buzz for the major pro sports leagues over the course of 2011 and news events where activity spiked on Twitter and Facebook.

    Major League Baseball can’t be happy to see social networking mentions hover around the NHL’s numbers and its 7-game World Series last year didn’t produce a real spike in activity compared to the NBA Finals. I’m not surprised by the fact that the NBA has more social networking buzz compared to MLB since the basketball league’s fan base skews younger, but I didn’t expect baseball to be on the social media level of hockey. (Note that there’s no point in comparing any other sport to the NFL in America: pro football blows everything else away on every metric. The only discussion is about who can take second place.)

    For college sports fans, slide 9 presents some extremely pertinent information that few of us have seen before: the average TV viewer numbers per game for each of the 6 power conferences for both football and basketball. With so many issues in college sports, such as conference realignment and a football playoff, driven by television money, these viewership figures are enlightening (and surprising in some cases).

    Here are the average football viewership totals by conference according to Nielsen:

    1. SEC – 4,447,000
    2. Big Ten – 3,267,000
    3. ACC – 2,650,000
    4. Big 12 – 2,347,000
    5. Pac-12 – 2,108,000
    6. Big East – 1,884,000

    Here are the average basketball viewership totals by conference according to Nielsen:

    1. Big Ten – 1,496,000
    2. ACC – 1,247,000
    3. SEC – 1,222,000
    4. Big 12 – 1,069,000
    5. Big East – 1,049,000
    6. Pac-12 – 783,000

    Some takeaways from those figures:

    A. The Big Ten and SEC deserve every penny that they receive and then some – The readers of this blog probably aren’t surprised by the football viewership numbers, but the proverbial icing on the cake is how strong both of them are in basketball. ACC alum Scott Van Pelt of ESPN once said, “Watching Big Ten basketball is like watching fat people have sex.” Well, the Big Ten even tops the vaunted the ACC in basketball viewership and it’s by a fairly healthy margin.

    B. The ACC has an undervalued TV contract – The flip side of the Big Ten and SEC analysis above is that while the ACC’s basketball viewership strength isn’t unexpected, the much maligned football side actually has strong TV numbers. If you take a step back for a moment, it makes sense. Florida State and Miami continue to be great national TV draws (even when they’re down) and schools such as Virginia Tech bring in large state markets.

    C. Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott can sell ice cubs to Eskimos – The viewership numbers for the Pac-12 in both football and basketball indicate that they shouldn’t be in the vicinity of the ACC and Big 12 TV contracts, much less currently above the Big Ten and SEC. The football numbers might be a little lower compared to a normal season with USC having the scarlet letter of not being able to go to a bowl this year, but one would think that some of that would have been countered by strong Stanford and Oregon teams. Meanwhile, the basketball numbers are just awful – the Pac-12 definitely needs UCLA to resuscitate itself to be viable nationally. The Pac-12 presidents ought to give Larry Scott a lifetime contract with the TV dollars that he’s pulled from ESPN and Fox.

    D. Big East basketball is a weaker draw than expected – No one should be surprised by the weak Big East football numbers. However, the basketball and large market-centric side of the league actually had fewer hoops viewers than any of the power conferences except for the Pac-12, which doesn’t bode well with the league losing the strong draws of Syracuse, Pitt and West Virginia. The Big East was also widely acknowledged as the top conference in basketball last year, so the league was at its competitive peak in the post-2003 ACC raid era. This gives credence to the argument that large media markets in and of themselves don’t matter as much as large and rabid fan bases that draw in statewide audiences.

    E. The Big 12 is appropriately valued – For all of the dysfunction of the Big 12, it might be the one conference whose TV contracts are actually in line with their viewership numbers. The Big 12 is ranked #4 among the power conferences for both football and basketball and the likelihood is that it will end up as the #4 conference in TV dollars after the Big Ten, Pac-12 and SEC when all is said and done.

    There’s lots of other data to chew on here that I may examine in future posts, but for now, the college conference viewership breakdown is something that I haven’t seen before and puts some quantitative backup to what we have speculated was behind conference realignment moves
    Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

    Comment


    • I am actually surprised that the SEC outranks the B1G in viewership ... it seems the B1G commands the biggest tv deal (I realize they don't have the biggest one at present since others have recently re-negotiated new deals), but sounds like the SEC should.

      Comment


      • Maybe the Big 10 has more affluent viewers.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Pasadena Blue View Post
          I am actually surprised that the SEC outranks the B1G in viewership ... it seems the B1G commands the biggest tv deal (I realize they don't have the biggest one at present since others have recently re-negotiated new deals), but sounds like the SEC should.
          Well sure, the SEC has better teams, more people watch.
          Atlanta, GA

          Comment


          • That's a big part of it. Also, CBS doesn't split broadcasts-- the entire country gets the SEC game of the week, while ESPN/ABC games often have competition in their timeslots with other games on the same family of networks.

            Comment


            • The Grim Reaper of collegiate sports comes for Oregon.



              There's not much here that wasn't already widely known, but still, when Charles Robinson is writing investigative reports about your program, bad things happen.

              This, though, is interesting:

              The payouts all took place within the last fiscal year and appeared in the annual college budget expenditures for the university. According to records, the monies were paid under the account for “Books, Publications and other References.” The $25,000 check was made out to “Willie J. Lyles/dba [doing business as] Complete Scouting”. The check to Flenory was made payable to his company, New Level Athletics.
              Either the Oregon staff is the dumbest bunch of cheaters alive, which I doubt, or they were able to convince themselves that what they were doing was permissible. I suspect that's going to be their defense-- we realize now we broke the rules, but we honestly thought we weren't doing so at the time.
              Last edited by JRB; February 28, 2012, 04:09 PM.

              Comment


              • All of DeAnthony Thomas, Dior Mathis and Lache Seastruck's recruitments were of the odd variety... Mathis started as a fan of Miami as a childhood favorite. Named a top 2 of MSU and Oregon; DeAnthony Thomas was a guy who on signing day everyone expected USC till he ended up a Duck..

                Comment


                • Originally posted by JRB View Post
                  That's a big part of it. Also, CBS doesn't split broadcasts-- the entire country gets the SEC game of the week, while ESPN/ABC games often have competition in their timeslots with other games on the same family of networks.

                  this... BIG needs to start splitting more of their games. Frankly, I'd love to see a Thursday night BIG game each week.
                  Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by JRB View Post
                    The Grim Reaper of collegiate sports comes for Oregon.



                    There's not much here that wasn't already widely known, but still, when Charles Robinson is writing investigative reports about your program, bad things happen.

                    This, though, is interesting:



                    Either the Oregon staff is the dumbest bunch of cheaters alive, which I doubt, or they were able to convince themselves that what they were doing was permissible. I suspect that's going to be their defense-- we realize now we broke the rules, but we honestly thought we weren't doing so at the time.

                    they are just 20 yrs behind the SEC
                    Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

                    Comment


                    • I am actually surprised that the SEC outranks the B1G in viewership ... it seems the B1G commands the biggest tv deal (I realize they don't have the biggest one at present since others have recently re-negotiated new deals), but sounds like the SEC should.
                      The SEC has significantly better time slots. They have a dedicated Saturday afternoon network. The B10 is regional on ABC. They always have at least 1, generally 2, Saturday night games. The B10 always has two Noon games -- often more. The B10 doesn't do primetime past October.

                      I'm not sure that accounts for the 33% difference, but those aren't insignificant facts.

                      If the B10 were to partner with FOX and have it's own dedicated national weekly game, I think you'd see a significant bump. In addition, FOX would pimp the hell out of the B10 -- like CBS does with the SEC.

                      Finally, those were for a pretty mediocre year in the B10. One of the B10's premiere TV draws was total shit. As a result, the conference basically had no one in the national picture for the better part of the season.
                      Last edited by iam416; February 28, 2012, 05:11 PM.
                      Dan Patrick: What was your reaction to [Urban Meyer being hired]?
                      Brady Hoke: You know.....not....good.

                      Comment


                      • LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) -- Texas Tech coach Tommy Tuberville is being accused of defrauding investors out of more $1.7 million in Alabama following his tenure at Auburn.
                        A federal lawsuit filed Friday in Montgomery, Ala., names Tuberville, John David Stroud and eight investment entities as defendants, claiming the two men "employed devices, schemes, and artifices to defraud" seven plaintiffs from Arkansas, Alabama and Tennessee.
                        The suit says Tuberville and Stroud misappropriated assets, and falsified client statements and fund performance reports as they "unjustly enriched themselves" at the expense of the investors.
                        Tuberville, who spent two seasons away from coaching after leaving Auburn in 2008, did not immediately return a message left with Texas Tech seeking comment.


                        Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...#ixzz1niXE1Zod
                        Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

                        Comment


                        • Talent... Agree. BIG needs prime time games
                          Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

                          Comment


                          • November football at night is a weather issue as it gets really could after dark in the B10. B10 unlikely to play on Thursday...

                            Might see a pretty dramatic difference in the B10's broadcast setup in the next TV deal, B10 might get a 2nd 'national' tv game, Fox/NBC might get involved in the bidding.

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by entropy View Post
                              this... BIG needs to start splitting more of their games. Frankly, I'd love to see a Thursday night BIG game each week.
                              [ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_KIzbktgJk&feature=channel"]You Can Not Be Serious! - YouTube[/ame]

                              Seriously, Entropy, YOU CAN NOT BE SERIOUS!

                              Other than you wanting a fix for your habit of College Football and not wanting to wait until Saturday, can you give me one benefit of having Thursday Night games, one good reason for something like this to be considered?

                              Sure, I like watching mid-week college football, too, but leave that niche to the MAC and WAC and Sun Belt and other conferences that don't matter. Proof that they don't matter? Look at all the empty seats in those stadiums at the typical mid-week game.

                              Think about it---would you be willing to travel to Lincoln, to take both Thursday and Friday off in order to have travel time, to be likely forced to fight 90,000 other Big Red fans for nearby lodging?

                              Didn't think so!

                              Sorry, but IMHO, College Football and Autumn Saturdays were made for each other. I live 2 1/2 hours away from Ann Arbor, and my Football Saturdays are an all-day thing as I get up well before dawn (after packing most of my tailgate/game gear into my vehicle the night before), grab my tickets and coffee, and usually pull into Ann Arbor anywhere from 4 to 8 hours before the game. That's followed by hours of tailgating, eating, drinking, and having an overall great time with friends, as both the day and the party warm up.

                              By one hour before kickoff, it's time to hastily pack it all away, make sure I have my tickets and binoculars, and head to The Big House, in time to maybe see the tail-end of pre-game warm-ups, but for sure in time to hear "Band....Take The Field!!" Got to have time before kickoff to see and talk to all the regulars we've sat near for years (and in some cases, even a decade or more). A football game then happens as some point or another, then it's back to the tailgate for some more grilling and sipping and camaraderie, before finally packing it all away for either an occasional overnight hotel stay, or more often than not, the 2 1/2 hour drive home, often getting back after midnight.

                              No, I see no reason to take Football Saturdays away, and I'm willing to bet the vast majority of Big Ten Fans and an even higher % of Michigan Fans would agree.
                              Last edited by Rob F; February 28, 2012, 07:32 PM.

                              Comment


                              • I love CF. I enjoy the BIG. I would like to watch as many games as possible. I'm an addict.
                                Grammar... The difference between feeling your nuts and feeling you're nuts.

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