Sports

Orange Bowl Viewership Up

Based on Nielsen’s Fast National ratings, ESPN’s coverage of the Discover Orange Bowl on January 3 averaged 11,400,000 viewers and a 6.7 US HH rating. The game – No. 12 Clemson over No. 7 Ohio State 40-35 – is the most-viewed Discover Orange Bowl since 2008. The 2014 telecast posted…

Based on Nielsen’s Fast National ratings, ESPN’s coverage of the Discover Orange Bowl on January 3 averaged 11,400,000 viewers and a 6.7 US HH rating. The game – No. 12 Clemson over No. 7 Ohio State 40-35 – is the most-viewed Discover Orange Bowl since 2008. The 2014 telecast posted increases of 8 percent (vs. 10,562,000 viewers) and 10 percent (6.1 US HH rating) over ESPN’s 2013 Orange Bowl.

ESPN’s four Bowl Championship Series telecasts of 2014 – the Rose Bowl Game Presented by VIZIO, Tostitos Fiesta Bowl, Allstate Sugar Bowl and Discover Orange Bowl – combined averaged 14,344,000 viewers and an 8.2 US HH rating. The four-game average marks an increase of 15 percent (vs. 12,478,000) and 12 percent (vs. 7.3) over the same four BCS bowls in 2014.

Fans also turned to WatchESPN to follow the matchup, spending 16.9 million minutes on the game (up 165 percent). The bowl also garnered an average minute audience of 72,000, a 131 percent increase over last season. Combined, the four games averaged 17.0 million live minutes viewed (up 84 percent) and an average minute audience of 75,000 (up 61 percent).

Columbus led all markets for the telecast with a 41.1 rating, marking the highest rating for a bowl game on ESPN in the market since at least 2000. The telecast was also the highest-rated bowl game on ESPN in the second through fourth top markets: Dayton (28.2 rating), Greenville (26.3) and Cleveland (21.3). The top 10 markets are rounded out by Charlotte (14.7), Birmingham (13.1), Atlanta (12.8), Cincinnati (12.2), Jacksonville (12.1) and Fort Myers (11.2).

ESPN & the BCS
ESPN’s fourth year of exclusive coverage of the five BCS matchups will conclude tonight at 8:30 p.m. ET with a BCS Megacast presentation of the VIZIO BCS National Championship (No. 1 Florida State vs. No. 2 Auburn).

(Editor’s Note: The above communication is a news release from ESPN and does not necessarily reflect the editorial position of FITSNews.com. To submit your letter, news release, email blast, media advisory or issues statement for publication, click here).

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6 comments

GrandTango January 6, 2014 at 5:05 pm

It was a good game. It was 2 overrated teams, so Clemson did not break its record of two years ago…

That said: The NCAA has a great product, but I heard tickets were dirt cheap…and so many bowls had large swaths of empty seats…

Obama has wrecked the economy and the NCAA is so liberal…they are screwing up football…When Clemson and Duke (the ACC) are two of the best bowls, that speaks volumes…But don’t expect the same luck next year…

Reply
CNSYD January 6, 2014 at 5:34 pm

GT is so right. Clemson won’t get in a BCS bowl next year.

Reply
Lenny January 7, 2014 at 8:22 am

It pains me to hear you say GT is right. Couldn’t you have worded that differently?

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Mickey January 8, 2014 at 11:14 am

Duh! No one will be in a BCS game next year!

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Crooner January 6, 2014 at 5:56 pm

A great game that I watched in a Clemson grad’s bar. Funny thing was that all the Clemson folk left before the game was over so we finished watching with a group of gamecocks.
I’d also point out that USC’s game was on national television. The Clemson game was on cable.

Reply
Scrappy January 6, 2014 at 6:08 pm

Correct on cable vs. network. Capital one bowl had 6.6 million viewers. What’s your point?

Reply

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