The Ghost of Raelene
Rod McCall (65)
Just two Randwick boys hanging out. Special guest Bob Dwyer with Campo to dial in.
Looks worse for Eddie than Link. Eddie is calling up a bloke who hasn't coached in a decade for advice.Does this confirm that he was Eddie's secret confidant during RWC23? I would also keep that quiet..
What is the podcast called?
Games just take longer these days as well. 8 pm kickoff used to finish around 9:30, now we are lucky if they are done by 10. At that extra half hour is too much for all of my kids who didn't make it through the game awake last nightEven a heap of adults by the end of it just switch it off at the whistle and watch bugger all post match etc.
UK & Ireland TV could have something to do with it. 11am probably sounds less going-out-of-your-way-to-watch-it than anything earlier.Someone with a better memory than me might be able to help - did test matches always kickoff at 8pm?
Our prime time SRP (Super Rugby Pacific) (Super Rugby Pacific) games have a 7.35pm kickoff time.
I know it’s not a problem unique to rugby e.g. SOO kicks off around 8.05pm these days.
Do broadcasters actually get significantly more revenue with the later kickoff time? It’s a shame because I’d love to see a younger generation be able to watch these type of flagship events like a BIL tour but they make it hard for people to stay awake!
Another column attacking rugby by Buzz Rothfield. If the Wallabies ever return to the glory days Rothfield will have a aneurysm.Rugby union’s TV ratings on Channel 9 were a disaster for the opening Test match of the Wallabies v British and Irish Lions series on Saturday night, annihilated by State of Origin.
Despite a full house at Suncorp Stadium, the game attracted an average audience of only 861,000 on Channel Nine’s free to air and streaming service 9Now, while the figures from Stan are unavailable.
This compares to rugby league’s recent State of Origin decider that rated 4.8 million – almost four million more viewers.
The poor rugby union audience was also less than all three women’s State of Origin games rated on Channel 9 this year.
It is a huge setback for Rugby Australia, an organisation that was hoping not just for a financial windfall from the British and Irish Lions tour but that it would be a series to attract record TV eyeballs to support their corporate partners.
It didn’t help that the Wallabies were never in the game.
The British and Irish Lions led 17-5 at halftime and were never under any scoreboard pressure. Ball-in-play times didn’t help the rugby game as a spectacle.
The Wallabies had the football for 19.5 minutes and the Lions 16.5 minutes.
In this year’s men’s State of Origin series, the ball-in-play time averaged 58.1 minutes.
Earlier this year Channel Nine signed a $240 million deal with Rugby Australian through until 2030.
It included all Wallabies and Wallaroos Test matches outside of the Rugby World Cup.
“The future of Australian rugby is bright and our growth trajectory is strong,” said rugby chief executive Phil Waugh when he signed the new broadcast contract.
Yet they are outrated by the women’s State of Origin which got Game 1 – Nine 927k, Game 2 – 1.067m and Game 3 – 995k.
The poor figures give rugby league bosses Peter V’landys (the horse racing guy) and Andrew Abdo more ammunition for their negotiations for the next NRL broadcast deal. V’landys (the horse racing guy) has frequently highlighted the fact rugby union has the ball in play for only around 35 minutes compared to the NRL’s average time of 56.1 minutes per game.
Nor does it include stats from where the other team comes from. These stats always skew to a sport who's tv audience comes primarily from one country.Bit of a nothing article in my mind as it doesn’t include Stan.
Buzz is an idiot and the article is ridiculous, but foreign numbers are wholly irrelevant to the argument he's trying to make about the health of the game in Australia.Nor does it include stats from where the other team comes from. These stats always skew to a sport who's tv audience comes primarily from one country.
But unlike League our games is mostly an international one. When these comparisons are done it's only with half the audience. They never include the audience from say NZ if we play the All Blacks.
Imagine if in SoO we only used figures from NSW. You miss half the picture.
I know what you're saying - but when do we ever track or care about international viewership numbers? It doesn't assist us with the game of rugby in Australia.Nor does it include stats from where the other team comes from. These stats always skew to a sport who's tv audience comes primarily from one country.
But unlike League our games is mostly an international one. When these comparisons are done it's only with half the audience. They never include the audience from say NZ if we play the All Blacks.
Imagine if in SoO we only used figures from NSW. You miss half the picture.
Ball in play without context is a bit shit as well, especially considering we have a real set piece with specialists skills (and time) required to execute these (which will account for the largest amount of time lost) - and more penalties, but again in Rugby, penalties can be won or forced to a significantly greater proportion to which they can in League.Also, it’s never going to rate as good as something on a Wednesday night. Don’t let facts get in the way of a good story though.
Ok - so in 2013, we had the followingBuzz is an idiot and the article is ridiculous, but foreign numbers are wholly irrelevant to the argument he's trying to make about the health of the game in Australia.
On free-to-air 869,000 people in the five capital cities watched the series opener on Channel Ten, for a combined audience of 1.266 million. Ten’s pre-match and post-match coverage also rated well, garnering 531,000 and 470,000 viewers respectively.
Surprisingly, the second Wallabies-Lions Test recorded a small decrease on the audience for the first match, with 414,00 watching on Fox Sports and 815,000 on Ten (combined 1.229 million). This was an increase on the pay TV result but a drop on the free-to-air one. However with the series still on the line at 1-1, a big audience for the third and final Test in Sydney is expected.
I think the only valid 'foreign viewership numbers' RA should be concerned about is from NZ. NZ needs to realise that Rugby in Australia is as important for NZ as it is for Australia.I know what you're saying - but when do we ever track or care about international viewership numbers? It doesn't assist us with the game of rugby in Australia.
It also goes both way - when the NRL gloat about their success in the USA market, we are all quick to point out that USA viewership figures aren't very good. But the Australian numbers are great and we don't mention that.
I am sure the BIL tour is doing good viewership numbers back in the Northern Hemisphere but it doesn't help change the rugby landscape here in Oz. Many of the BIL touring parties I've talked to have been surprised about how much rugby has dropped off as a mainstream sport here since they were last here in 2013.
Would mostly agree but would caveat that FTA TV numbers for sport are still pretty relevant as that the only genre that's remained stable or grown in that time - with some increasing shifts to BVOD (eg 9now, not STAN).Ok - so in 2013, we had the following
So a slight decrease in FTA over the 12 years which you could fudge some numbers in the smaller population 12 years ago, but I would dare say more watched on Stan?
FTA is a metric that has been close to irrelevant in 10+ years, but its clung to people as its the only published figure and most of the time, the people writing this articles where eligible for the Vietnam war.
Ball in play without context is a bit shit as well, especially considering we have a real set piece with specialists skills (and time) required to execute these (which will account for the largest amount of time lost).