stever20 wrote:adoraz wrote:stever20 wrote:
one of those where it sounds good, but it's not. It's the lowest LCS game 7 ever. Even worse than in 2012 which had the misfortune of going up against only Monday Night Football and a presedential debate.
had misfortune of going up not only against LeBron's home opener, but also a major upset in college football with Purdue over Ohio St(#1 game of the weekend in college football).
very surprisingly game 1 of the WS was not good. A 10.0 rating down 2% from last year and down 21% from 2016. Worst since 2014. Didn't see that coming......
That major upset was on Fox, so for them it doesn't really matter.
Regarding Game 1, I'm not surprised MLB ratings are down. I am a big Braves fan, but I didn't tune into the World Series. It's not fun seeing the two teams with the highest payrolls in it yet again. Always more fun when there is an underdog.
MLB isn't like the NBA where people tune in to watch superstar individual players. You're not going to see a player go off for 3 HR in a playoff game like you would see LeBron take over an NBA game. The closest thing to that is the pitcher, which isn't nearly as exciting. People tune in for the teams, especially their own team.
In recent years, it was a big deal seeing teams like the Red Sox, Cubs, and Dodgers making the World Series. I personally rooted for the Red Sox back in 2004 and the Cubs in 2016. Those droughts were historic. Now, I couldn't care less about them and it's getting boring seeing them in it every year. I actually root against all of them now. It'd even be more refreshing seeing the Yankees make it, which I never thought I'd say a few years ago.
Time for a salary cap. Allow the top teams to outspend the lower teams, but put a limit as to how much they can spend.
actually the major upset was on ABC so it did matter to Fox/FS1...
What I think is interesting. I know this girl who is like 25 years old. In her time that she can remember- say since 2000- if the Red Sox win the World Series this year- only 2 franchises would have won more titles than the Red Sox. The Lakers and the Patriots. Red Sox would match the Spurs with 4 titles... Only 4 franchises with 4 titles or more.
adoraz wrote:stever20 wrote:MUPanther wrote:Game 7: 7.340M on FS1, 339K on FSD.
one of those where it sounds good, but it's not. It's the lowest LCS game 7 ever. Even worse than in 2012 which had the misfortune of going up against only Monday Night Football and a presedential debate.
had misfortune of going up not only against LeBron's home opener, but also a major upset in college football with Purdue over Ohio St(#1 game of the weekend in college football).
very surprisingly game 1 of the WS was not good. A 10.0 rating down 2% from last year and down 21% from 2016. Worst since 2014. Didn't see that coming......
That major upset was on Fox, so for them it doesn't really matter.
Regarding Game 1, I'm not surprised MLB ratings are down. I am a big Braves fan, but I didn't tune into the World Series. It's not fun seeing the two teams with the highest payrolls in it yet again. Always more fun when there is an underdog.
MLB isn't like the NBA where people tune in to watch superstar individual players. You're not going to see a player go off for 3 HR in a playoff game like you would see LeBron take over an NBA game. The closest thing to that is the pitcher, which isn't nearly as exciting. People tune in for the teams, especially their own team.
In recent years, it was a big deal seeing teams like the Red Sox, Cubs, and Dodgers making the World Series. I personally rooted for the Red Sox back in 2004 and the Cubs in 2016. Those droughts were historic. Now, I couldn't care less about them and it's getting boring seeing them in it every year. I actually root against all of them now. It'd even be more refreshing seeing the Yankees make it, which I never thought I'd say a few years ago.
Time for a salary cap. Allow the top teams to outspend the lower teams, but put a limit as to how much they can spend.
billyjack wrote:adoraz wrote:stever20 wrote:one of those where it sounds good, but it's not. It's the lowest LCS game 7 ever. Even worse than in 2012 which had the misfortune of going up against only Monday Night Football and a presedential debate.
had misfortune of going up not only against LeBron's home opener, but also a major upset in college football with Purdue over Ohio St(#1 game of the weekend in college football).
very surprisingly game 1 of the WS was not good. A 10.0 rating down 2% from last year and down 21% from 2016. Worst since 2014. Didn't see that coming......
That major upset was on Fox, so for them it doesn't really matter.
Regarding Game 1, I'm not surprised MLB ratings are down. I am a big Braves fan, but I didn't tune into the World Series. It's not fun seeing the two teams with the highest payrolls in it yet again. Always more fun when there is an underdog.
MLB isn't like the NBA where people tune in to watch superstar individual players. You're not going to see a player go off for 3 HR in a playoff game like you would see LeBron take over an NBA game. The closest thing to that is the pitcher, which isn't nearly as exciting. People tune in for the teams, especially their own team.
In recent years, it was a big deal seeing teams like the Red Sox, Cubs, and Dodgers making the World Series. I personally rooted for the Red Sox back in 2004 and the Cubs in 2016. Those droughts were historic. Now, I couldn't care less about them and it's getting boring seeing them in it every year. I actually root against all of them now. It'd even be more refreshing seeing the Yankees make it, which I never thought I'd say a few years ago.
Time for a salary cap. Allow the top teams to outspend the lower teams, but put a limit as to how much they can spend.
Please no salary cap. There's already a luxury tax to help limit team payrolls.
If an argument for a cap is that the Finals get "boring" with the "same old teams" (not that i have a problem with repeat champions, which i don't)::
The NBA, with a salary cap, has had the same 2 finalists the last 4 years... Golden State and Cleveland, Golden State and Cleveland, Golden State and Cleveland, and Golden State and Cleveland.
The NFL, with a salary cap, has had the Patriots almost every year.
That doesn't happen in baseball, which sees more "rises and falls" that any other sport... the Astros, Cubs, Royals, Giants, Red Sox, Giants, Cardinals, Giants, Yankees, and Phillies have won the previous 10 World Series. And the Giants with 3 WS wins now suck. WS losers included some different teams too, the Dodgers, Indians, Mets, Rangers, Tigers, Rays, and Rockies if you go back to 2007. Half of MLB has appeared in a World Series in the last 11 years... wow. This is only the 2nd Boston WS appearance that my sons can remember, and my older son is in 10th grade and has followed baseball since kindergarten. C'mon, how is that "boring" with the "same old teams"...?.
So far each WS game this week has been competitive and nail-biting too.
MUPanther wrote:Nice day on FOX last Saturday....
Kentucky/Seton Hall (12:00, FOX): 1.512M
Louisville/Indiana (2:30, FOX): 1.431M
Wisconsin/Marquette (5:00, FOX): 1.204M
adoraz wrote:MUPanther wrote:Nice day on FOX last Saturday....
Kentucky/Seton Hall (12:00, FOX): 1.512M
Louisville/Indiana (2:30, FOX): 1.431M
Wisconsin/Marquette (5:00, FOX): 1.204M
Looks pretty impressive to me.
These OOC games against big time opponents need to keep happening, even if we're major underdogs. St. John's vs Duke earlier this year on Fox had pretty solid ratings as well. Nova recently added a big series with Kansas. Georgetown has Syracuse. Etc, etc.
Really like what the Pirates did in regards to their schedule this year. Maybe a BIT overboard, but appears to help them stay relevant during a down year. Every team in the conference should schedule at least 1 or 2 of these type of opponents annually.
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