Is that happening this year?
Didn't that used to be a thing?
Is that happening this year?
Didn't that used to be a thing?
i am picking that NFL viewership will be down at least 17%. The NFL was sort of getting beyond kneeling issue and nike went and kicked them right in the balls. SO FUNNY!
Clearly you don't know how this works.
Viewership declined in 2017. As it looks now, viewership will decline even further in 2018.
Current viewership has nothing to do with money.. since the NFL was smart enough to sign multi-year deals with networks.
If viewership continues it's spiral downward, they won't be able to get as much money from advertisers or networks in the future.
Yes, they NFL is hurting.
Last edited by Parkbandit; 09-05-2018 at 04:21 PM.
Say what you want, even if viewership/ratings are dropping, their revenue keeps rising.
In the grand scheme of things, that's all that matters.
You can claim the NFL has a real problem when they are not the top sport in the US.
Also, if it's so bad, why would Fox pay 3.3b for Thursday night games even AFTER ratings have dropped?
This isn't a big deal, just like Nike's (along with Adidas, Puma, and Under Armour) stock dropping a few points the other day. In the grand scheme these businesses will be fine.
Last edited by SHAFT; 09-05-2018 at 04:34 PM.
Professional sports franchises are still a good investment because the owners have figured out how to get the local governments to pay for sweetheart deals on stadiums that they then sell leases to executive boxes in. The growing trend in new professional stadiums and maybe in college too, to a lesser extent, is not huge stadium but more luxury ones with higher per ticket seats. The NFL and MLB can make money with no one in the seats because of television deals, but that formula only holds true as long as people continue to watch from home and advertisers are willing to pay the sums they demand.
I saw something the other day that was maybe the clearest indicator how much viewership has declined and what they are doing to try to get it back. Direct TV used to charge $300/season for Sunday ticket, they now give it away for free. Think about that a moment, how many people used to gladly pay that every year, I know of at least half a dozen friends and family that did, and now, only one, a single person out of six does. I realize that is a very small sample, but it still a sample. When I asked my other brother that stopped buying it, he said he will still watch the Saints some, since that is our home team, but he does not spend Sunday in front of the television anymore like he used to.
And I think Nike is still going to make money, they are a global company after all, the NFL will be hurt by it more than Nike.
Last edited by kutter; 09-05-2018 at 05:18 PM.
I explained why it does matter.. you are simply unable to understand it.
I can't dumb it down anymore than how I already did.
Ask an adult to help you I guess.
The gap is closing. And this is from someone who loves the NFL.You can claim the NFL has a real problem when they are not the top sport in the US.
Because Fox believed it to be a very short term issue and the NFL stated they would address it. They did, then they waffled under the pressure as usual.Also, if it's so bad, why would Fox pay 3.3b for Thursday night games even AFTER ratings have dropped?
If viewership continues to dwindle, you can be sure Fox will re-negotiate. Hell, I would be surprised if Fox didn't put a viewership decline clause into the agreement.
1 year.. I agree.This isn't a big deal, just like Nike's (along with Adidas, Puma, and Under Armour) stock dropping a few points the other day. In the grand scheme these businesses will be fine.
2 year.. not so sure.
3 year... it is a big deal.
Last edited by Parkbandit; 09-05-2018 at 05:43 PM.