Articles

November 18, 2013
 

UPDATED – SKEDBALL: Weekend Sports TV Ratings

 

AFTERNOON UPDATE:  Here are some additional weekend sports ratings

Formula One Racing – Sunday

1.05 HH rating NBC 2PM racing from Austin

0.7 rating NBC 3:45PM post-race coverage

International Skating – Sunday

1.22 rating NBC 4:30PM

Ironman World Championship – Saturday

0.84 rating NBC 4:30PM

EARLIER:

The ratings below are household ratings from the 56 television markets with local Nielsen meters for Saturday November 16 and Sunday November 17, 2013. (The 56 markets out of 210 total cover about 70% of the US television population.)

 

College Football Week 12: Top National Games on Saturday

3.5 rating CBS 3:30 #25 Georgia at #7 Auburn
3.5 rating ABC 8:00 #4 Stanford at USC
2.54 rating ESPN 8:00 #1 Alabama at Mississippi State
2.4 rating ABC 3:30 Syracuse at #2 Florida State or #16 Michigan State at Nebraska
2.31 rating ESPN 12:00 #3 Ohio State at Illinois
2.1 rating FOX 7:00 Texas Tech at #5 Baylor
1.7 rating FOX 3:30 #12 Oklahoma State at #24 Texas
1.49 rating ESPN2 7:15 Florida at #10 South Carolina
0.54 rating FS1 4:00 Utah at #6 Oregon

 

NFL Week 11: Sunday Network Packages — Ranking

16.7 rating FOX 4:30 pm SF-NO/GB-NYG (+28% from 13.6 last year for single game)

16.6 rating NBC 8:30 pm KC-DEN (+36% from 12.2 last year for BAL-PIT)

10.5 rating FOX 1:00 pm mostly WAS-PHI (-23% from 13.6 last year for single game)

10.4 rating CBS 1:00/4:00 pm mostly BAL-CHI/SD-MIA (-7% from 11.2 last year early game of doubleheader)

 

NASCAR

2.7 rating ESPN Sunday 3:00 pm Miami 500 (unchanged from last year)



About the Author

Mitch Metcalf
MITCH METCALF has been tracking every US film release of over 500 screens (over 2300 movies and counting) since the storied weekend of May 20, 1994, when Maverick and Beverly Hills Cop 3 inspired countless aficionados to devote their lives to the art of cinema. Prior to that, he studied Politics and Economics at Princeton in order to prepare for his dream of working in television. He has been Head of West Coast Research at ABC, then moved to NBC in 2000 and became Head of Scheduling for 11 years.