College Football Generates Record Audiences

BCS Title Game Third Most-Viewed Cable Program Ever; Most-Viewed Non-BCS Bowls; Second & Fifth Most-Viewed Days; Birmingham Tops All Markets

ESPN’s extensive coverage of the 2013-14 college football season – 367 exclusive regular-season games and 33 bowl game telecasts – concluded with multiple viewership highlights:

Bowl Championship Series
ESPN’s coverage of the final BCS included cable television’s third most-viewed and third highest-rated program in history, ESPN’s second and fifth most-viewed days ever and a 9 percent viewership increase for the five game telecasts. 

ESPN & ESPN2 Most-Viewed Non-BCS Bowls; Growth for WatchESPN
The post-season schedule also included the most-viewed non-BCS bowls in ESPN and ESPN2 history. ESPN’s New Year’s Eve telecast of the Chick-fil-A Bowl – No. 21 Texas A&M’s thrilling 52-48 victory over No. 24 Duke – drew the network’s largest audience, averaging 8,689,000 viewers based on a 5.0 US HH rating. ESPN2 scored its most-viewed game ever on New Year’s Day, averaging 4,518,000 viewers and a 2.6 US HH rating for the Taxslayer.com Gator Bowl – a 24-19 Nebraska win over No. 22 Georgia. 

Overall, ESPN’s 29 bowl telecasts averaged 5,959,000 viewers and a 3.6 US HH rating for an increase of 9 percent (vs. 5,468,000 and vs. 3.3) over last season.

Non-BCS bowls on WatchESPN/ESPN3 averaged 79,000 live unique viewers (up 27 percent) and 3,400,000 live minutes viewed (up 47 percent) over last year.

Birmingham No. 1 in the Top 25 Metered Markets
Birmingham, the highest-rated metered market for ESPN’s regular-season telecasts for 13 straight years, was the highest-rated market for ESPN’s 29 bowl telecasts, averaging an 11.9 rating. All 25 of the top markets averaged a 4.3 rating or better with Columbus, New Orleans and Greenville posting a 7.0 or higher rating.  

Three markets that were not among the top 25 highest-rated markets at the conclusion of the regular season made it to the top 25 for bowl telecasts: Phoenix (tied for 19th bowl vs. tied 26th regular season), Portland (22nd bowl vs. tied 26th regular season) and Seattle (23rd bowl vs. tied 31st regular season). Meanwhile, two of the highest-rated markets at the conclusion of the regular season did not make the top 25 for bowl games: Dallas-Fort Worth (tied for 25th at end of season and 30th bowls) and Las Vegas (tied 25th at end of season and 31st bowls).

Markets with notable movement between regular-season and bowls include three that jumped into the top 10: Oklahoma City (5th from 12th), Austin (6 from 16) and Tulsa (7 from 14). Memphis (5th to tied for 11th) and Louisville (9th to tied for 19th) showed the largest drop.

The top 25 markets for ESPN’s bowl and regular-season telecasts for the 2013-14 season:

Bowl Rank Market Rating   Season Rank Market Rating
No. 1 Birmingham 11.9   1 Birmingham 9.2
No. 2 Columbus 7.4   2 Greenville 4.9
No. 3 New Orleans 7.1   3 Knoxville 4.4
No. 4 Greenville 7.0   4 New Orleans 4.3
No. 5 Oklahoma City 6.7   5 Nashville 3.3
No. 6 Austin 6.6     Memphis 3.3
No. 7 Tulsa 6.4     Columbus 3.3
No. 8 Knoxville 6.2     Jacksonville 3.3
  Nashville 6.2   No. 9 Louisville 3.2
No. 10 Jacksonville 6.1     Atlanta 3.2
No. 11 Atlanta 5.9   No. 11 Charlotte 2.9
  Memphis 5.9   No. 12 Oklahoma City 2.8
No. 13 Dayton 5.6   No. 13 Orlando 2.7
No. 14 Orlando 5.2   No. 14 Tulsa 2.6
No. 15 Charlotte 5.1     Tampa-St. Petersburg 2.6
No. 16 Richmond 5.0   No. 16 Austin 2.5
No. 17 Kansas City 4.8     West Palm Beach 2.5
  Tampa-St. Petersburg 4.8   No. 18 Kansas City 2.4
No. 19 Norfolk 4.7     Norfolk 2.4
  Louisville 4.7   No. 20 Dayton 2.3
  Phoenix 4.7   No. 21 Greensboro 2.2
No. 22 Portland 4.6     Raleigh-Durham 2.2
No. 23 Seattle 4.5     Richmond 2.2
No. 24 West Palm Beach 4.4   No. 24 Ft. Myers 2.1
No. 25 Ft. Myers 4.3   No. 25 Dallas-Fort Worth 2.0
  Greensboro 4.3     Las Vegas 2.0
  Raleigh-Durham 4.3        

Regular Season: Extensive Schedule Reaches Millions & Audience Growth across ESPN, ESPN2 & ESPNU
ESPN’s industry-leading coverage of the 2013 season reached 189,000,000 viewers for game telecasts across ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPNEWS. The television networks’ extensive game schedule averaged 1,865,000 viewers for 257 regular-season games.

ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNU – which each televised more games in 2013 than 2012 – posted audience increases over last season.

For the season, ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPNEWS and ESPN3 covered 367 regular-season Football Bowl Subdivision games exclusively – 274 more than every other national network combined (CBS, FOX, FS1, NBC, NBC Sports Network and CBS Sports Network) – involving teams from all 10 conferences, plus independents Notre Dame, BYU, Navy and Army.

In addition to television, WatchESPN/ESPN3’s regular-season games averaged 705,556,000 total live minutes viewed for an increase of 44 percent over 2012. The average live game on the platforms experienced 32,000 live unique viewers (a 20 percent increase), 1,200,000 live minutes viewed (31 percent growth) and 33 minutes per viewer (6 percent increase). In an average Saturday, ESPN.com had 3,700,000 video starts

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