NFL television ratings down 9.7 percent during 2017 regular season.

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NFL television ratings fell 9.7 percent during the 2017 regular season, according to numbers registered by Nielsen.
A typical game was watched by 1.6 million fewer people this season as compared to last season (14.9 million versus 16.5 million).
The drop comes after the NFL had hoped to stem an 8 percent ratings slide from last season by experimenting with television commercials and trying to speed up the game.
Last year's slide was partly attributed to a lost audience due to the presidential election. This year, the league was challenged with fans upset at players protesting during the national anthem, an action that led to a league face-off with President Donald Trump.
Other factors cited include the dilution of the product through Thursday Night Football, which was broadcast on the NFL Network, CBS, NBC and Amazon Prime this season. This season, both Fox CEO James Murdoch and CBS Sports Chairman Sean McManus blamed the ratings slide on the proliferation of games.
The NFL RedZone also might be a factor in taking fans away from watching the daytime games on CBS and FOX. The NFL Network and DirecTV, which air separate versions of the show that broadcast live look-ins, have never shared viewership numbers.
The NFL isn't in a vacuum, as the viewership drop is indicative of the general environment as less television is being watched and cable subscriptions have declined. The NBA, however, has seen a 20 percent increase in viewership this season as compared to 2016-17.
Despite the drop in NFL ratings, Nielsen data shows that the 20 of the top 30 highest-rated shows on television in 2017 were football games. Both NBC and ESPN had the most-watched shows in every single week, in terms of audience and in all key male demographics, for every Sunday Night and Monday Night Football game this season.
NBC's Sunday Night Football finished first in primetime this fall for the seventh consecutive year, besting American Idol (2005-06 through 2010-11) as the longest at the top primetime spot since 1950. Its 18.2 million viewers bested the second-best primetime show, Thursday Night Football on CBS, by 29 percent -- its largest margin ever.
ESPN officials reported earlier in the week that the network grew its total day viewership in 2017 by 1 percent, while primetime was up 7 percent.
 

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I'm sure they'll be bankrupt in no time. You showed them. Your protest is a success. :ohno:
 

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I'm sure they'll be bankrupt in no time. You showed them. Your protest is a success. :ohno:
you're welcome. it's been a pleasure getting my sundays back
 

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This is from people streaming (illegally). Those millions of former customers now dont count towards ratings.
 

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Another way to title this thread is: "NFL ratings are down....... by about the same amount as TV ratings in general are down."
 

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The trend is down for the nfl. Let's see the season ticket renewal numbers. Let's see the next round of tv deals.
 

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The trend is down for the nfl. Let's see the season ticket renewal numbers. Let's see the next round of tv deals.

Yes but the point is the trend is down for TV in general. The NFL is just part of a downward trend in the entire industry. Its not just the NFL
 

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most people that turn off the nfl this yr imo will not turn it back on next yr as well imo
 

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A diminishing product with nonstop rule changes hurting both the play and the flow of the game combined with Anthem protests have absolutely hurt ratings.

We all know the game is not the same, it's not as good as it was.

A lot of this happened under Roger's watch. It's like snowflakes are running the asylum
 

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Funny how one of the main reasons doesn’t get mentioned - the Giants, Jets, and Bears all sucked. Throw in the ratings for LA (fans there would rather watch the Raiders, Broncos, or 49ers than the Rams or Chargers). That is a big part of the ratings drop.
 

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PI has killed the game. At least let them face guard.
 

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I haven't watched much NFL lately but it's clear the protests impacted ratings. But there are other factors too. The diminished product, people cutting the cable cord and I'd say major injuries in the NFL this year all played a role.

The NFL has to make some changes this off season and can't worry about hurting the player's feelings.
 

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When the ratings drop 10% next year I wonder if they will blame the mid-term elections?
:):)
 

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Maybe they should pay the Commish more?
 

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Yes but the point is the trend is down for TV in general. The NFL is just part of a downward trend in the entire industry. Its not just the NFL

And yet, even with the "downward trend", Verizon is willing to pay $400 million to $500 million a year, nearly twice as much as last year's deal. Too bad they didn't read this thread so they could see the light :ohno:



If only other businesses could be this unsuccessful. The poor NFL. It's terrible how they're disintegrating right before our eyes.
 

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Here are my reasons in order of importance:

1) 50% Cord-cutting/ streaming ... less people watch the games on a traditional TV with cable. Will only continue and get worse

2) 20% Protest related political drama . only temporary, will pass

3) 20% Two year Daily Fantasy boom ending.

4) 5% rule changes, diminished product. I just don't see much difference at all

5) 5% Player injuries. Again minor factor, but who wants to see the Packers play on TV with Hundley, or the Texans with Savage. I'll just skip those games, thank you
 

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my take:

still huge business and not going anywhere

think several factors are impacting the numbers:

- protests
- quality of game (penalties, rule changes, pace)
- red zone watchers
- brutal hits (i have turned off a few games after seeing guys involunartily spazm after big hits)
- less overall traditional TV watching.....NFLX, etc

tough to say any one factor is the main one, but I am not surprised to see the numbers down
 

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