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#70653 07/12/06 07:12 PM
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World Cup US ratings growing, advertisers crowing
Tue Jul 11, 2006 7:40 PM ET

By Michele Gershberg

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Banner growth in television ratings for the tension-filled World Cup soccer final proved a boon to U.S. advertisers, who bet the sport would finally attract significant interest in the United States.

According to early Nielsen ratings data released on Tuesday, nearly 12 million viewers tuned in to Walt Disney Co.'s ABC network on Sunday to watch Italy beat France in a match that ended with a round of penalty kicks. That was nearly triple the audience for the last championship game in 2002 and, overall, it ranked as the third most-watched men's soccer game on ABC.

"It definitely exceeded (expectations)," said network spokesman David Nagle. "It's not just a good-sized audience, it's a very urban and upscale audience and we're very bullish on soccer going forward."

Official World Cup sponsors this year included McDonald's Corp., Coca-Cola Co., Anheuser-Busch Cos Inc. and Yahoo Inc..

U.S. Spanish-language broadcaster Univision Communications Inc. saw ratings for its World Cup finals broadcast rise 75 percent to more than 5 million viewers. Official Nielsen ratings for the tournament are due on Thursday.

But soccer is still a poor cousin in the United States compared with sports such as football, baseball and basketball. Nearly 91 million viewers tuned in to watch the U.S. National Football League's Super Bowl championship this year.

Nevertheless, sports marketing experts see a definite shift in U.S. soccer viewing habits. While the World Cup finals were followed by a passionate audience of Italian-Americans, viewership was not only driven by ethnic or national affiliation this year, they said.

"What we would call the 'average American' is now looking at the World Cup as a truly exciting and important international event without any need to identify with Italy or ... or Ghana or Brazil," said Neal Pilson, a former president of CBS Sports, who runs his own sports and entertainment consultancy in New York. "It's pretty clear the World Cup has arrived in the United States."

In all, Univision's three television and cable networks pulled in 50 million viewers for the duration of the three-week tournament. Nearly 21 million of those viewers were not Hispanic, suggesting the event's draw was beyond soccer fans hailing from Latin America.

Excluding the finale, ABC saw an average rating of 2.9 million homes for its World Cup broadcasts, more than double the viewership in 2002. Its cable sports sibling, ESPN, averaged more than 1.7 million homes for games broadcast through July 5.

ABC and ESPN, as well as Univision, agreed in November to pay a record $425 million to continue to air World Cup soccer and other events from 2007 to 2014. It was the largest deal ever struck by the Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) for broadcast rights in a single country.

The next World Cup, set for South Africa in 2010, will bring a fresh crop of media buzz in the United States, sports business experts said.

"There will be that level of business and political curiosity," said David Carter, executive director at the University of Southern California's Sports Business Institute. "How are sponsors going to feel about that region, will they have the facilities ready and what will the political environment be?"


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Follow up:

World Cup TV ratings way up from 2002

NEW YORK (AP) — The World Cup final earned a 7.0 fast national rating for ABC, a 180 percentage increase from the 2002 final in Japan.

Sunday's final in Berlin, in which Italy beat France on penalty kicks, was also the third-highest rated men's soccer game on ABC since the network resumed airing the World Cup in 1994, when the tournament was held in the United States.

Only the '94 final, when Brazil beat Italy on penalty kicks (9.5), and a second-round match that year between the U.S. and Brazil (9.3), had higher ratings. This year's tournament had an advantage over 2002 because of the large time difference in the Far East.

A ratings point represents 1,096,000 households, or 1 percent of the nation's estimated 109.6 million TV homes.

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First, the NBA finals .......next baseball World Series -


Shanghia Daily -
World Cup surpasses over NBA finals in US TV ratings
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
12/7/2006 17:00

World Cup final in Berlin on Sunday scored big with US television viewers, with nearly 17 million tuning in for the clash between France and Italy -- topping audiences for the NBA basketball finals.
A total of 11.9 million people watched live coverage of the final on the ABC network, while another five million chose the Spanish-language broadcast on the Univision channel, according to preliminary data released by Nielsen Media Research.
The total represented an increase of more than 150 percent over the 2002 final, which was shown early in the morning, and around 30 percent over the 1998 tournament decider.
It was four million more than the average audience for last month's NBA finals between the Dallas Mavericks and the Miami Heat and not far away from the average 17.1 million that watched last year's baseball World Series.


xinhua

Last edited by 2004striker; 07/13/06 04:18 PM.
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..not too shabby considering the US didn't make it out of group play.. etc..

Johannesburg and Berlin are in the same timezone so no reason why 2010 won't be another step forward.

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Well.....I assume these stats are presented as the World Cup final itself compared to the average audience of the NBA finals and the World Series games. So a better comparison would be for the actual final game of each sport.
Don't know what that comparison would be.

Here's another report on the audience. I feel that the increased excitement for the Cup mentioned in this article comes from the fact that a whole lot of people are turned off by the NBA, and baseball lost a lot of fans from the '94 strike, steroids and the game itself is not as exciting as it once was, til the playoffs.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/07/08/MNGP8JS3UE1.DTL

Last edited by 2004striker; 07/13/06 05:05 PM.
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Okay.. so..

17 million for France/Italy and an average of 13 million for each game of the NBA Finals??


Is there an estimate for an average of all 64 games yet?

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I don't think comparing average audiences for up to only 7 games for each (NBA & World Series) is a valid comparison with 64 games of the Cup.
Where is Chico when we need him the most?? Can we get a banana cream pie chart of a comparison of these stats in question.

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I wasn't wanting a 64 match average for comparison..just curious.

Very interesting article.

Might as well throw this out there while we're talking about TV.

Can anyone recommend a TV/internet package that includes highspeed internet (preferably wireless) and Fox Soccer Channel in the Columbia area. (and incase I need to be super specific..the Five Points area)

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Since you have to register to read this, I will post from N.Y.Times. Some interesting comparisons, and suggestions for 2010. (Note: 84% of Italian TVs were tuned to final!!
July 11, 2006
TV Sports
Cup Ratings Are Up, but Fans Deserve Better
By RICHARD SANDOMIR
The quadrennial visit of the World Cup must be viewed as a television success story. The final on Sunday attracted 16.9 million American viewers, and the star of stars, Zinédine Zidane of France, morphed from magician to the soccer equivalent of Mike Tyson with his overtime head butt of Marco Materazzi.

Those 16.9 million viewers included 11.9 million on ABC and 5 million on Univision, and they represented a 152 percent leap from 2002, when the game in Japan was shown in the morning. The audience was 31 percent better than eight years ago from France, and it was on par with 1994 from Pasadena, Calif.

This year’s viewership — tough to achieve at 2 p.m. on a Sunday — exceeded by about four million the average audience last month for the N.B.A. finals between the Miami Heat and the Dallas Mavericks. It also came close to the 17.5 million for Florida’s victory over U.C.L.A. in the N.C.A.A. men’s basketball championship game and the 17.1 million average for the Chicago White Sox’ sweep of the Houston Astros in the World Series last October.

Still, the 16.9 million was one million short of the viewership, only on ABC, for the United States’ penalty-kick shootout win over China in the 1999 Women’s World Cup final at the Rose Bowl.

Nothing matches Super Bowl viewership; when Pittsburgh defeated Seattle in February, 91 million people tuned in.

But around the world, the World Cup makes the Super Bowl look tiny. Depending on two estimates, anywhere from 300 million to more than one billion people watched Italy win its fourth World Cup on Sunday.

“The World Cup final has the single largest global audience in sports,” Kevin Alavy, a senior analyst for the media agency Initiative Futures Worldwide, said from London. “It doubles the audience for the Olympic opening ceremony in Athens and triples the Super Bowl.”

Initiative and Sponsorship Intelligence, the agency hired by FIFA’s marketer, Infront Sports, view the World Cup’s world in different ways. Initiative estimates that 300 million watched the final and 5.9 billion watched the World Cup. Sponsorship Intelligence expects at least one billion for the final and more than 30 billion over all — nearly five times the total number of earthlings.

Initiative counts only the live World Cup coverage; Sponsorship Intelligence counts the live coverage and replays and highlights shown in news and magazine shows. Both count the same people over and over, leading to the big numbers for the full event.

Some games preceding the final had a world audience exceeding 200 million, said Andy Kowalczyk, deputy managing director of Sponsorship.

Alavy said 84 percent of the televisions in use in Italy, and 80 percent of those being viewed in France, were watching the game Sunday.

ESPN and ESPN2, which averaged viewership of 2.3 million and 1.1 million, far exceeded the expectations of Major League Soccer, whose marketing arm bought the television rights, sold the advertising and paid ESPN’s production costs. “We outdelivered our guarantees by 100 percent,” said Don Garber, the M.L.S. commissioner.

ABC’s average viewership, before the final, had already swelled by 125 percent, to 1.7 million, from 2002.

Granted, four years ago, viewing in the United States was hampered by the Asian time zone. But Artie Bulgrin, ESPN’s senior vice president for research, said ESPN did much better than during the 1998 World Cup in France.

“This year, we had 20 telecasts on ESPN, and 17 did a rating of 1.0 or better, and in 1998, only 7 out of 27 did a 1.0 or better,” he said. “Only one match in 1998 did a 2.0 or better, and this year, seven did.”

•Garber must now determine how to capitalize, whether through bettering the broadcasts or investing heavily in luring major international stars to M.L.S. “The market’s there,” he said. “We didn’t build this. We put on the games, and 17 million watched.”

But as ESPN looks to the next World Cup, in South Africa in 2010, it must change a few tactics:

1. Sure, there are no in-game stoppages for commercials, but larding the pregame and halftime shows with ads creates disjointed jumbles. On Sunday, some segments lasted as little as 10, 20, and 41 seconds.

2. Revel in the festivities. Univision, not ABC, carried the pregame show by Wyclef Jean and Shakira and the halftime singing of Placido Domingo. And ABC sinned by joining the Italian national anthem in progress.

3. Don’t lead into any match, let alone the third-place game, with a rerun of the 2005 All-Star Game home run derby, as ESPN did Saturday. The host country’s last game wasn’t worth a nice little pregame auf wiedersehen?

4. Restrain the visuals. Curb the drop-down graphics that block the field. Cut out urgent alerts like Sunday’s telling ABC viewers to watch the Western Open on ESPN. The government’s terrorism warnings are more subtle.

5. Nurture a new generation of announcers. Naming a fine baseball announcer like Dave O’Brien to be the lead soccer voice only put a target on his back from the chattering bloggers. Teach analysts to explain nuances and tell stories better. And hand them a 21st-century Telestrator.

6. Follow up stories. When Zidane was red-carded, ABC’s Marcelo Balboa said he believed the referee wrongly made the call after watching the stadium replay. Where was Jeremy Schaap when we needed him?

E-mail: sportsbiz@nytimes.com

Last edited by 2004striker; 07/13/06 06:01 PM.
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