AFL can’t make a dent in Sydney
Sometimes you have to wonder if the AFL’s assault on
Sydney is just
plain fruitless. The battle of the football codes over the weekend was a hands down win to the AFL – except in Sydney.
Ten had the Swans in a final on Friday night but still finished fourth in Sydney, despite winning the national battle, and
on Saturday night – with AFL coming from Adelaide –
Ten finished second behind Nine nationally, but it was again in fourth behind
the ABC in Sydney.
Take
Friday night. The Swans vs Eagles final was watched by 1.452 million, with 593,000 of those in Melbourne,
339,000 in Perth (naturally) but only 213,000 in
Sydney. The
last Friday night home and away NRL game on Nine was
watched by 649,000: 407,000 in Sydney and 242,000 in Brisbane.
The AFL
is basking in a very good season for crowds and TV audiences (like the NRL in
many respects), but the first finals match involving the Swans just failed to attract and hold viewers. Ten and
some supporters talk about the peak audiences, but they are fleeting moments:
the average audience tells you how well a program holds viewers
and the AFL wasn’t in the hunt on Friday night.
This Friday night there will be another dose of realism: the Swans play
Geelong at the SCG and it will be a full house, while over at Telstra Stadium
the first rugby league final will see Wests Tigers playing North
Queensland. The ground crowd might be a touch smaller but the TV audience will be much bigger than the AFL’s. And on
Saturday, Ten has all but acknowledged the fruitless
nature of broadcasting the AFL into Sydney by scheduling the Saturday night final
at 10.05pm.
Great
timing or unfortunate coincidence?
The Seven Network’s movie next Sunday night is currently listed as Oil Storm – a 2005
production with the following story line: “After a
hurricane hits the coast of Louisiana, an
important portion of the oil industry’s infrastructure is taken out, leaving
America with a critically low oil
supply.”
Life
imitating art, or art anticipating life?
The Winners |
Nine easily. Daylight was second, another replay of some of the winning Sunday nights the network enjoyed last year. Ten slipped into second. 60 Minutes was the most watched program with 1.95 million people from Nine News with 1.55 million. Nine News is down 200,000 or so viewers because there’s no AFL to boost audiences in Melbourne and Adelaide. The NRL helps in Sydney and Brisbane. Backyard Blitz was watched by 1.339 million people in the more expensive hour segment (which also generates more money from advertisers). Ten’s best was Law and Order Criminal Intent with 1.196 million people and then NCIS with 1.037 million. New Tricks and the ABC 7pm News also did well with 1.19 million and 1.325 million people. Seven News was watched by 1.346 million and it was down hill from then on for the network. |
The Losers |
Seven. After peaking with the News, viewers just didn’t |
News & CA |
Nine News, naturally because it’s a Sunday night. On Saturday night Georgie Gardiner returned to Nine to read the 6pm News in Sydney, thus relieving Mike Munro of that onerous task. 60 Minutes did very well, as did Seven News and the ABC News. All up possibly due to the crisis in New Orleans and the efforts of their respective news teams reporting and rescuing Australians. Audience levels were higher on the Sunday morning chat shows with Father’s Day and poor weather in Sydney helping. Sunday regained the lead with its average audience rising to 363,000 while Weekend Sunrise on Seven (8am) jumped to 339,999 and easily beat Nine’s Business Sunday with 192,000 people. That was up sharply from a week earlier. Insiders on the ABC was higher on 147,000, Meet The Press on Ten also up on 90,000, but Inside Business on the ABC fell to only 70,000. |
The Stats |
Nine, 32.9% to Ten with 23.6%, Seven with 22.6%, the ABC with 17.5% and SBS with 3.6%. |
Glenn Dyer’s comments |
Only 11 programs with a million or more viewers and it would seem that after 60 Minutes had finished, the audience dropped away from Nine and spread itself across channels, or simply tuned out. Nine’s audience plunged from the 1.956 million average of 60 Minutes to the 1.178 million average of the movie, Catch Me if You Can. Seven’s audience went from the 994,000 average for Massive Nature to the 605,000 for the movie We Were Soldiers. (the drops would have started much later in the movies as the audience became bored). Ten’s audience however was relatively steady (Idol averaged 1.188 million to 9pm then lifted to 1.196 for Law and Order). The ABC’s audience peaked with the News at 1.325 million, down to 941,000 for the Broadway Musical series at 7.30pm, then back to 1.190 million for New Tricks, then down to 637,000 for Canterbury Tales. |
Crikey is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while we review, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.