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CFP TV Ratings

Franisdaman

HB King
Nov 3, 2012
105,663
145,696
113
Heaven, Iowa
Tennessee-Ohio State averaged 14.3M on ESPN and ABC Saturday night.

Indiana-Notre Dame averaged 13.4M on ESPN and ABC Friday night.

The two Saturday afternoon windows that aired on TNT Sports opposite the NFL:
* Clemson-Texas, w/ a 3:00 pm CT kickoff, averaged 8.6M (up against 3:30 CT Steelers/Ravens)

* SMU-Penn State, w/ an 11:00 am CT kickoff, averaged 6.4M (up against 12:00 CT Texas/Chiefs)

* These were the two most-watched cable-exclusive college football games all season.


 
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Yes, Mister Man: "New York – April 9, 2024 — An estimated 18.9 million viewers watched the NCAA Women's Basketball National Championship matchup between the South Carolina Gamecocks and the Iowa Hawkeyes on ABC and ESPN on Sunday, according to Nielsen live-plus-same-day data.Apr 9, 2024"
 

Saturday NFL games top College Football Playoff viewership

Associated Press
Dec 25, 2024, 09:43 AM ET

A pair of Saturday NFL games drew a larger viewing audience than college football for the rollout of the sport's 12-team playoff.

* SMU-Penn State, with an 11:00 am CT kickoff on TNT networks, averaged 6.4M (up against 12:00 CT Texas/Chiefs on NBC, which averaged 15.5 million viewers).

* Clemson-Texas, with a 3:00 pm CT kickoff on TNT networks, averaged 8.6M (up against 3:30 CT Steelers/Ravens on Fox, which averaged 15.4 million viewers).

ESPN, ABC and others aired the other two college games: Indiana-Notre Dame (13.4 million) on Friday night and Tennessee-Ohio State (14.3 million) on Saturday night. There were no competing NFL games.

The overall average of 10.6 million viewers was higher than all but four college games this season.

 
Interesting insights. Aside from that being a lot of B1G eyeballs, I’m curious what folks read into the NFL numbers beating the CFP numbers. Bigger, dedicated, fan bases in the NFL? Disinterest in the CFP, teams, or format? Bad scheduling for both leagues? Merely represents there are many football fans with TV sets? 🤷🏻‍♂️
 
Interesting insights. Aside from that being a lot of B1G eyeballs, I’m curious what folks read into the NFL numbers beating the CFP numbers. Bigger, dedicated, fan bases in the NFL? Disinterest in the CFP, teams, or format? Bad scheduling for both leagues? Merely represents there are many football fans with TV sets? 🤷🏻‍♂️
Far more casual followers in the NFL.

Or should I say gullible, casual-f*** followers. Either way these people are piece of sh** drains on society and are primarily responsible for allowing most of the problems in this country, which allows the media to focus their attention on captivating this main section of the national viewing audience. And sports media is no different.

There is a reason the Lakers, Yankees, Cowboys, all the top name-brands perpetuate sports talk even when those teams are trash in particular years.

It's because of the gullible casual f***s.
 
I've always wondered how they do these ratings. Is it mostly an estimate based on a sample?

Anyway, I "viewed" all 4 games. I might have averaged 30 min of watching per game.
So, the way it works is I call 500 people. Or at least I tell my boss that I called 500 people. It's usually more like 15 or 20, depending on the mood I'm in. Its a work from home gig so, you know.

Then I ask them if they watched a particular game. If they say yes I mark it down as yes. If the say no I mark it down as no. If they tell me to **** off and die and never to call them again, I tell them I'm outside their home and waiting for them to go to sleep. I then split those calls in half between yes and no and send everything in, proportionally raising all of the numbers to get to 500.

Any other questions I can answer for you?
 
Far more casual followers in the NFL.

Or should I say gullible, casual-f*** followers. Either way these people are piece of sh** drains on society and are primarily responsible for allowing most of the problems in this country, which allows the media to focus their attention on captivating this main section of the national viewing audience. And sports media is no different.

There is a reason the Lakers, Yankees, Cowboys, all the top name-brands perpetuate sports talk even when those teams are trash in particular years.

It's because of the gullible casual f***s.
It’s like they’re from Pissconsin or something
 
I've always wondered how they do these ratings. Is it mostly an estimate based on a sample?

Anyway, I "viewed" all 4 games. I might have averaged 30 min of watching per game.
Made up BS … companies paid to fudge them for networks if not owned by networks or just made up by the networks
Notice ESPN’s are always BS especially when advertising is down
It’s all BS no one really knows
 
Interesting insights. Aside from that being a lot of B1G eyeballs, I’m curious what folks read into the NFL numbers beating the CFP numbers. Bigger, dedicated, fan bases in the NFL? Disinterest in the CFP, teams, or format? Bad scheduling for both leagues? Merely represents there are many football fans with TV sets? 🤷🏻‍♂️

NFL is king and has been for a long time in this country.

The eyeballs are in major cities and those lean way more NFL than college.

That said the national championship game last year had 12.9 million viewers so viewership is way up over last year considering that.
 
Quarterfinals Viewership:

21.1 M: Ohio State vs Oregon

17.3 M: Texas vs Arizona St

15.8 M: Notre Dame vs Georgia

13.9 M: Penn St vs Boise St


Every one of these games was higher rated than the natty in previous years.
 
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17.80M viewers for Penn State vs Notre Dame.

The story:

Notre Dame-Penn State low for a semi, high for an Orange Bowl​

by Jon Lewis
Jan 11, 2025


Pushed a week into the new year, the first College Football Playoff semifinal of the 12-team era was on the lower end of the historical scale.

Thursday’s Notre Dame-Penn State CFP semifinal at the Orange Bowl averaged an 8.9 rating and 17.80 million viewers across ESPN (8.4, 16.92M), ESPN2 (0.39, 733K) and ESPNU (0.07, 144K), ranking just 16th out of the 21 total playoff semifinals.

Comparisons to past years are complicated by the new 12-team format, which has pushed the semifinals a full week past the New Year’s holiday. As a result, it should be no surprise that ratings and viewership fell sharply from last year’s first semifinal, Michigan-Alabama at the Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day (13.0, 27.76M), and from TCU-Michigan at the Fiesta Bowl on New Year’s Eve 2022 (10.0, 21.70M).

Notre Dame’s win actually increased from the previous Orange Bowl to host a playoff semifinal, Georgia’s New Year’s Eve rout of Michigan in the 2021-22 season (8.1, 17.19M). In fact, only one Orange Bowl in the playoff era has had a larger audience, Alabama-Oklahoma in December 2018 (19.07M).

Dating back to the start of the BCS era in the 1998-99 season, this year’s game ranks as the fifth-most watched Orange Bowl behind the aforementioned 2018 game, the two BCS-era national championship editions (2001 Oklahoma-FSU: 27.24M; 2005 USC-Oklahoma: 21.42M) and Penn State’s triple-overtime win over Florida State in 2006 (18.56M).

Pending results for Friday’s Ohio State-Texas Cotton Bowl, the Orange Bowl ranks second for the college football season behind the New Year’s Day Rose Bowl, now a CFP quarterfinal (21.09M). It should be noted that under the expanded format, it is the quarterfinals, not the semifinals, that benefit from elevated holiday season viewing.

 
Viewership for the 2025 CFP Semifinals:
20.60M viewers for Ohio State vs Texas
17.80M viewers for Penn State vs Notre Dame

Here are the 10 most-watched CFP semifinals. Ohio State in #1, #5, #8, #9 and #10.

GhNnxh5XcAArbF1
 
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Personally, Oregon's $24 million payroll and Ohio ST.'s $20 million payrolll turned me off for college sports in general. I do still follow Iowa, the rest who cares. Might as well watch the NFL which has more Iowa guys playing. I haven't watched any of the college playoff games. The college bowls are even worse---why bother.
 
Personally, Oregon's $24 million payroll and Ohio ST.'s $20 million payrolll turned me off for college sports in general. I do still follow Iowa, the rest who cares. Might as well watch the NFL which has more Iowa guys playing. I haven't watched any of the college playoff games. The college bowls are even worse---why bother.
I watch Iowa bowl games and I have been watching most of the CFP games to see great athletes playing. I havent watched much of any other regular bowl games. I did watch most of the first half of the ISU Miami game which is odd because even living in Des MOines ISU just doesnt trip my trigger.

I watch a few Nfl teams' games during the regular season and pro games just have outstanding players making plays. If the Chiefs, who I have rooted for since '63 or so , doesnt make the super bowl I would like to see the Bills finally win one.
 
Tennessee-Ohio State averaged 14.3M on ESPN and ABC Saturday night.

Indiana-Notre Dame averaged 13.4M on ESPN and ABC Friday night.

The two Saturday afternoon windows that aired on TNT Sports opposite the NFL:
* Clemson-Texas, w/ a 3:00 pm CT kickoff, averaged 8.6M (up against 3:30 CT Steelers/Ravens)

* SMU-Penn State, w/ an 11:00 am CT kickoff, averaged 6.4M (up against 12:00 CT Texas/Chiefs)

* These were the two most-watched cable-exclusive college football games all season.


made up numbers to fool advertisers ... no one is watching that crap, can barely fill stadiums
season is too long for college game, crappy product now.
 

Ohio State-Notre Dame among lesser-watched CFB title games

by Jon Lewis
Jan 22, 2025

Despite pitting two of the most prominent programs in college sports, college football’s national championship delivered one of its smaller audiences.

Monday’s Ohio State-Notre Dame College Football Playoff National Championship averaged a combined 22.1 million viewers across the Nielsen-rated ESPN networks, marking the fifth-least watched national title game since the debut of the CFP predecessor, the Bowl Championship Series, in 1998.

Three of the five least-watched title games have come in the past five seasons, with Georgia-TCU two years ago the least-watched (17.2M) and Alabama-Ohio State in 2021 the second-least watched (19.1M). The two other title games in the bottom five are USC’s rout of Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl 20 years ago (21.4M) and Miami-Nebraska in the 2002 Rose Bowl (21.6M).

The Buckeyes’ comfortable win, which peaked with 26.1 million viewers in the 8:30 PM ET quarter-hour, declined 12% from Michigan-Washington last year (25.1M).

Despite the decline, the title game edged out the Ohio State-Oregon Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day to rank as the most-watched game of the college football season — marking the first time in three years and only the second in five that the title game has taken top honors.

Several factors contributed to the relatively low figure, which was still the top non-NFL sports audience since last year’s Super Bowl. The game took place on Inauguration Day, which almost certainly resulted in greater cable news viewing than is typical. The fact that the game aired as late as Inauguration Day in the first place is another factor, as the expanded 12-team playoff pushed the season a week further into January.

The matchup pit the teams ranked fifth and sixth at the end of the regular season, a departure from title games that had previously consisted of top four — or in the BCS era, the top two — teams. Notre Dame was not expected to keep pace with the Buckeyes, and while they kept the score respectable, the game largely followed expectations.

Perhaps most importantly, ESPN is now said to be in just 65 million homes, a figure that makes it highly difficult to reach the kind of audiences that were once commonplace for the national title game. When the Buckeyes previously won the National Championship in the 2014-15 season, ESPN was in more than 90 million homes — and the title game, the first of the playoff era, averaged 34.1 million viewers.

The title game accounted for more than half of television viewing in the adults 18-49 demographic Monday night, an indication both of the resilience of live sports as a television property and of the decline of linear viewing. With fewer people watching television overall, even a smaller audience will account for a greater piece of the pie.

 

No changes coming to CFP schedule​

ESPN and the College Football Playoff are not anticipating significant changes to the 2025 College Football Playoff, according to Sports Business Journal.

The inaugural 12-team playoff featured two early-round games opposite the NFL, which predictably dominated viewership. The SBJ report suggests that CFP executives feel the viewership for those two Saturday games was not as low as expected, and that CFP viewership may have impacted the NFL games more than the other way around.

Viewership for this year’s championship game was on the low side, caused by a number of factors including presidential inauguration coverage, a regional matchup, and a lopsided halftime score. For now, it seems the CFP is content with the performance of the 12-team tournament.

The 2026 season features some additional changes. The national championship is currently scheduled for Monday, January 25, 2027, the latest date ever. TNT will take over two quarterfinal bowls, and ABC is expected to simulcast three additional games, including the final, which should boost viewership. The playoff has also not confirmed the 12-team format for 2026 and beyond, and has reportedly considered further expansion of the field, perhaps to 14.

 
It would be unfortunate if they don't fix the seeding issue. That is the one thing that needs addressed now. asu and boise as 4 and 3 and getting a bye was obviously bad. I suppose it had to be in place year 1 to get the buy in of lesser leagues, but needs to be removed going forward.
Outside of that, I'd ask that the field be expanded to 16 teams. That's not absolutely necessary, but it would be an improvement.
 
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