The Houston Astros' defeat over the Los Angeles Dodgers after seven games that were mostly close and competitive came with high World Series viewing numbers.
There was also history here: Houston has never won a World Series in its 55-year history.
While achieving great
results — a Game Seven average 28.2 million viewers on Fox — it could not beat results of the year before. That’s when the Chicago Cubs came from a three-games-to-one
deficit to beat the Cleveland Indians. More importantly, the Cubs had not won a World Series in over a century — a bigger storied franchise.
And just like last year, Fox dominated
TV viewing with the World Series for the better part of a week. How could you turn away from that?
Even with declines across many TV programming areas — including the NFL, which has
seen some viewing falloff this year — TV networks are still paying high-priced billion-dollar
renewals of big sports franchises.
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In 2022, the NFL will be renewing all its packages with TV networks. For many, digital media platforms will be even more important to the league,
especially for “Thursday Night Football” — CBS shares it with NBC — and “Sunday Night Football,” which runs on NBC.
During a recent earnings call,
chairman/CEO of CBS Corp. Les Moonves said CBS will be in the hunt again. “Digital rights will be an important part of it. We expect larger players to be involved. Who knows? We may get all the
digital rights ourselves.”
Is that how TV networks look to monetize their ever-higher NFL license fees?
TV networks — despite ratings declines — have found ways
to raise ad revenues (and retransmission fees) to support their ever-higher sports programming appetite.
But one network might blink.
One columnist believes that ESPN may need to drop out of the big NFL programming race as a result of a tougher
financial situation. The cabler has had issues over subscriber losses as well as overall revenue declines.
ESPN’s eight-year, $15.2 billion deal for “Monday Night
Football” ends in 2021. ESPN still averages around 11 million viewers a week for the series, easily the top-rated programming series on cable — and a big competitive performer for all
of TV.
Bottom line: How would ESPN replace those 11 million viewers — and the advertising dollars it brings in?