Sunday Night Football Finale Earns Best Overnight Rating For NFL’s Last Regular Season Game

It used to be that Monday Night Football had the last game of the season, but now, it’s NBC’s Sunday Night Football and NBC continues to reap the benefits getting a 12.6 rating for the St. Louis Rams-Seattle Seahawks NFC West Division play-in game. The game received a 19 share. This is up 11% from last year’s Week 17 contest. We’ll get final numbers later.

Here’s the NBC press release which is the third we’ve received today.

“SUNDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL” RAMS-SEAHAWKS EARNS BEST OVERNIGHT RATING IN NEARLY A DECADE FOR NFL’S SEASON-ENDING GAME

12.6 Overnight Tops Last Year’s Season-Ending Game by 11%

SNF Powers NBC to Another Sunday Night Win
NEW YORK – January 3, 2011 – Last night’s “Sunday Night Football” game earned the best overnight rating in nearly a decade for the NFL’s season-ending game, including the best overnight for a Week 17 game in SNF history, and was up 11 percent over last year’s Week 17 game, according to overnight data released today by the Nielsen Company. The game, in which the Seattle Seahawks defeated the St. Louis Rams 16-6 in a ‘win-and-in’ contest to clinch the NFC West title, registered a 12.6 overnight rating and a 19 share.
  • The 12.6/19 overnight rating is the best overnight rating in nine years for the NFL’s season-ending game (since 1/7/02, Min-Bal on ABC, 13.4/21).
  • The overnight rating is an increase of 11 percent over last year’s Week 17 SNF (Bengals-Jets, 11.4/18) and is the highest season-ending overnight rating in the five-year history of “Sunday Night Football.”
  • The rating peaked at a 13.4/23 from 11-11:15 p.m. ET at the end of the game.
NFL SEASON-ENDING GAME OVERNIGHTS SINCE 2001
2010            1/2/2011          NBC            StL-Sea      12.6            19
2009            1/3/2010          NBC            Cin-NYJ      11.4            18
2008            12/28/2008      NBC            Den-SD      10.6            17
2007            12/30/2007      NBC            Ten-Ind       11.6            19
2006            12/31/2006      NBC            GB-Chi          8.7            17
2005            12/26/2005      ABC            NE-NYJ       10.5            18
2004            12/27/2004      ABC            Phi-StL        11.7            19
2003            12/22/2003      ABC            GB-Oak       12.1            19
2002            12/30/2002      ABC            SF-StL           9.6            15
2001            1/7/2002          ABC            Min-Bal        13.4            21
DEFEATED ALL SUNDAY NIGHT COMPETITION: Last night’s “Sunday Night Football” broadcast defeated all Sunday Night competition, the 17th straight week that primetime NFL football on NBC defeated its competition, on a night that included such competition as CBS’s 60 Minutes, ABC’s Desperate Housewives and Brothers & Sisters, and Fox’s comedy lineup. 
  • “Sunday Night Football” powered NBC to a Sunday night win in primetime (7-11 p.m.), topping second place CBS (which was aided by an NFL overrun) by 23 percent.  NBC also beat Fox (also aided by NFL overrun) by 58 percent and ABC by the same 58 percent.
SNF EXPECTED TO FINISH SEASON UNDEFEATED: When the viewership is available tomorrow from Nielsen, “Sunday Night Football” is expected to be the most-watched Sunday night show; the 17th time in 17 weeks that “Sunday Night Football” defeated its competition (every week this season). When adding in the NFL Kickoff opener on Thursday, Sept. 9 between the Vikings and Saints, the franchise went undefeated on 18 of 18 nights. Last season, SNF was the most-watched Sunday night primetime broadcast in a then-record 15 of 16 (94 percent) weeks. In 2008, SNF won 13 of 16 (81 percent) Sunday nights after winning 11 of 16 in 2007 (69 percent) and nine of 16 in 2006 (56 percent). 
TOP METERED MARKETS FOR RAMS-SEAHAWKS:
  1. St. Louis, 38.7/53
  2. Seattle, 35.4/58
  3. New Orleans, 22.9/31
  4. Las Vegas, 20.1/29
  5. Oklahoma City, 19.0/27
  6. Tulsa, 18.3/24
  7. Baltimore, 16.7/25
  8. Milwaukee, 16.0/24
  9. Portland, 15.6/26
  10. Norfolk, 15.4/22

It’s obvious that St. Louis and Seattle would be  #1 and #2, respectively and why New Orleans finished third as the Saints would face the winner of Rams-Seahawks. Anyone want to venture a guess why Oklahoma City and Tulsa finished in the Top 10? It’s a rather easy answer if you think about it.

I hope to get to links later.

About Ken Fang

Ken has been covering the sports media in earnest at his own site, Fang's Bites since May 2007 and at Awful Announcing since March 2013. He provides a unique perspective having been an award-winning radio news reporter in Providence and having worked in local television. Fang celebrates the three Boston Red Sox World Championships in the 21st Century, but continues to be a long-suffering Cleveland Browns fan.

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