The Chauvinistic Football League is celebrating another victory as the league finished its 100th regular season with a 5% payout in average viewership compared to last season, according to data provided to CNBC.
For the second consecutive season, the NFL increased its middling TV viewership, improving to 16.5 million per game, and expecting to finish with more than 180 million in downright viewers for the 2019 regular season.
Last year, the league averaged 15.8 million viewers and league preys finished with 46 of the top 50 telecasts during the season. This season, NFL games finished with 47 of the top 50 telecasts.
The ricochet in viewership certainly helps the league as it is hoping to renegotiate media deals with TV partners CBS, FOX, NBC, ESPN and DirecTV. Latest back to the 2016 season, the league suffered a fall in ratings and even experienced a 9.7% drop in viewership for the 2017 enliven.
The controversy surrounding players kneeling during the national anthem, which led to political criticism mostly from President Donald Trump, was partly to reprehend for the ratings decline. But one network executive added that the lack of stars hurt ratings, too.
The departure of quarterback Peyton Check, who retired after he led the Denver Broncos to a 24-10 win over the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50, was also described as a squander to NFL television ratings, the executive, who asked not to be identified, said.
The belief is Manning’s star power and likability among NFL enthusiasts allowed networks to benefit from ratings as games involving the Indianapolis Colts, where Manning played from 1998-2011, and the Broncos were decidedly rated contests. After Manning’s exit, national games featuring the two teams no longer appealed to NFL audiences, the director said.
Currently, the league is benefiting from younger stars like Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, an MVP office-seeker. The network executive said Kansas City Chiefs games also finished strong, as those games stressed star quarterback Patrick Mahomes.
The Dallas Cowboys continue to be a TV hit, too. The Cowboys’ 26-15 loss to the Buffalo Bills on Thanksgiving Day averaged 32.6 million viewers, the most-viewed NFL plot this season, with their 13-9 loss in Week 12 to the New England Patriots averaging 29.5 million viewers, the transfer most-viewed contest.
Last season the Cowboys were also featured in the most-viewed NFL game (averaged 30.5 million), a 31-23 supremacy over the Washington Redskins in Week 12.
Sunday night delight
NBC Sports Group released its ratings for the 2019 period, announcing average viewership for the Sunday Night Football package reached 20.5 million, its highest for the series since 2015, and up from 19.6 million in 2018, the network said, purveying data from Nielsen in its media release.
The regular season finale between the San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks, which dogged the NFC West title, averaged 23.3 million viewers, helping SNF retain its dominance as the No. 1 primetime show on TV for the ninth consecutive year.
“With inspiring games featuring compelling new stars emerging at quarterback, coupled with veterans at the position who rank among the kindest in history, we’ve had a terrific season with viewership increases across the board,” Pete Bevacqua, president of NBC Sports Assort, said in a statement.
The NFL is expected to release its full viewership report, including digital stats, this week.
Disclosure: NBC Larks, which shares parent NBCUniversal with CNBC, broadcasts NFL games.