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NRL 2017 TV RATINGS!

DIOGENES

Juniors
Messages
1,484
Interesting from last night:
FIFA Belgium vs Tunisia 489K
RU Aust vs IRL 435K
AFL every week is SOO 366K
RL Sam vs Ton 244K
 

Billythekid

First Grade
Messages
6,570
Build it up over time along with the women’s NRL season and internationals..at the moment the NRL season hasn’t even started yet and that will only run a few weeks...

I’m assuming for how you criticise the emphasis of Origin in the men’s season you don’t want that repeated with the women’s..

When it comes to women's sport any coverage is great. Sure it would be nice if the club game got this sort of attention but it simply won't. 600K+ people being exposed to women's RL is a fantastic step forward for the game. IMO making a 3 game series like the men's will only increase its profile.

Who knows maybe in a few years we will be seeing 1 million or more watching women's SOO. Maybe that would make the game wake up to the potential.
 

Hello, I'm The Doctor

First Grade
Messages
9,124
^^^

If anyone can be bothered, it would be great to see a "G1 vs G2" comparison over the last few years to see how sunday matched up to previous G2s.

3.45m > 3.16m sounds pretty good, but id like to see what previous years would have looked like
 

BlueandGold

Juniors
Messages
1,155
^^^

If anyone can be bothered, it would be great to see a "G1 vs G2" comparison over the last few years to see how sunday matched up to previous G2s.

3.45m > 3.16m sounds pretty good, but id like to see what previous years would have looked like

About 350k from expectations.

It will take time to bed in.

NRL should stick with it for a couple years see how it goes.
 

King Ben

Juniors
Messages
1,176
2018: 2.35m -> 2.09m
2017: 2.35m -> 2.38m
2016: 2.61m -> 2.3m
2015: 2.43m -> 2.62m
2014: 2.51m -> 2.58m
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
65,849
It was all about State Of Origin last night with Nine’s first Sunday match in a long time. While the match dominated and put Nine well ahead of the competition, the numbers were down a little on expectations of what an Origin Sunday might deliver.

The match did over 2.1m metro to become the second-highest rating program of the year, behind only Origin 1. The Sydney audience was close to 900,000 while Brisbane was over 700,000.

Nine’s winning Sydney primary share was 45.1%, while Brisbane, hoping for a last minute miracle as the match drew to a close, was on 50.7%. Nine also won in Melbourne, but Seven was ranked #1 in Adelaide and Perth.

https://mediaweek.com.au/tv-ratings-june-24-2018-origin/
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/s...t/news-story/78462f7c6b1e548da007addaa62bbbb9

Nine wins Origin ratings battle but will push NRL to drop Sunday experiment

Holly Byrnes, National TV editor, News Corp Australia Network
29 minutes ago


CHANNEL 9 is likely to urge the NRL to drop its Sunday experiment with State Of Origin, after the series decider saw a ratings dive of 12 per cent on its Wednesday night staging of Game I.

The NSW Blues victory over the Maroons, 18-14, was a victory for Nine too - winning the night’s national ratings battle, with an average combined audience of 3.179 million viewers across the five-city and regional markets.

The thrilling series win by coach Brad Fittler’s ‘baby Blues’ team made the 7pm Sunday broadcast the second highest rating program of the year, only bettered by the Origin 2018 opener (which averaged 3.456 million viewers nationally).

But despite the solid ratings result, the numbers were more than 300,000 viewers down on the Game II national average of 3.487 million last year, when it aired in the traditional Wednesday night timeslot.

While expectations were for the Sunday timeslot to deliver bigger market share for league’s showcase event, the choice of reality TV options on rival networks, Seven and Ten tempted many viewers away.

The final house reveal on Seven’s House Rules (from 7pm) posted a season high against Origin, averaging 948,000 people; beating reality rival MasterChef on Ten, which drew a metro market average of 731,000 viewers.

A kick-off at the earlier time of 7.50pm caught out many who were counting on the same start time for Wednesday matches, which are typically scheduled 20 minutes later at 8.10pm.

While the early start-time and Sunday shift were widely publicised, viewers have also come to expect Origin on a Wednesday night as it has been scheduled for the past 17 years (in 2001, all three games were aired on Sunday nights).

Early tries by Queensland and a dramatic penalty try to NSW in the first half kept viewers locked on in Sydney (peaking at 981,000 viewers) and Brisbane (with a peak of 805,000 viewers); while the sin-binning of Blues star James Robert late in the second half set up another gripping finish.

But both NRL stronghold cities were down on Game I audience figures, which had peaked at 1.058 million in Sydney, and 829,000 people in Brisbane.

Melbourne viewers, who had tuned into the MCG-hosted opening game after a strong marketing push into the AFL’s heartland (peaking at 425,000 people), also dropped off for Game II on Sunday (which peaked at 386,000 viewers).

A change to policy this season means the NRL now controls all broadcast scheduling and kick-off times - making it their decision, not Nine’s, to include this year’s Game II in a stand-alone weekend.

Halting the club competition allowed the women’s Origin battle to be broadcast in the regular Friday night timeslot, and Pacific Islands test matches scheduled on Saturday (from 4pm and 7.30pm); with both exceeding ground and ratings expectations.

The first-ever women’s Origin game to be televised - also won by NSW 16-10 - drew an average Friday night audience, combined with the simulcast on Fox League, of 690,000 people (peaking at 1.010m).

The two Pacific Islands tests saw Papua New Guinea defeat Fiji (26-14), watched by a combined national average of 269,000 people (including Fox League); while Tonga overpowered Samoa, 38-22 with a combined TV audience averaging 507,000 people.

Nine’s cumulative standalone league audience for the weekend averaged 6.8 million viewers nationally.

Nine’s head of sport, Tom Malone said while the ratings for all weekend games, including Origin were strong, “we would prefer it to be a Wednesday night to get its biggest possible audience share,:

An NRL spokesman said the game was prepared to discuss timeslot options for State of Origin 2 with Channel 9.

He said the NRL would look favourably at a family-friendly 4 pm kick off on Sunday afternoon for the second Origin game.

Their decision to stage the stand alone Origin and representative weekend was set up for a range of issues, including player welfare.

“Holding Origin II on a Sunday is a new concept for our fans but it still attracted more than three million viewers and was the second most watched show on television this year. The only show which has beaten Sunday’s match was Origin 1.

He added: “while we are always prepared to discuss options to attract more fans, we believe it was a highly successful weekend of Rugby League.”

NINE’S RATINGS GAME:

ORIGIN GAME I: averaged 3.456 million (5 city metro 2.353 million / Regional 1.103m); peaked 3.894 million (5 city metro 2.591 million / Regional 1.303m).

ORIGIN GAME II: averaged 3.179 million (5 city metro 2.122 million / Regional 1.057m); peaked 3.665 million (5 city metro 2.419 million / Regional 1.246m).

PROS OF SUNDAY

* Close to 7 million people watched league’s marquee players across the standalone round, showcasing both the womens competition and Pacific Island nations.

* Since its inception in 1982, Origin has been played at various times on every night of the week, except Saturday.

* Biggest night of the TV week mean broadcasters can charge bigger premiums on advertising and sales packages.

PROS OF WEDNESDAY

* Rep teams get a 10-day turnaround between NRL rounds and Origin, allowing for greater recovery time and team cohesion.

* Less competition on Wednesday, compared to Sunday which is the biggest night of the TV week when programmers roll out their hit programs.

* Getting more viewers on a less-cluttered night of the week could convert to more revenue flowing back into the game.
 

Coparugby

Juniors
Messages
693
https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/s...t/news-story/78462f7c6b1e548da007addaa62bbbb9

Nine wins Origin ratings battle but will push NRL to drop Sunday experiment

Holly Byrnes, National TV editor, News Corp Australia Network
29 minutes ago


CHANNEL 9 is likely to urge the NRL to drop its Sunday experiment with State Of Origin, after the series decider saw a ratings dive of 12 per cent on its Wednesday night staging of Game I.

The NSW Blues victory over the Maroons, 18-14, was a victory for Nine too - winning the night’s national ratings battle, with an average combined audience of 3.179 million viewers across the five-city and regional markets.

The thrilling series win by coach Brad Fittler’s ‘baby Blues’ team made the 7pm Sunday broadcast the second highest rating program of the year, only bettered by the Origin 2018 opener (which averaged 3.456 million viewers nationally).

But despite the solid ratings result, the numbers were more than 300,000 viewers down on the Game II national average of 3.487 million last year, when it aired in the traditional Wednesday night timeslot.

While expectations were for the Sunday timeslot to deliver bigger market share for league’s showcase event, the choice of reality TV options on rival networks, Seven and Ten tempted many viewers away.

The final house reveal on Seven’s House Rules (from 7pm) posted a season high against Origin, averaging 948,000 people; beating reality rival MasterChef on Ten, which drew a metro market average of 731,000 viewers.

A kick-off at the earlier time of 7.50pm caught out many who were counting on the same start time for Wednesday matches, which are typically scheduled 20 minutes later at 8.10pm.

While the early start-time and Sunday shift were widely publicised, viewers have also come to expect Origin on a Wednesday night as it has been scheduled for the past 17 years (in 2001, all three games were aired on Sunday nights).

Early tries by Queensland and a dramatic penalty try to NSW in the first half kept viewers locked on in Sydney (peaking at 981,000 viewers) and Brisbane (with a peak of 805,000 viewers); while the sin-binning of Blues star James Robert late in the second half set up another gripping finish.

But both NRL stronghold cities were down on Game I audience figures, which had peaked at 1.058 million in Sydney, and 829,000 people in Brisbane.

Melbourne viewers, who had tuned into the MCG-hosted opening game after a strong marketing push into the AFL’s heartland (peaking at 425,000 people), also dropped off for Game II on Sunday (which peaked at 386,000 viewers).

A change to policy this season means the NRL now controls all broadcast scheduling and kick-off times - making it their decision, not Nine’s, to include this year’s Game II in a stand-alone weekend.

Halting the club competition allowed the women’s Origin battle to be broadcast in the regular Friday night timeslot, and Pacific Islands test matches scheduled on Saturday (from 4pm and 7.30pm); with both exceeding ground and ratings expectations.

The first-ever women’s Origin game to be televised - also won by NSW 16-10 - drew an average Friday night audience, combined with the simulcast on Fox League, of 690,000 people (peaking at 1.010m).

The two Pacific Islands tests saw Papua New Guinea defeat Fiji (26-14), watched by a combined national average of 269,000 people (including Fox League); while Tonga overpowered Samoa, 38-22 with a combined TV audience averaging 507,000 people.

Nine’s cumulative standalone league audience for the weekend averaged 6.8 million viewers nationally.

Nine’s head of sport, Tom Malone said while the ratings for all weekend games, including Origin were strong, “we would prefer it to be a Wednesday night to get its biggest possible audience share,:

An NRL spokesman said the game was prepared to discuss timeslot options for State of Origin 2 with Channel 9.

He said the NRL would look favourably at a family-friendly 4 pm kick off on Sunday afternoon for the second Origin game.

Their decision to stage the stand alone Origin and representative weekend was set up for a range of issues, including player welfare.

“Holding Origin II on a Sunday is a new concept for our fans but it still attracted more than three million viewers and was the second most watched show on television this year. The only show which has beaten Sunday’s match was Origin 1.

He added: “while we are always prepared to discuss options to attract more fans, we believe it was a highly successful weekend of Rugby League.”

NINE’S RATINGS GAME:

ORIGIN GAME I: averaged 3.456 million (5 city metro 2.353 million / Regional 1.103m); peaked 3.894 million (5 city metro 2.591 million / Regional 1.303m).

ORIGIN GAME II: averaged 3.179 million (5 city metro 2.122 million / Regional 1.057m); peaked 3.665 million (5 city metro 2.419 million / Regional 1.246m).

PROS OF SUNDAY

* Close to 7 million people watched league’s marquee players across the standalone round, showcasing both the womens competition and Pacific Island nations.

* Since its inception in 1982, Origin has been played at various times on every night of the week, except Saturday.

* Biggest night of the TV week mean broadcasters can charge bigger premiums on advertising and sales packages.

PROS OF WEDNESDAY

* Rep teams get a 10-day turnaround between NRL rounds and Origin, allowing for greater recovery time and team cohesion.

* Less competition on Wednesday, compared to Sunday which is the biggest night of the TV week when programmers roll out their hit programs.

* Getting more viewers on a less-cluttered night of the week could convert to more revenue flowing back into the game.
I wonder if the women’s SOO had the highest tv ratings for any Australian women’s team sport in history?
 

j5o6hn

Juniors
Messages
2,013
It was all about State Of Origin last night with Nine’s first Sunday match in a long time. While the match dominated and put Nine well ahead of the competition, the numbers were down a little on expectations of what an Origin Sunday might deliver.

The match did over 2.1m metro to become the second-highest rating program of the year, behind only Origin 1. The Sydney audience was close to 900,000 while Brisbane was over 700,000.

Nine’s winning Sydney primary share was 45.1%, while Brisbane, hoping for a last minute miracle as the match drew to a close, was on 50.7%. Nine also won in Melbourne, but Seven was ranked #1 in Adelaide and Perth.

https://mediaweek.com.au/tv-ratings-june-24-2018-origin/
Hi Red, 7 always rates 1 in Perth because it was the first channel into Perth had the place to its self for a number of yrs, the rest rolled along later, its also tied up in a one Newspaper town the Sundry Slimes is just ads,both owned by Stokes with 6PR radio owned by Fairfax but staffed by mainly West Journos.
7 & the AFL also help in Perth they are brainwashed by AFL, they fit it into every conversation no matter what its about, on Radio 6PR all day maybe all night as well,the ABC in Perth was/ is AFL till they die, the sports dept is especially bad
Telethon helps though 24 hours watching 7 would make anyone who likes to think turn into a Gibbering idiot and honorable mention to Ch 10 sports & Gossage, who quite frankly I dislike intensity their programs are rubbish News & Sports shows as well or read press releases if the truth is known & on weekends at least 2 hours old 3 in DST
 

BuffaloRules

Coach
Messages
14,272
Nine’s head of sport, Tom Malone said while the ratings for all weekend games, including Origin were strong, “we would prefer it to be a Wednesday night to get its biggest possible audience share,:

That's the only direct negative quote I could see in the article...

They prefer it to be on Wednesday but not saying that they are going to make them move it...

I think they will persevere a bit longer... doubt they are going to move all 3 games to Sunday anytime soon though...
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
if the game hadn't been close and more like game one then the ratings would have been lower

that to me makes the Sunday slot even worse
 

Perth Red

Post Whore
Messages
65,849
What were 300k city slickers that would normally watch Origin on a Weds night doing on Sunday night instead? Given the real possibility of NSW actually winning one Id have thought Sydney figures would have been through the roof? What was the viewing by city numbers?
 

Brutus

Referee
Messages
26,205
I can remember ratings were underwhelming back in 01 when we had three Sunday night Origins. Even the Aflie comeback game wasn't as big as they anticipated.

Nothing was worse than in 98 though when Origin was played on Friday night. Worst Origin ratings since the 80's if I recall correctly. Friday and Saturday nights would be the worst slots to play it in.
 

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