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Pacquiao-Horn a massive ratings hit, even with the often-elusive younger crowd

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  • Pacquiao-Horn a massive ratings hit, even with the often-elusive younger crowd

    https://sports.yahoo.com/pacquiao-ho...221906454.html

    Pacquiao-Horn a massive ratings hit, even with the often-elusive younger crowd

    Kevin Iole
    Combat columnist

    ESPN’s broadcast of the Manny Pacquiao-Jeff Horn fight Saturday from Brisbane, Australia, increased the audience among adults 18-to-34-years-old an astonishing 10 times compared to its lead-in, according to Nielsen ratings obtained by Yahoo Sports.

    The boxing card’s lead-in was an MLS soccer game, which in its final 15 minutes posted a rating of 0.2 and an audience of 86,000 among adults 18 to 34. By the climax of the Pacquiao-Horn fight, the rating had jumped to 1.9 and the audience among 18-34 adults had increased to 879,000.

    It had already been clear the card was a big hit among fans watching television on Saturday, but these 15-minute ratings are astonishingly good, particularly in the targeted 18-34 and 18-49-year-old demographics.

    ESPN announced on Monday that it was the most-watched boxing telecast on cable since 2006 and averaged 2.8 million viewers. It also peaked at 4.4 million total viewers.

    But Yahoo Sports obtained a more detailed ratings breakdown that show the fight did sensationally well among the 18-34 and 18-49-year-old audience demographics that advertisers covet and which boxing broadcasts on television have had difficulty reaching.

    In the boxing card’s first 15 minutes, which featured a bout between Shane Mosley Jr. and David Toussaint, ratings increased by nearly 40 percent among 18-34-year-olds to 119,000 before jumping up to 879,000 viewers by the end of the fight — 10 times more than its lead-in.

    The fight performed as well as anything on television Saturday, including broadcast networks and the top cable channels.

    Reaching the younger audience was key. The UFC shines among the 18-34-year-old male demographic as well as in the 18-49-year-old demo. Advertisers are enamored with that group.

    In recent years, boxing audiences were largely viewed as older, with the largest demographic frequently being 55 and over.


    But not only did Pacquiao-Horn do well among the 18-34 and 18-49-year-old demographic, the audience stayed for the “SportsCenter” broadcasts that were devoted to the fight after it. The 1 a.m. ET “SportsCenter” was second among adults 18-49 on Saturday with an average of 1.852 million viewers. It only trailed the fight, which averaged 2.81 million viewers among the adult 18-49-year-old demographic.

    “That reconfirms my theory that it’s not just the event, but everything that surrounds the event, that needs to be there,” Top Rank president Todd duBoef said. “College football does that. The NFL does it. So does college basketball. You tune in to see a game, and there’s a pregame show, a halftime show and then a postgame show. That’s treating it like a real sport, and that’s what I think ESPN did with our show and the people are there. That’s what they’re looking for.”

    He admits the audience will likely drop for Top Rank’s next two cards on ESPN, featuring Vasyl Lomachenko against Miguel Marriaga on Aug. 5 and Terence “Bud” Crawford against Julius Indongo on Aug. 19, because none of those fighters are household names like Pacquiao.

    But duBoef said that isn’t of concern. His plan is to consistently put on these types of shows to build awareness and interest among the audience.

  • #2
    Despite all the controversy surrounding the fight, one thing can't be argued: the fact that the event was a massive ratings success. We already knew that the ratings did extremely well, and now it's being noted that the fight also did great in the most coveted demographic -- a demographic that boxing has traditionally struggled mightily with.

    PBC has had some fantastic ratings hits (most notably I believe Thurman/Garcia), and now this Pacquiao/Horn fight on ESPN, which had what -- 2 weeks worth of promotion?

    This is great for the sport, man. Who knows, maybe in a few years all the big fights will be on major networks that are in most homes...and if the ratings continue to shine, could we even one day see the death of the PPV platform?

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Mike D View Post
      Despite all the controversy surrounding the fight, one thing can't be argued: the fact that the event was a massive ratings success. We already knew that the ratings did extremely well, and now it's being noted that the fight also did great in the most coveted demographic -- a demographic that boxing has traditionally struggled mightily with.

      PBC has had some fantastic ratings hits (most notably I believe Thurman/Garcia), and now this Pacquiao/Horn fight on ESPN, which had what -- 2 weeks worth of promotion?

      This is great for the sport, man. Who knows, maybe in a few years all the big fights will be on major networks that are in most homes...and if the ratings continue to shine, could we even one day see the death of the PPV platform?
      The Thurman-Garcia fight was also a huge hit with the "demo" as they say. Guess soccer isnt as huge a bit with the kiddos as they think..

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Mike D View Post
        Despite all the controversy surrounding the fight, one thing can't be argued: the fact that the event was a massive ratings success. We already knew that the ratings did extremely well, and now it's being noted that the fight also did great in the most coveted demographic -- a demographic that boxing has traditionally struggled mightily with.

        PBC has had some fantastic ratings hits (most notably I believe Thurman/Garcia), and now this Pacquiao/Horn fight on ESPN, which had what -- 2 weeks worth of promotion?

        This is great for the sport, man. Who knows, maybe in a few years all the big fights will be on major networks that are in most homes...and if the ratings continue to shine, could we even one day see the death of the PPV platform?
        The fight started so late only 18-30 year olds were awake LOL.

        I agree this is a great sign for the sport. This is why a lot of us were so happy with Haymon trying to get fights on cable channels other than HBO and SHO.

        ESPN has deals in place with GBP, TR and PBC which I hope breaks down barriers to fights being made.

        This has been a really great resurgent year for boxing.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by BWC View Post
          The Thurman-Garcia fight was also a huge hit with the "demo" as they say. Guess soccer isnt as huge a bit with the kiddos as they think..
          It's crazy how many people that I am contact with that would NEVER go out of their way to watch a fight on HBO or Showtime (who do have these channels), much less a PPV fight...but are faithful ESPN heads and ended up watching Pacquiao/Horn. Just because of the heavy promotion that ESPN was running all week leading up to it. I got a bunch of texts right after the fight (because they know I'm a hardcore boxing fan) concluded from people that have told me in the past straight up that they think boxing is a joke. But they tuned in anyway.

          And that's obviously just a tiny sliver of a sampling of people. But the ratings prove it -- when a powerful giant like ESPN really (and I mean really) get behind something, the sky's the limit. Now yeah of course Pacquiao's name was a huge ingredient in this, but I really believe that if ESPN promotes the hell out of the Lomachenko and Crawford fights in similar fashion, that those fights can do extremely well also. The key is getting the casual ESPN viewing public to get to know who these guys are. Because most of them have no clue. But if ESPN runs stories on them on Sportscenter, leading up to their bouts, then people will tune in.
          Last edited by Mike D; 07-07-2017, 07:59 AM.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by The Big Dunn View Post
            The fight started so late only 18-30 year olds were awake LOL.
            Lol yeah that is true Dunn, but even your other main events, while not starting THAT late (as Pac/Horn), they still typically start pretty late. And still (at least according to the numbers) the sport has traditionally done poorly with that key demo. Meanwhile the UFC usually kills it with that demo.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Mike D View Post
              Lol yeah that is true Dunn, but even your other main events, while not starting THAT late (as Pac/Horn), they still typically start pretty late. And still (at least according to the numbers) the sport has traditionally done poorly with that key demo. Meanwhile the UFC usually kills it with that demo.
              True. I think ESPN being more involved with boxing will help the sport. ESPN treated UFC like a real sport rather than a sideshow and I think that gave it credibility,especially among the younger kids. UFC also seems to have a big on line presence which the younger generation uses for entertainment much more than TV.

              I'm just excited for the future with ESPN being committed to the sport. It will suck a bit because ESPN will not cover the sport the way it would if there was not a corporate partnership, but having more programming on and liftng the sports profile is a trade off I can make.

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              • #8
                Pacquiao and Horn advertisig boxing well in an exciting fight. If they'd been boring it would have turned off a lot of Aussie youth. That's how you win fans, not the calamity of Mayweather vs Pac.

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                • #9
                  and they all got to witness the very ugly side of boxing and that is the blatant robberies. lots of casuals that I know watched it and were screaming robbery and no they weren't pac fans.

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                  • #10
                    Young people I've never seen mention boxing were posting about it on facebook. Top Rank is onto something here.

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