BCS National Championship Grabs Cable TV’s Biggest Audience Ever

This is what ESPN was hoping for when it signed the Bowl Championship Series to a cable-exclusive contract. Not only did the BCS National Championship Game garner the biggest overnight rating in cable history, but it also received the highest audience in history. This is NFL playoff-like numbers.

The average audience was 27.3 million viewers with a rating of 15.3 rating which is very impressive. Staggering numbers not just for cable, but for either cable or broadcast TV. Amazing stuff. ESPN is saying it would get an audience and it did.

Your press release.

BCS National Championship: Cable’s Biggest Audience
ESPN’s Highest Rating Ever; Digital Success
Last night’s Bowl Championship Series (BCS) National Championship on ESPN was watched by an average of 27,316,000 viewers (P2+) and 17,718,000 households, more than any program in the history of cable television.  The previous record was an ESPN Monday Night Football contest, Green Bay at Minnesota on October 5, 2009, with an audience of 21,839,000 viewers (P2+) and 15,136,000 homes, based on a 15.3 coverage rating.
The game – a last-second 22-19 Auburn victory over Oregon – earned a 17.8 fast national coverage rating, according to Nielsen, the highest in ESPN history, besting the MNF 15.3 in 2009. The rating for the U.S. television universe, 15.3, is higher than four of the past 12 BCS title games; the 27+ million viewers is higher than eight of the 12.  Among men 18-34, last night’s game was higher rated than 11 of the 12 games from 1999 – 2010.
The game was also a huge success for ESPN’s digital platforms. On ESPN3.com, the game was watched by more than 619,000 unique viewers, its most ever for a college football game and fourth all-time behind three 2010 FIFA World Cup contests (source: Adobe). The previous college football record was last week’s Sugar Bowl (248,000 viewers), a total that was more than doubled with the Auburn-Oregon matchup. Usage in visits, page views and total minutes on the day on ESPN.com and the ESPN Mobile Web saw increases ranging from 26 percent to 60 percent across all categories.
“ESPN’s inaugural telecasts of the BCS culminated with a thrilling finish viewed by a record audience,” said George Bodenheimer, ESPN president. “The BCS was a huge win for fans who through our television, radio and digital platforms enjoyed more coverage, more analysis and more ways to connect with their sport than ever before.”
BCS Highlights
  • Dec 27 – Jan 2:  ESPN’s highest-rated week ever (2.2 coverage rating)
  • Jan. 1: ESPN’s highest-rated day ever (4.3 coverage rating)
  • ESPN’s “reach” (one-minute qualifier) on January 1, 2011, was 63,535,000 viewers, an increase of 49% from New Year’s Day 2010 (42,747,000).
  • ESPN’s five BCS games (Rose, Fiesta, Orange and Sugar) have averaged 16,724,000 viewers – higher than the season-to-date prime-time average for each of the four major broadcast networks.
  • As a series, the five games would rank sixth among viewers out of the 111 prime-time programs on the four major broadcast networks this season (excluding specials).

That will do it for us.

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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