XFl Ratings

shiner

Lifer
Jul 18, 2000
17,112
1
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XFL ratings slide 50 percent in Week 2
By HOWARD FENDRICH
AP Sports Writer
February 11, 2001


The novelty factor didn't last long for the XFL.

NBC's second broadcast of the fledgling football league owned by the network and the World Wrestling Federation drew about half as many viewers as the debut did, despite a boost in the final 45 minutes from a double-overtime game.

Tellingly, NBC finished last among the four major networks in prime time Saturday just a week after beating ABC, CBS and Fox with the opening of the part-sports, part-spectacle program.

The preliminary overnight rating for Saturday's XFL show was a 5.1, meaning an average of 5.1 percent of television homes in the country's largest 49 markets tuned in at any given time.

That's a steep fall from the 10.3 preliminary Nielsen number last week, and reminiscent of the viewer erosion experienced by the USFL in the 1980s.

Another bad sign: Repeating a pattern seen in Week 1, the XFL rating decreased each half-hour from 8 to 10:30 p.m. EST.

That was followed by a razor-thin increase for the next 30 minutes, but then the audience expanded by 25 percent from 11 to 11:45 p.m. as the Los Angeles Xtreme pulled out their 39-32 victory over the Chicago Enforcers in two extra periods.

There was a major glitch 12 minutes into the show, when an NBC power generator gave out and the feed from Los Angeles was lost. Viewers saw an on-screen graphic for 1 1/2 minutes before being taken to the night's other XFL game, San Francisco at Orlando, for about 25 minutes.

Still, it took just seven days for the loud and sometimes lurid XFL to go from vastly exceeding expectations to hovering right around the 4.5 national rating NBC promised advertisers. National ratings for Saturday night should be released Tuesday.

``We remain a work in progress, and our numbers last night are exactly where we said they would be the last six months,'' NBC Sports chairman Dick Ebersol said.

The size of the drop surprised some industry observers.

``I had anticipated perhaps a 25 percent decline from the first week to the second,'' former CBS Sports president Neil Pilson, who now heads a TV consulting firm, said Sunday.

Saturday's program had more WWF influence, with one of that group's star wrestlers opening the on-field proceedings in Los Angeles with rambling bluster about being ``sick and tired of NFL suits telling us what they want.''

The main play-by-play voice changed, with wrestling announcer Jim Ross supplanting Milwaukee Brewers broadcaster Matt Vasgersian as the setup man for Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura. Vasgersian worked the game in Orlando.

There were a few other on-air tweaks orchestrated by Ebersol and his XFL partner, WWF impresario and marketing wizard Vince McMahon, as they strive to attract wrestling's core audience of young male viewers.

The USFL, another outdoor spring football league, went from a 14.2 rating in its first game, on ABC in 1983, to 7.4 in its second game. It was down to 3.3 by Week 15 and folded after three seasons.

ABC's airing of ``The Parent Trap'' topped Saturday night with an 8.1 preliminary rating, followed by CBS with 7.0, and Fox with 6.4. NBC's rating for the prime-time slot (8-11 p.m.) was 4.8.

According to Pilson, it's too early to judge whether the XFL can be a viable TV product on Saturdays, traditionally the lowest-rated night of the week.

``We have to wait at least four weeks to get an accurate prediction for the season,'' he said.

The Week 2 rating, though, ``does establish that last week we had an enormous tune-in from people who probably are not going to be regular viewers of the XFL,'' Pilson added.

``I thought the rating last week simply was a result of the terrific promotion for the debut. Now you have to deal with regular viewers -- people who are going to come back on a week-to-week basis -- and that is the major challenge for NBC and the WWF.''


 

AndrewR

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
11,157
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What I don't understand is that's what they predicted for the viewership, and now everyone's surprised (at least the media wonk who wrote that piece). I actually didn't watch the first week but did watch the second, and I thought it was pretty good. It is a little hokie at times, but it certainly beats watching some moronic basketball game.

The part I really didn't like was that they kept saying, "This what you can expect in the XFL!!!". Ok, blowhard, we KNOW it's the XFL, could you please stop reminding us every 10 seconds?

Some of the camera work was interesting, and I do like the no fair catch rule since that's one of the biggest let downs on kickoffs and punts in the NFL. No, there are titanic hits as a result of the halo rule, but there at least is a return.

Did you see the guy break his leg on Saturday?? :Q Poor guy. Fortunately, they didn't feel the need to show the play again. I wonder what his contract says about that -- I hope they don't just hang him out to dry.
 

Modeps

Lifer
Oct 24, 2000
17,254
44
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Yeah, he broke his leg in 2 places. Fibula and Tibula (if im not mistaken). Sucks for him, back to his normal job... :(

The XFL this past weekend was awesome, specially the game on Saturday. (double overtime, come from behind win for the xtreme) I love the XFL
 

Double Trouble

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
9,270
103
106
The ratings are exactly where NBC and Vince predicted they would be, and that's what they sold to the advertisers.

I watched some of the games this weekend, and I must say I really liked the way they fixed the camera angles, and the games were decent quality. I think the XFL will be here for a while...... The crowd atmoshpere at the games is excellent compared to the rather dull crowd at NFL games , almost like a good college atmosphere.
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
62,484
8,345
126
I'm with tagej on the crowd atmosphere. It almost has a college feel about it. The game that I saw a week ago between Orlando and Chicago had a pep band going playing fight songs and what not. For 45,000 fans they sure made a lot of noise as well.
 

Muadib

Lifer
May 30, 2000
18,124
912
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Dull crowd?? Then you guys have never been to a Jets game. There's always at least 1 fight.:D
 

FrogDog

Diamond Member
Jan 12, 2000
4,761
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I just find it funny how half the people that watched it the first week didn't like enough to bother watching it even one more time. And I think it will continue to decline in the weeks to come because there were still people who wanted to see it for the first time, who missed it the first week. About half of them won't watch any more either.
 

reitz

Elite Member
Oct 11, 1999
3,878
2
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What did you expect?

<< There were a few other on-air tweaks orchestrated by Ebersol and his XFL partner, WWF impresario and marketing wizard Vince McMahon, as they strive to attract wrestling's core audience of young male viewers. >>

People want to watch football, not have it shoved down their throats.
 

dcdomain

Diamond Member
Jan 30, 2000
5,158
0
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Actually, I missed the first week do to a project I had due. Watched the NY game last night and it wasn't bad at all. Now if it was on during the same time as an NFL game, it would shut down pretty quick. However, I'm thankful that the XFL exists. Gives me something to watch during the NFL off season.
 

Double Trouble

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
9,270
103
106
I agree with dcdomain on that one, the time slot is perfect, as is the time of year. If this thing was going head to head with the NFL, it would be dead pretty quick because of the lower caliber talent.... but since there's no other football to be had, this will have to fill the void and stop the cravings ;)

Besides, this time of year, what the heck is a sports fan to do? Pro hoops is boring until the playoffs start, March Madness hasn't started yet, NFL is over, and hockey playoffs haven't started yet. Baseball won't start for a while, so this is the perfect time for XFL to get going.
 

syzygy

Diamond Member
Feb 5, 2001
3,038
0
76

if this baby survives, i think vince will need a lower profile,
there will need to be much less of the wwf in the game, probably
less of the cheerleaders, more sanity on the sidelines, and possibly
they may evolve into a stateside development league for the nfl if
they prove to have any staying power.