Roger Goodell: NFL trying to understand drop in ratings

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Roger Goodell: NFL trying to understand drop in ratings
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Goodell not making excuses for NFL ratings drop
5:11 PM CT

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said Wednesday that the league does not think it has lost viewers despite a 10 percent drop in television ratings this season.

At the same time, however, he acknowledged that league officials are trying to understand what has caused the drop and how to address it.

Speaking after the league's fall meetings in Houston, Goodell said it is important not just to get viewers tuned in but also to "get them to stay tuned in" to game broadcasts.

"There a lot of factors to be considered. We don't make excuses. We try to figure out what's changing."

Roger Goodell, on drop in NFL's ratings this season
"When you look at ratings you have to go deeper than that," Goodell said. "It's viewers, but also how long they're engaging for, and a lot of times, people will leave a game for whatever reason, whether it's to go to other programming or whether the game is not that competitive."

Goodell said neither he nor the league's broadcast partners believe player protests of the national anthem have played a role in the drop. But he did note a relative lack of competitive games in prime time and the contentious presidential election and debate schedule as partial explanations.

"There a lot of factors to be considered," he said. "We don't make excuses. We try to figure out what's changing."





Also at the meetings, Goodell heard what he called a "factual" presentation of the Oakland Raiders' interest in relocating to Las Vegas. Goodell, however, said "there is still a great deal of information that we need to gather with respect to the circumstances in Oakland and also the challenges," indicating that resolution of the issue shouldn't be expected quickly.

Nevada lawmakers recently approved $750 million in public money to be used toward a domed stadium that would open in 2020. Billionaire casino mogul Sheldon Adelson has pledged $650 million toward the project, but Goodell said NFL owners have not been briefed on the structure of that offer. The Raiders could apply for relocation as early as January 15, 2017.

There will be follow-up discussion "maybe as early as December but more likely later than that," Goodell said.

In other meeting news:

Goodell offered no apologies for the uptick in taunting and unsportsmanlike conduct penalties this season. "We do believe that our players are role models and others look at that at the youth level," he said, "so that's important for us. And it's part of being a professional. That's one element of it. We have taunting and it's a significant issue, and taunting fouls are up this year. It's probably a combination of making that a point of emphasis, and we look at that as sportsmanship. In most cases when somebody taunts somebody else, somebody reacts and it can escalate quickly. People may not like the rule. They may not like the line that's been drawn, but we believe it's part of being a professional league."
  • Goodell said owners spent much of the morning discussing the league's collective bargaining agreement, which has reached its halfway point and will expire in 2021. The deal has worked "incredibly well" for players and owners, Goodell said.

    ESPN has reported that the league would like to extend the deal before its expiration.
  • As part of any CBA talks, Goodell suggested the league would like to address limitations in offseason and in-season practice time. "That undoubtedly will come up," he said.
 

Confucius

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Roger Goodell: NFL trying to understand drop in ratings
i

Goodell not making excuses for NFL ratings drop
5:11 PM CT

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said Wednesday that the league does not think it has lost viewers despite a 10 percent drop in television ratings this season.

At the same time, however, he acknowledged that league officials are trying to understand what has caused the drop and how to address it.

Speaking after the league's fall meetings in Houston, Goodell said it is important not just to get viewers tuned in but also to "get them to stay tuned in" to game broadcasts.

"There a lot of factors to be considered. We don't make excuses. We try to figure out what's changing."

Roger Goodell, on drop in NFL's ratings this season
"When you look at ratings you have to go deeper than that," Goodell said. "It's viewers, but also how long they're engaging for, and a lot of times, people will leave a game for whatever reason, whether it's to go to other programming or whether the game is not that competitive."

Goodell said neither he nor the league's broadcast partners believe player protests of the national anthem have played a role in the drop. But he did note a relative lack of competitive games in prime time and the contentious presidential election and debate schedule as partial explanations.

"There a lot of factors to be considered," he said. "We don't make excuses. We try to figure out what's changing."





Also at the meetings, Goodell heard what he called a "factual" presentation of the Oakland Raiders' interest in relocating to Las Vegas. Goodell, however, said "there is still a great deal of information that we need to gather with respect to the circumstances in Oakland and also the challenges," indicating that resolution of the issue shouldn't be expected quickly.

Nevada lawmakers recently approved $750 million in public money to be used toward a domed stadium that would open in 2020. Billionaire casino mogul Sheldon Adelson has pledged $650 million toward the project, but Goodell said NFL owners have not been briefed on the structure of that offer. The Raiders could apply for relocation as early as January 15, 2017.

There will be follow-up discussion "maybe as early as December but more likely later than that," Goodell said.

In other meeting news:

Goodell offered no apologies for the uptick in taunting and unsportsmanlike conduct penalties this season. "We do believe that our players are role models and others look at that at the youth level," he said, "so that's important for us. And it's part of being a professional. That's one element of it. We have taunting and it's a significant issue, and taunting fouls are up this year. It's probably a combination of making that a point of emphasis, and we look at that as sportsmanship. In most cases when somebody taunts somebody else, somebody reacts and it can escalate quickly. People may not like the rule. They may not like the line that's been drawn, but we believe it's part of being a professional league."
  • Goodell said owners spent much of the morning discussing the league's collective bargaining agreement, which has reached its halfway point and will expire in 2021. The deal has worked "incredibly well" for players and owners, Goodell said.

    ESPN has reported that the league would like to extend the deal before its expiration.
  • As part of any CBA talks, Goodell suggested the league would like to address limitations in offseason and in-season practice time. "That undoubtedly will come up," he said.


Stop penalizing players for celebrations...and don't try to blame the drop on Kap
 

Mt. Yukon

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
The product is wack, and the market is over saturated with the wack product. The NFL has always been boring compared to college, but the gap is as wide as its ever been IMO. You literally can't do shit in the NFL. Theres no real atmosphere in the games, and there aren't enough good QBs to play this wide open, pass friendly game they're trying to push. So it's a bunch of checkdowns, and screens all game, but defenses are handcuffed so they dink and dunk all the way down the field and then get a 19 million dollar franchise tag...
 

actinanass

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
man i agree with all of what other folks said.

I think Kaep was the straw that broke the camels back for a lot of fans.

Personally, I don't care what Kaep does. The 49ers suck, Dallas beat them, and they aren't relevant right now.

However, I'm at a bar during the Thursday night game. I saw a white dude become physically mad just by the sight of Kaep, and try to get the bartender to turn it off.

I can only imagine how many folks are that pissed at Kaep.
 

Confucius

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
man i agree with all of what other folks said.

I think Kaep was the straw that broke the camels back for a lot of fans.

Personally, I don't care what Kaep does. The 49ers suck, Dallas beat them, and they aren't relevant right now.

However, I'm at a bar during the Thursday night game. I saw a white dude become physically mad just by the sight of Kaep, and try to get the bartender to turn it off.

I can only imagine how many folks are that pissed at Kaep.

I love it. Fuck them cacs. I hope they blow a blood vessel when they see him kneel
 

Mt. Yukon

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
y'all just going to pretend it aint racist white folks mad players protesting against white supremacy? ok then.

That ain't the main reason why. CACs arent mad enough to boycott football. They just use any, and every excuse to be openly racist and the Kap thing is an opportunity to do just that through phoney outrage about insignificant shit. They still going after the patriotism angle and stopped talking about the issues he was kneeling for.
 

actinanass

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
That ain't the main reason why. CACs arent mad enough to boycott football. They just use any, and every excuse to be openly racist and the Kap thing is an opportunity to do just that through phoney outrage about insignificant shit. They still going after the patriotism angle and stopped talking about the issues he was kneeling for.

Again, you will be foolish to think that Kaep isn't apart of the overall problem.

No matter how noble you feel that Kaep's protest is, the perception is still "he doesn't respect this country".

They do not care about what he is protesting about.
 

godofwine

Supreme Porn Poster - Ret
BGOL Investor
Ridiculous penalties on celebrations ,A lot of shit that makes it seem like the players can't even play. Like Mark Cuban said, Pigs get fat and hogs get slaughtered. In the NFL oversaturated with the horrible decision of Thursday games and over penalizes people don't want to watch
 

actinanass

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Honestly, fix the officiating, and allow celebrating. People wouldn't care about what Kaep does.

I hope everyone understands what I'm saying.

Kaep is the straw that broke the camel's back. Kaep isn't the primary reason of the dip, but he is a contributing element of it.

One thing that should help the game flow better. Quit replaying touchdowns every time. In fact, Give the coach's 6 timeouts for the whole game. Any timeout can be used for a replay. If you use all of them, no more replay.
 

Mt. Yukon

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Again, you will be foolish to think that Kaep isn't apart of the overall problem.

No matter how noble you feel that Kaep's protest is, the perception is still "he doesn't respect this country".

They do not care about what he is protesting about.
In general I don't think cacs really give a shit outside of having an outrage competition, and using it to be racist. They say racist shit during pregame boycotts but I just think the love affair with the NFL is just waning. It's too much, and it's bad. There's no way of knowing but I think the ratings would have dipped with or with out Kap.
 

actinanass

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
In general I don't think cacs really give a shit outside of having an outrage competition, and using it to be racist. They say racist shit during pregame boycotts but I just think the love affair with the NFL is just waning. It's too much, and it's bad. There's no way of knowing but I think the ratings would have dipped with or with out Kap.

However, there's a direct correlation with Kaep. That's why I said that his protest was the straw that broke the camel's back.

This shit been bubbling up since before Ray Rice.

When you constantly changing the rules on the fly, and a lot of bastions of sports *i.e. ESPN* has become heavily politicized. There's going to be a backlash.

The coverage has become shitty as well.
 

Mo-Better

The R&B Master
OG Investor
Somebody hand Goodell a mirror. If there's a drop in the ratings he's the cause.

Goodell IMO is the worst thing that's happened to the NFL. He's too involved with day to day operations, NFL games are hitting all kinds of time slots that can't good. He simply needs to stop tampering with the game.
 

shiz2615

Support BGOL
Registered
Fatigue in my opinion, way to much coverage during the offseason. Plus for me not seeing other player take a stand up with Kap , I lost a lot of respect for players I once rooted for.
 

KrafMatik

Rising Star
Registered
Brady suspended, Manning retired, election year, 80% of QBs in the league are bums, feature running back a thing of the past.
 

LSN

Phat booty lover.
BGOL Investor
I gotta keep it real...only reason I haven't really watched the games is cuz the giants haven't been playing up to their potential the last few weeks and I'm usually sleeping thru most of sunday tryna recover from fri./sat. :dunno:
 

Day_Carver

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
the officiating is the reason more than anything.
people being awarded fumbles
people not being called for p.i.
all sorts of BIG calls from refs that go against teams and make you feel the shit is fixed.
Officiating isn't the reason; refs have always been bad; it's bad play which is a result of all these spread bullshit offenses in college; no good olines leads to bad offensive play; throw in these stupid ass Thursday games and welp...ratings would be very bad if it wasn't for fantasy football....
 

freakwolf

Star
Registered
Roger Goodell: NFL trying to understand drop in ratings
i

Goodell not making excuses for NFL ratings drop
5:11 PM CT

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said Wednesday that the league does not think it has lost viewers despite a 10 percent drop in television ratings this season.

At the same time, however, he acknowledged that league officials are trying to understand what has caused the drop and how to address it.

Speaking after the league's fall meetings in Houston, Goodell said it is important not just to get viewers tuned in but also to "get them to stay tuned in" to game broadcasts.

"There a lot of factors to be considered. We don't make excuses. We try to figure out what's changing."

Roger Goodell, on drop in NFL's ratings this season
"When you look at ratings you have to go deeper than that," Goodell said. "It's viewers, but also how long they're engaging for, and a lot of times, people will leave a game for whatever reason, whether it's to go to other programming or whether the game is not that competitive."

Goodell said neither he nor the league's broadcast partners believe player protests of the national anthem have played a role in the drop. But he did note a relative lack of competitive games in prime time and the contentious presidential election and debate schedule as partial explanations.

"There a lot of factors to be considered," he said. "We don't make excuses. We try to figure out what's changing."





Also at the meetings, Goodell heard what he called a "factual" presentation of the Oakland Raiders' interest in relocating to Las Vegas. Goodell, however, said "there is still a great deal of information that we need to gather with respect to the circumstances in Oakland and also the challenges," indicating that resolution of the issue shouldn't be expected quickly.

Nevada lawmakers recently approved $750 million in public money to be used toward a domed stadium that would open in 2020. Billionaire casino mogul Sheldon Adelson has pledged $650 million toward the project, but Goodell said NFL owners have not been briefed on the structure of that offer. The Raiders could apply for relocation as early as January 15, 2017.

There will be follow-up discussion "maybe as early as December but more likely later than that," Goodell said.

In other meeting news:

Goodell offered no apologies for the uptick in taunting and unsportsmanlike conduct penalties this season. "We do believe that our players are role models and others look at that at the youth level," he said, "so that's important for us. And it's part of being a professional. That's one element of it. We have taunting and it's a significant issue, and taunting fouls are up this year. It's probably a combination of making that a point of emphasis, and we look at that as sportsmanship. In most cases when somebody taunts somebody else, somebody reacts and it can escalate quickly. People may not like the rule. They may not like the line that's been drawn, but we believe it's part of being a professional league."
  • Goodell said owners spent much of the morning discussing the league's collective bargaining agreement, which has reached its halfway point and will expire in 2021. The deal has worked "incredibly well" for players and owners, Goodell said.

    ESPN has reported that the league would like to extend the deal before its expiration.
  • As part of any CBA talks, Goodell suggested the league would like to address limitations in offseason and in-season practice time. "That undoubtedly will come up," he said.

It's over exposed.
It used to be Sunday and Monday night. Now it's Sunday night, and Thursday also.
 

kidmegaii

Medium well
BGOL Investor
No matter how much we may act like big dogs, wifey ain't letting us watching Thursday Sunday & Monday football. The Thursday night football are hot garbage by the way.
 

ugk

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Mark Cuban called it 2 years ago.

http://ftw.usatoday.com/2016/10/mar...e?hootPostID=c1aaa859dfa9b331a47919989b37f733

Blame the NFL’s declining ratings on whatever you want: A captivating presidential election, players protesting the nation anthem, too many penalties, etc. There’s no denying this: The NFL’s primetime games have been hard to watch.

This is what happens when you have three primetime slots to fill every week with a finite number of good teams and the desire to showcase different teams throughout the season. We’ve been oversaturated with football — bad football — and we’ve started to tune out. Which is exactly what Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban said would happen back in 2014.

Via ESPN.com:

“I think the NFL is 10 years away from an implosion,” Cuban said two years after the NFL announced an expanded TV package. “I’m just telling you: Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered. And they’re getting hoggy.”

“Just watch. Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered. When you try to take it too far, people turn the other way. I’m just telling you, when you’ve got a good thing and you get greedy, it always, always, always, always, always turns on you. That’s rule No. 1 of business.”

“They’re trying to take over every night of TV,” Cuban said. “Initially, it’ll be, ‘Yeah, they’re the biggest-rating thing that there is.’ OK, Thursday, that’s great, regardless of whether it impacts [the NBA] during that period when we cross over. Then if it gets Saturday, now you’re impacting colleges. Now it’s on four days a week.

“It’s all football. At some point, the people get sick of it.”

Based on this year’s ratings, people have gotten sick of it. Of course, people will still watch their favorite team play every week, no matter how bad those games are, but the primetime games — which draw the big advertisers — rely on a national audience that won’t tune in to a bad game between teams they don’t care about.

101916-nflratings-social.jpeg
 
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