Historic Wins by Serena, Federer Lead to Huge Weekend for ESPN at Australian Open

The historic Australian Open Championships with legends on both sides of the net led to increases for ESPN’s overnight rating for both (final ratings will be available tomorrow, Tuesday) – including a record for the men’s championship since it moved to an overnight ET time slot in 2005.  In addition, on WatchESPN, the two finals – Serena Williams defeating her sister Venus for an Open Era record 23rd Major title and Roger Federer capturing his record 18th Major title by outlasting his fiercest rival, Rafael Nadal, in five sets – enjoyed healthy increases over the equivalent match a year ago, highlighted by the men’s match tallying 13.5 million minutes viewed – more than triple (up 215%) the minutes viewed compared to 2016.

Women’s Championship

The Williams Sisters match earned a 0.7 overnight rating for the live telecast on ESPN Saturday, Jan. 28, at 3 a.m. from Nielsen’s metered markets, up 17% from the 2016 Championship, Angelique Kerber over Serena in three sets (0.6).  The encore presentation at 9 a.m. on ESPN2 earned a 0.6 rating, up 20% from last year’s 0.5.

The leading markets for the live telecast of the Women’s Championship:

  1. Washington DC 7
  2. Richmond 4
  3. Myers 1.3
  4. Seattle 1

Memphis                       1.1

New York                      1.1

Atlanta                          1.1

Los Angeles                  1.1

The linear feed of the match drew more than 58,000 unique viewers (+35% vs. last year), with 3.4 million minutes viewed (+14%), and an average minute audience of 27,143 (+59%).

Men’s Championship

The five-set battle in the 35th meeting between Federer and Nadal posted a 0.9 overnight rating for the live Sunday, Jan. 29, 3 a.m. match on ESPN, up 80% from the 2016 final between Novak Djokovic and Andy Murray (0.5).  When the national ratings are available, this will likely be the most-watched Australian Open Men’s Championship aired by ESPN since the match was moved from Saturday evening (Sunday afternoon in Australia) to Sunday at 3:30 a.m. (Sunday evening on site).  It may also be the most-watched program at that hour in ESPN history.  The ESPN2 encore at 9 a.m. posted a 0.7 rating, up 75% from a 0.4 a year ago.

The leading markets for the live telecast of the Men’s Championship:

  1. Atlanta 8
  2. Washington DC 7
  3. Norfolk-Portsmouth 5
  4. Columbus OH 4

Los Angeles                  1.4

  1. New York                      1.3

Richmond                     1.3

West Palm Beach          1.3

Ft.Myers                       1.3

Of note, six markets are on both lists of top-rated markets:  Atlanta, Ft. Myers, Los Angeles, New York, Richmond and Washington, DC.

The linear feed of the match attracted more than 141,000 unique viewers (+174% vs. 2016), with 13.5 million minutes viewed (+215% — more than triple last year), and an average minute audience of 48,339 (+136%).

History Made DownUnder

The “retro” championship matchups – each living up to their billing – concluded what has been called “the greatest tennis Grand Slam event in history.”  Both matches – in fact, the entire tournament – are available on demand on WatchESPN.  Over the course of two weeks, ESPN aired more than 100 hours of live television with 1,400 more on WatchESPN covering every match – men’s women’s, doubles, juniors and wheelchair – and each match is available for 30 days after its conclusion.

ESPN and Tennis

Tennis has been part of ESPN since its first week on the air, providing numerous memorable moments from around the world, but it has never been as important as today, with the unprecedented position of presenting three of the sports Major events from start to finish (Australian Open, Wimbledon, US Open, with exclusivity at the latter two).

-30-

 

Exit mobile version