AFL takes a page from NFL’s playbook with Sunday night football

By Andrew Kitchener / Roar Guru

The AFL will break new ground in 2014, scheduling a number of primetime Sunday night games – doubtless at the insistence of their broadcast partner, the Seven Network, who are projected to start games just after 7:30pm.

In retrospect, I’m surprised it’s taken as long as it has for the most popular winter sport in the nation to stake it’s claim in primetime.

And why not? After a successful twilight experiment, a night game on the final day of the week.

Their northern cousins at the National Rugby League seem to be happily stuck in the ’90s as far as broadcasts of the game go with delayed telecasts, which must put the NRL alone as the only major league in the world still not delivering every single game live in some form or another.

The AFL, on the other hand, have been pushing the television boundaries for years, trying out Monday night (another American invention, and rating a storm for cable network ESPN) and Thursday night football.

Footy will be played in both those important television time slots in 2014, but the Sunday night games are the ones we should watch with particular interest, for it may be the beginning of something big.

I’ve just returned from my annual four-to-six week American trip, where I get to speak to a bunch of people in various parts of the sporting media landscape over there. It’s also given me time to compare broadcast habits of American sport compared to Australian sport.

Based on what I’ve seen in America, and knowing the ratings that Friday night games can pull, Sunday night primetime footy looks like an all-posts winner.

In America, NBC paid (and continue to pay) a not-so-small fortune for rights to the primetime Sunday night game which is generally the best contest of the weekend – or at least features high-drawing teams from major markets like the Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants and New England Patriots.

I can only imagine that a similar thing will happen in Australia as Sunday night football becomes more regular. Imagine a Collingwood versus Carlton, Richmond versus Essendon, Derby or Showdown sort of scenario.

In America, the ratings that NBC pull on a regular basis for Sunday night football are astronomical, and, week-in-week-out, are the best numbers that the struggling network drags in.

They are the fourth most-popular broadcast network in America, well behind CBS, ABC and FOX.

Except on Sunday nights. It’s appointment viewing now, with numbers even besting the juggernaut that is reality singing contest The Voice.

The AFL is going to look at their Sunday night numbers and realise what NBC realised – that they’re on a major winner. It’s my guess that we’ll see increasing numbers of Sunday night broadcasts season after season.

It could be only five years before there’s a regular primetime Sunday night game every week, and I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see it even out-rate Friday night football, provided there is sensible scheduling.

I can’t imagine the league messing up a primetime slot with a bad game. The AFL will be looking to make it appointment viewing, a centrepiece of what people do on a Sunday.

Why will Sunday Night football be successful? Simple: eyeballs.

Think of all the distractions on Friday nights, Saturday afternoons, Saturday nights and Sunday afternoons. There are a thousand and one things that people can be doing across the weekend that would keep them away from their television sets.

If you’re not going out to tie one on, you’ve doubtless got kids playing sport, or you’re playing sport yourself, or the weather’s just too damn nice to be indoors watching football, especially if it’s not a hugely appealing match-up.

Come Sunday night, though, the weekend is coming to an end, and there’s less people doing things.

As evidenced by solid ratings for various TV shows on a Sunday night, most Australians seem to want to sit in front of their television and watch whatever’s on while mentally preparing themselves for the working week.

It’s where networks run some of their strongest products, and what television people like to label a captive audience.

People are more likely to watch a bad game on a Sunday night with nothing else on than they would be on a sunny Sunday afternoon when the alternative is to head outdoors.

With so many eyeballs, Seven can go to their advertisers waving the figures that say primetime audiences are bigger than those on a weekend afternoon and demand more money for running their advertising.

They also have more chances to promote other shows coming up in the week. It works for the networks and, of course, for AFL House, who will have the added viewer data to take to their own fleet of official sponsors.

As far as the sport’s governing body, its broadcasters and advertisers go, Sunday night primetime football is a no-brainer.

I like the idea of a full day of football. The NFL dominates the American sporting landscape on Sunday afternoons during the fall.

Networks have pre-game shows starting at midday (or earlier on cable networks) which lead into games the League schedules at 1:00pm, 4:25pm and then the primetime game that begins around 8:30pm east coast.

What that means is you can, if you so choose, turn on your television at midday, watch a pre-game show, then football right through to around midnight.

It’s a football fan’s dream.

If Seven slide their news coverage in a break, they stand to expose another network product to a big audience. It might help the news broadcasts in the week, too, if viewers find them to be better than what they normally watch for the news of the day.

What happens on Sundays in America is exactly the sort of saturation coverage that’s made the NFL such a powerful force, and why other leagues and sports do their best to avoid all clashes with pro football – or suffer death in the ratings as a result, like NASCAR has recently.

If the AFL does something similar they stand to grow their product enormously, and Seven will certainly appreciate the extra ratings.

It’s not a stretch to say that the NFL has ground their competition into the dust. Of course, there have been challengers, but none have had the staying power.

The National Football League is unquestionably the big dog of American sport, and this year’s Super Bowl (to be played at MetLife Stadium, just across the Hudson River from New York City) might prove to be the most-watched show in the history of television in America.

Not just sporting broadcasts, but television full stop. That’s how big the NFL is.

Obviously, the AFL won’t ever grow to that level, because Australia simply isn’t big enough, but the way Commissioner Roger Goodell runs football in America is with a ‘take no prisoners’ attitude.

He’s made changes to his product to further assert his position, and the AFL should be looking to do the same. Invading primetime is the first step.

What about crowds? Well, let’s face it, if you’re a serious, rusted-on fan of your team, you’ll go to games no matter when they’re scheduled.

I can only imagine that people prefer Sunday night to Monday night games – I don’t know for sure, as the Swans don’t get these sorts of games for me to properly put my theory to the test – as you haven’t struggled through a day at work prior to game time.

Monday nights, I prefer to do nothing at all. I can’t imagine I’d be hugely enthusiastic about going to the footy. Generally, there seems to be apathy to the Monday night concept.

The Seven Network would doubtless prefer a Sunday night game as it won’t ruin their weeknight primetime schedule, and Sunday nights allow them to make viewers painfully aware of what’s coming up.

Of course, the way Seven ram their product plugs down your throat during the tennis might be replicated for footy, and that wouldn’t be a good thing for anyone, as all long-suffering tennis fans could attest to.

Subtlety would be nice, or Seven risks alienating viewers.

All in all, I see mostly positives and only a few minor negatives about the introduction of AFL primetime Sunday night football.

Of course, whether the experiment grows past this year and takes on a bigger presence on the league’s media landscape depends on its success, which will be measured by viewer numbers.

As long as the product is handled well, and the AFL has proven itself to be quite savvy from a media standpoint, we should only see growth.

I think it’s a concept that’ll deliver big-time for both the AFL and Seven. I’ve seen it work in America, and we’re as sports-mad as they are, so why not here?

Looking into my crystal ball, I see a time, in the not too distant future, when Sunday nights are bigger ratings nights than Fridays.

The Crowd Says:

2014-01-18T12:39:05+00:00

Denis Ryan

Guest


Good story & interesting comments thread. Unless these Sunday night games were blockbusters, there'd be a significant risk for the AFL. Besides the one Thursday night game, the NFL is played only on Sunday, where as the AFL is spread over three days. People could be "footied out" by the time Sunday night rolls around. I've lived in the US for 15yrs now & the NFL is undoubtedly the king of US sports, but one crucial reason why never gets mentioned. Teams only play one game per week. Fans get to build anticipation for the coming game, you get time to work on your fantasy team & figure out your bets with your "bookie". MLB, NBA & the NHL simply play too many games for most busy people to keep up. One game per week is why football, both NFL & college, has become so deeply ingrained in American culture. Its the actual event, the coming together of people to tailgate, the cheerleaders, bands & announcer/dj that do a lot of the entertaining, not so much the game itself. This periphery entertainment would never work with the AFL, there's too much going on in the game (& it hasn't - remember the Bluebirds & Swanettes?)

2014-01-17T10:44:28+00:00

Jack Russell

Roar Guru


I think the argument is that it's better suited to TV as you can see more of the play. It's a fair argument, although you could apply the same argument to chess. That doesn't mean it's more interesting to the viewer.

2014-01-16T05:43:14+00:00

Jorji Costava

Guest


Once 4k TV becomes workable. It'll take AFL to a whole new level across the country. You can see double the area on your tv in far more clarity. To give you an idea, it allows you just to set a camera in the middle of a basketball court and you can see in perfect view the whole court. It is going to be a game changer.

2014-01-16T05:40:40+00:00

Jorji Costava

Guest


Will be interesting to see how much AFL telecasts improve with 4k television. FIFA is using it and from the demostration videos it allows to see a lot more of the field, so you can see the runs players are making to passes. AFL would be in the same boat. Much larger sections of the field could be seen making it much better to watch on tv. Not sure if I buy the NRL is better on tv argument. I see the empty stadiums and I just get a lack of atmosphere which kills the interest. Bit of a con job that argument. I do not buy it at all.

AUTHOR

2014-01-16T03:57:02+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


By the way, I am a Manly supporter and member. I have no bias against rugby league. I love the sport. I'm just being real here. Nine is short-changing the game.

AUTHOR

2014-01-16T03:56:21+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


Channel Nine insisting on delayed telecasts is what kills the NRL. No other broadcast partner in any other league dictates in tjhe same fashion. The rules should be placed on the table by the NRL when bargaining begins. They say, "We want all games delivered live" and that's what is bid on. Like the NFL do. It's ludicros that the NRL are being dictacted to by a broadcast partner, and it happens nowhere else.

2014-01-16T03:20:19+00:00

roosters14

Guest


Author with his clear bias against rugby league seems to forget it is channel 9 who insist on the delayed rubbish and he will find the NRL in 2013 and again in 2014 has Thursday night football on FTA, Sunday evening on fox and of course had Monday night footy for years. Where has the afl's Monday night footy been for the past 5 years????

AUTHOR

2014-01-16T00:30:16+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


That is why tailgating was invented!! :)

2014-01-15T23:42:11+00:00

josh

Roar Rookie


I believe college football has dry stadiums too.

AUTHOR

2014-01-15T22:35:57+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


Ray Warren can call swimming but that's about it for Nine. You're right, with guys like Bruce McAvaney and Dennis Cometti, who can pretty much call anything. Bruce is famous for his submersive research.

2014-01-15T08:41:19+00:00

Chocco

Roar Rookie


Australian Football coverage and commentating has always been lightyears ahead of RL coverage and commentating IME. The proof is in 7's commentators seem to be able to commentate on a wider spread of sports, across the Olympic, horse racing etc.

AUTHOR

2014-01-15T08:29:01+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


Apparently Channel Ten were set to broadcast all (or just about all) games live over the course of any given weekend, but I think Nine had last rights to match whatever bid Ten, or any other bidder, submitted. When they did that, instead of the NRL saying, "Right, this is what you have to do," they did what Nine wanted. I can't imagine CBS or NBC dictating to the NFL how and when they'd broadcast pro football in America.

2014-01-15T06:28:14+00:00

alicesprings

Guest


I'm always amused when i hear people complain about channel 7's AFL's coverage. Its light years ahead what channel 9 dishes up for league and is no were near as professional! I have no idea why they didn't take say 20m/yr less to ensure the quality and reach of the coverage. Makes no sense! Thankfully the AFL is not in the position of the NRL, having to rely on the tv networks for the majority of its revenue!

AUTHOR

2014-01-15T05:43:51+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


When you don't get every game live via some outlet or other - free-to-air, internet streaming, cable, pay per view, whatever, it damn near is a second-rate sport. At least, in terms of being but a minor blip on the worldwide sporting landscape. Can you name any other top-tier sporting league who has two games a weekend delayed?

2014-01-15T04:52:40+00:00

JamesP

Guest


One off Monday night games are not the same as regular Monday night games. In any case, Demetriou is on the way out - it will be deputy (and almost certainly future) CEO Gill McLachlan who will have his hands all over the next TV rights deal - the negotiations of which will really start heating up in 2015.

2014-01-15T04:49:42+00:00

JamesP

Guest


In Nine's defence they did a pretty good job of the AFL when they had it from 2002-2006. Really made 7 lift their game when they took it back. Nine, especially the NRL and even the cricket, also suffers from poor quality broadcasters including people like Fatty Vautin and Michael Slater on the Footy Show. Contrast that to James Brayshaw and Garry Lyon on the AFL footy show - both of them are larrikins also but have a lot more polish.

2014-01-15T04:34:48+00:00

Slane

Guest


Not to mention NRL is shown on channel 9. A lot of NRL fans got a taste of what professional sport broadcasts should look like when the League World Cup was shown on 7. Channel 9 is a joke. Makes League look like a second rate sport.

AUTHOR

2014-01-15T03:52:50+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


There have been Monday night games in the past, and it appears that he's now bowing to pressure from his broadcast partners, who - correctly, I might add - see primetime footy as the way forward in terms of mass presentation of the game product.

AUTHOR

2014-01-15T03:51:45+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


The difference between the NRL and the AFL is that the AFL, like America's NFL, lays out what they want from their broadcast partners. Not the other way around. It's insane that the NRL is actually willing to basically be dictated to by Channel Nine when it comes to what games are shown live and what aren't. It's the only big-time sporting league in the world to not have their entire fixture broadcast live in some form. It's archaic.

2014-01-15T02:55:34+00:00

clipper

Guest


Yes, but the point, as Storm Boy is making, is that the fans don't turn up. He says the AFL will be jumping the shark if it has SNF because it will put the real barracking fans second, which is what the NRL has done with the Monday night games, even though the ratings are good.

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