Perth SuperSprint Ratings spell trouble for V8 Supercars

By Andrew Kitchener / Roar Guru

Foxtel’s presentation of V8 Supercars is above and beyond anything this country has ever seen.

In fact, it’s on par with NASCAR and Formula One, where every single on-track session is covered in minute detail, even those early-weekend practice sessions that can be about as exciting as watching paint dry.

The quality of Foxtel’s coverage isn’t in doubt – and I’m sure even those who are against the deal in principal can at least admit it’s pretty impressive – but, rather, the eyeballs tuning in to watch races.

The series took a major leap of faith in taking a large portion of the sport away from free-to-air television, giving it exclusively to Foxtel. While Channel Ten broadcasts live races from Adelaide, Townsville, Sandown, Bathurst, the Gold Coast and the Sydney 500, the balance of the season – Symmons Plains, Barbagallo, Winton, Hidden Valley and Sydney Motorsports Park – can only be found on subscription television.

Now, we already know that Foxtel is available in only a fraction of homes that have televisions, and the series is well known to attract working-class types and those who live in far-flung rural areas. Some folks can’t afford Foxtel and some, who may very well have the spare coin, simply don’t get connectivity.

I had a sinking feeling when the deal was announced that there would be a major drop-off in ratings, and despite low viewer numbers for Symmons Plains – potentially due to the Cricket World Cup final going against the Sunday race – I was prepared to give things the benefit of the doubt and judge the ratings after last weekend’s event out west.

Well, they weren’t much better. Sunday’s lone race attracted 63,000 viewers*. That was good enough for 11th on the top 20 subscription television programs, well behind AFL’s Port Adelaide versus Adelaide clash (213,000), Guardians of the Galaxy movie (114,000) and, bizarrely, episodes of The Real Housewives of Melbourne (84,000) and equal with a decades-old Fawlty Towers (63,000).

The very fact that the AFL can rate so highly on Foxtel proves that there certainly is an audience for sport there. What does that mean for the V8 Supercars? Nothing good, that’s for certain.

Response from V8 Supercars: There are no alarm bells with sponsors. In fact, sponsors are over the moon with the extra cumulative viewers – we ask them and they tell us. Repucom reports that sponsor awareness has increased by 40 per cent YOY. We have signed 10 new sponsors in the past six weeks – Lexus, Toyota, GH Mumm, Blundstone, Woodstock, Coates Hire, Armor All

The gap of 150,000 viewers is a giant one between AFL and the V8 races. Surely alarm bells are ringing in the V8SC bunker? If not with the series administrators, led by CEO James Warburton, then surely with sponsors? It’s hard enough to source sponsors these days, but throw in the fact that the sport goes missing on free-to-air for large chunks of the year – Clipsal is in March, and the next live race on Channel Ten is in July, at Townsville – and it becomes exponentially harder. Four months is a long time to disappear from the national consciousness. It’s hard for even diehard fans to stay interested for that long without proper coverage.

The alternative for fans without access to Foxtel is to wait until 8:30pm on Saturday or Sunday night to watch an hour of highlights on One – or longer still if you don’t get the high definition channel. Replays and highlights might’ve been okay ten years ago, but with social media, and the volume of posts through all those platforms, including the V8 Supercar page itself, it’s now almost impossible to avoid having the results spoiled.

Add to that, an hour of highlights on free-to-air television really actually means about 40 minutes when you include advertisements, and even less racing because of the intro and outro. So, you’re down to just over half an hour of highlights of races that, at a minimum, run for one lap over thirty minutes, when adjudged to be time-certain. Sunday’s race ran for nearly 90 minutes, and it was sliced and diced down to basically a third of that. I can understand why no one wants to turn that on.

The multi-channel (Go, 7Two, One, ABC2 etc.) ratings for Sunday were dominated by cartoons and movies, and One’s broadcast of the Perth SuperSprint highlights failed to crack the top 20. Like I said, why is anyone going to watch highlights of a race that’s been over for at least four hours, and one in which the result – Will Davison’s impressive win for Erebus – is well known.

Seven Network personality Mark Beretta tweeted on Tuesday night that the ratings for this year’s coverage of the Barbagallo round compared with numbers from last year saw Foxtel achieve just one tenth of the audience Seven garnered last year (note that V8 Supercars reject these figures tweeted by Beretta as “Grossly inaccurate”), despite the coverage being on 7Mate in some areas**.

Obviously Beretta has an agenda, but the benefit of free-to-air coverage was demonstrated by the success of the Bathurst 12 Hour race earlier in the year, which delivered huge numbers for Seven. (V8 Supercars contacted The Roar to clarify Bathursat 12 Hour saw 170,000 viewers. 4 million viewers watched Bathurst 1000)

I can’t wait to see how the series spins these numbers. That tactic of adding up all of the ratings for every single V8-related show – including magazine and panel shows – smacks of desperation. That they are resorting to such a ploy speaks volumes.

Having part of your round on free-to-air and part on subscription television each week obviously works for the AFL and NRL, because fans can access at least a few games each week for no cost, but if the V8 Supercar board believed fans without Foxtel would still tune into pared-down highlights, surely the numbers now put that notion to bed?

It was always a risk for the series to throw their lot in with subscription television, and early numbers, at least, suggest it was a mistake. Is a rebound possible? Certainly, but too many more rounds drawing numbers in and around 60,000 per race and sponsors are going to start worrying, if they already haven’t, particularly when you add in the large drop in attendance at both Symmons Plains and Barbagallo.

The fans have spoken, voting to stay away from the series, both at the racetrack and on television, and the groundswell of discontent is only getting stronger. You can’t help but feel that the series is approaching a precipice, with attendance and TV numbers down, and the prospect of an all-V8 format disappearing in a few years^^.

Whether it can pull back from the cliff is another question entirely.

Editor’s note: **V8 Supercars contacted The Roar, and argued that the numbers cited by Seven reporter Mark Beretta (referenced above) were “grossly inaccurate.”

*The spokesman pointed out Foxtel separate the ratings of the race and the pre and post-race programming. 63,000 is the correct figure for the race itself, but an average of 60,000 tuned into the pre and post-show programming on Foxtel.

V8 Supercars further clarified that the highlights package of V8 races is usually broadcast from 4-5pm on Ten. This replay is available on free-to-air after each race, with Perth the only exception due to the timing of the race. V8 Supercars informed The Roar that the Tasmanian race was viewed by 160,000 people on Ten, as well as pointed out mitigating factors for the weekend race like the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight, and rescheduled Kangaroos-Kiwis Anzac Test.

^V8 Supercars said they are projecting an audience number around 10 per cent short of last year’s figures after the live broadcast of a number of races moved exclusively to Pay television. They said they held no concerns at all about the state of the sport, or the sponsorship, telling The Roar they have recently signed on nine new sponsors to the sport.

^^The spokesman also confirmed that V8 Supercars held no concern over the future of the series.

They also provided The Roar with this breakdown of the numbers from the weekend’s race:

Day 2014 2015 (includes Foxtel Go and Play) Difference +/-
Friday n/a 98,000 New Day
Saturday 368,000 375,000 +2%
Sunday 607,000 273,000 -55%
Weekend 975,000 746,000  -23%

The Crowd Says:

2015-06-25T03:03:53+00:00

FTA Viewer

Guest


Warburton has stated. the addition of extensive replays and non-racing programming on the pay-TV provider brings the cumulative figures up to par. How on this earth does adding the NON racing programs ratings figures to the racing figures be correct? Non racing programs should never be added to the racing program figures. What is foxtel doing, why lie to the public? Have a read, you will see the truth here- http://www.v8xmagazine.com.au/index.php/component/k2/item/1698-v8-supercars-tv-deal-how-the-ratings-stack-up This is proof Foxtel is fudging the figures!!

2015-05-10T08:18:27+00:00

Kymbo

Guest


So V8 Supercars discredit the tv ratings from last year because they were on seven mate, but are happy to include the Foxtel Go ratings as total viewing numbers. The PR team are working over time.

2015-05-10T07:34:59+00:00

Bolt

Guest


A Well balanced article. V8SC is a blue collar sport. Under the current plan sponsors will no longer be able to reach their target audience. Corporate Dollars will dry up for what is an expensive sport and in the end everyone loses. Long live the V8. On the track AND on the street.

2015-05-09T00:15:01+00:00

MOnique Hart

Guest


Beretts has a bee in his bonnet as we all do. There is no agenda, just the truth. We the fans feel that we have been shafted and betrayed, and there is no amount of sugar coating or defending your answers as we see straight through you. Why the hell dont you stop and listen to the fans WE ARE NOT HAPPY hell is that clear enough!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

2015-05-08T05:25:56+00:00

Lost interest

Guest


I'm surprised just how quickly I've lost interest in V8SC now after avidly following the sport for so long. Out of sight, out of mind I guess so I didn't even think to watch the so called highlights package on the weekend, and realised then I didn't even miss it. With no decent coverage until July or whatever it is, i won't be watching anymore unless I've got nothing better to do, or remember it's on. The highlights package I did watch for Tasmania was pretty poor - highlights just don't capture the tactical drama of the race and weekend unfolding. If the races can't be shown live on Ten, why can't they at least show a full replay of the race later instead of the "highlights"?

2015-05-08T04:55:11+00:00

Dean Sinton

Guest


My family along with many other Kiwis no longer bother to tune in since the coverage went to Sky in NZ. While the V8's hold a lot of interest in NZ Sky's poor programming is not worth the investment just to watch the V8's, which for me after 30years of enjoying them is a shame but I have now found other sports to follow.

2015-05-08T03:44:52+00:00

Hayden

Guest


Two races of 60 km with no pit stops very boring.The race was about who qualified first as the final results showed.Not a fan of these super sprint formats.two 125 km races on sataurday and 250 km race Sunday.Add interested by adding pit stops and potential for safety car intervention, as we viewed in the Sunday race , totally mixed it up.

2015-05-08T01:38:26+00:00

Peter Donaghy

Guest


Fox does a great job. Now I can watch the V8's live. I do not get free to air and I am not going to outlay hundreds of dollars to get rubbish. Free to air is SHIT.

2015-05-07T23:52:37+00:00

pete

Guest


V8SCA will always put their spin on it, Perth was the Nail in the coffin for the series in W.A, crowds were down dramatically, the racing boring..the infield Pits demanded by the V8`s was the beginning of the end, watch closely, I`ll bet they will be trying to sell it.. The W.A. Government spent a fortune on the Perth Event, money they can ill afford, lucky the Govt Depts got a free tent and hospitality..it made up for some of the crowd...

2015-05-07T23:10:34+00:00

Barry

Guest


V8 Supersar's spin on not being able to get ongoing sponsorship for the V8s racing was that many more sponsors were being drawn to the sport. Hmmm. Many more sponsors yes, but only for one or two races in the main. Meanwhile V8s stick with FoxTel while nobody watches. Prediction: Last year for V8's this year.

AUTHOR

2015-05-07T22:27:24+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


42 minutes of programming, and 18 minutes of ads.

AUTHOR

2015-05-07T22:26:51+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


This is one misnomer that really annoys me. Please look carefully at the promos - which are available on YouTube, and on television itself. Channel Ten only ever called themselves "The Home of Big Event Motorsport" which is true, given that they have live coverage of Australia's F1 and MotoGP races, plus Bathurst, Sandown, the Clipsal 500, Monaco Grand Prix and others. There's no deception there. The "Home of Motorsport" moniker was from their previous run with the series in the late 90's and early 00's.

AUTHOR

2015-05-07T21:49:29+00:00

Andrew Kitchener

Roar Guru


Very true. Whilst the Sunday races have been good in the last to SuperSprint format weekends, the two Saturday races are a waste of time. The only way I see them working is by way of them being qualifying races, but guys saving tyres for the long-distance events on Sunday cheapens the races, but they often have no choice. I'd like a 200km race each of Saturday and Sunday.

2015-05-07T15:07:45+00:00

BoomerAUS00

Guest


LOL sorry guys but the fact is at the end of the day V8's is washed up the moment holden & ford told australian they are closing the doors was the moment V8's lost the real fan's Full Stop !!!

2015-05-07T10:38:27+00:00

Shayne

Guest


This was the conversation at my work on Monday morning between 25 to 30 guys and I would say 9 out of 10 were angry that the V8 went to Foxtel and aren't interested in trying to keep up with what's happening with the category this year . For myself I sat and watched every single race last year on free to air , I'm sick of theses sports trying to force people onto Foxtel . So I swore that I would boycott the V8's this year which I am definitely doing after seeing my first highlights show this past weekend, a very average, hard to follow and know what's going on show. V8's you have lost me and a lot of other people I have spoken to, I will not even watch the full free to air races this year. It'll be like going to a football game and the teams walking out halfway through the game and as a spectator I'm meant to feel fulfilled. Sorry V8's free to air only and I personally think this could be the start of the end for you.

2015-05-07T10:27:44+00:00

Geoff

Guest


You would have to say even if you take V8 Supercars viewer numbers, a negative 23% over the weekend would not be music to sponsors ears. Even more alarming is the negative 55% for Sunday. Surely the strategic plan for V8 Supercars would include things like, increasing corporate sponsorship and increasing the fan base (both on television and trackside). After the first 3 rounds this appears to be an epic fail. To take the series away from free to air TV and a large percentage of fans is fraught with danger.

2015-05-07T10:05:05+00:00

Ryan Eckford

Roar Guru


The problem with V8 Supercars has got nothing to do with whether races are being shown live on free-to-air, or not. The problem is with the actual product, the lack of good quality tyres for both racing/qualifying part of the weekend, as well as practice, the lack of longer races, the lack of strategy differences/flexibility, the lack of practice/qualifying time, and silly rules and regulations which drives everyone insane. If V8 Supercars don't change, there is no chance the ratings will improve.

2015-05-07T08:43:41+00:00

Darryl Kelly

Guest


Well said Andrew. I've turned off from V8 Supercars almost entirely, I still watch old races on Youtube (until V8's finish deleting those that is) and remember how it was and never will be again. The FTA / Foxtel deal could have been a real bonanza with some clever cross media advertising and a little bit of thought. The simplest and best way to wean the punters away from the FTA coverage would have been to show the earlier races of the day on delay and the final race live, with little in the way of coverage of practice and perhaps show qualifying entirely but delayed as well. Then, while the racing is on have a banner at the bottom promoting the Foxtel coverage and the special features only Foxtel has. Personally, I like the adverts, I like NOT seeing an empty track for half of each practice session because no one has a tyre bank, and I like the racing in SD. HD means nothing to me as I physically don't see it any better... I honestly don't understand why the two shows could not have been done concurrently, its not rocket science, and both the series, FTA AND Foxtel, and most importantly of all, ALL of the punters would have been thrilled. Greed is a powerful compulsion, and if those in charge don't do something to mitigate the damage caused by their greed, then this series won't last until the end of it's Foxtel contract. Long Live GT3 and WEC!!!

2015-05-07T08:40:41+00:00

William

Guest


Ten is televising the Saturday Qualifying Day - 1pm to 5pm - Moto3 QP, MotoGP FP4, MotoGP Q1 and Q2, Moto2 QP. Ten is televising the Sunday Race Day - 11.30am to 5pm - MotoGP WUP, Moto3 Race, Moto2 Race and MotoGP Race

2015-05-07T08:29:03+00:00

mark gardner

Guest


The highlight package consists of 45 minutes of adds and fifteen minutes of cars. Go figure

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