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Rainy Game 5 of World Series Draws 13.2 Million and Fox’s Best Monday Since May

Posted on 28 October 2008 by Robert Seidman

via Fox Sports:

FOX REIGNS AS HISTORIC SUSPENDED GAME 5 DELIVERS NETWORK BEST MONDAY SINCE MAY

Philadelphia – Baseball history was made last night when severe weather conditions in Philadelphia forced World Series Game 5 to be suspended.  It is the first time a World Series game has been suspended in-progress, forcing it to be concluded on a different day. Game 5 is scheduled to resume Wednesday night at 8:30 PM ET with the Phillies coming to bat in the bottom of the sixth with the score tied 2-2.

FOX earned an 8.2/12 household rating/share (13.2 million viewers) last night for the first five-and-a-half innings of Game 5.  Comparisons to all previous World Series games are irrelevant due to the unprecedented suspension. When Game 5 is completed, Nielsen will issue a separate rating for the second portion of the game, and under Nielsen rules the two segments can not be officially combined into one rating.

Highlights

- Last night’s pre-game show (4.1/7) and the completed portion of the game combined to average a 7.5/11 in prime time and a 3.7 among Adults 18-49. FOX ranked first for the night in prime among Adults 18-49, Adults 18-34 (3.1), in every significant male demo and second among households.  Among both Households and Adults 18-49, last night rates as FOX’s top Monday night in 23 weeks.

- The audience for Game 5 was growing as the evening progressed.  It posted a 6.5/10 at 8:30 and a 6.7/10 at 9:00, surged to 8.8/13 at 9:30, 9.6/15 at 10:00. The final quarter-hour of the broadcast earned a 10.4/16 as the decision was made to halt the game.   

- The last World Series Game 5 posted a 10.3/18 (16.3 million viewers) for the decisive game of the 2006 World Series between the Cardinals and the Tigers.  To this point, the 2008 World Series has averaged an 8.1/14 (13.1 million), down -24% in rating compared to last year’s 10.6/18 (17.1 million) for Boston’s four-game sweep over Colorado.  The ‘08 series is off 20% in rating and -17% in rating and audience, respectively compared to the five-game ‘06 World Series featuring the Cardinals and Tigers (10.1/17, 15.8 million).

- Philadelphia posted a stratospheric 45.2/60 last night for what could have been – and could still be – the decisive game of the Series.  That 45.2/60 tops all games of the 2001 NBA Finals with the Sixers. Tampa Bay/St. Petersburg delivered a 28.1/40, a slight improvement over its Game 4 rating (27.5/41). Florida markets Orlando (12.2), West Palm Beach (12.0) and Ft. Myers (11.4) followed and other markets posting above average viewership for the first part of Game 5 include Minneapolis (11.0), Baltimore (10.0), Milwaukee (9.9) and Phoenix (9.5).

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8 Responses to “Rainy Game 5 of World Series Draws 13.2 Million and Fox’s Best Monday Since May”

  1. Julia says:

    Ha. I love how defensive they are.

  2. defensive because they brought up the Nielsen rules on combining or something else? If that, I see that as excellent attention to detail on Fox’s part! They’re very forthcoming about it being down 24% vs. last year without masking it. I find it very refreshing!

  3. Julia says:

    No the whole “Don’t compare us to any other year! This doesn’t count!”

  4. Ah, gotcha. But it really has never happened before. I see it as savvy PR, but I’m with you either way, I love it! :-D

  5. Johnny Shoe says:

    This is/was the best thing FOX could have hoped for. They will have the Obama thing on from 8-8:30 then the last three innings of game five. Question: Will the Obama thing count towards the ratings? Or be metered?

  6. Bill Gorman says:

    Johnny, My guess is we will see numbers from Nielsen in the same way we did with the debates, but I am not certain.

  7. We’ll see the data, but with the debates the numbers did not count towards network weekly averages or season-to-date totals (the post-debate analysis was counted though). Since the Obama program is paid for (versus advertising supported) I’m not sure how it will count.

  8. Cohen says:

    Baseball: America’s favorite pastime? Not any more. Among steroids, lack of exciting players, and competition of other sports, baseball is slowly going where boxing is right now…Oh, well…


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