Tuesday, July 25, 2000
Woods draws a huge TV audience;
boosts CART, not Women's US Open
By HOWARD FENDRICH
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) Tiger Woods keeps turning
in record-breaking performances and people keep tuning in to watch.
His victory at the British Open drew the
highest preliminary TV ratings for the tournament since at least
1989 and, according to ABC Sports' estimates, the largest
number of viewers ever for the event.
ABC's telecast of the final round Sunday
drew a big-market overnight rating of 7.5 with a 21 share. That
represents a 32 percent increase over last year's 5.7/14, which
was boosted by a three-man playoff to determine the champion and
had been the highest overnight mark in the previous 10 years.
ABC does not have overnight numbers from
before 1989.
The Sunday rating is all the more impressive
given the time of the broadcast, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. EDT.
Saturday's third-round coverage registered
a 5.3 overnight with a 16 share, 33 percent better than the 4.0/13
in 1998. ABC did not televise the third round last year, instead
opting for news coverage of John F. Kennedy Jr.'s plane crash.
ESPN, like ABC owned by the Walt Disney Co., aired the third round
last year with a national cable rating of 1.8.
Full national ratings for the weekend will
be available later in the week.
The ratings for the British Open mirror
what NBC drew last month when Woods won the U.S. Open by a record
15-stroke margin.
And as was the case with Pebble Beach, viewers
were not watching the coverage from St. Andrews to get a glimpse
of a great head-to-head finish.
Woods became, at 24, the youngest golfer
to complete a career Grand Slam by beating runners-up Ernie Els
and Thomas Bjorn by eight strokes, the largest margin of victory
in the British Open since 1913.
Woods finished at 19-under-par 269, the
lowest score in relation to par ever at a major championship and
the best score ever at St. Andrews.
The last half-hour of ABC's British Open
telecast Sunday with the only thing in doubt being just
how much history Woods would make drew a 10.7 overnight
rating.
He's an amazing phenomenon. He has
certainly captured the imagination and the attention of the American
viewing public. The ratings numbers keep proving that, ABC
Sports' Mark Mandel said.
And ABC got high ratings without being as
Tiger-centric as NBC or CBS have been in their golf coverage.
In Sunday's final round, for example, viewers saw live coverage
of 61 of Woods' 69 strokes; NBC showed 67 of his 69 shots in the
final round of the U.S. Open.
ABC did take the opportunity to repeatedly
promote its Aug. 28 made-for-TV, one-on-one Battle at Bighorn
between Woods and Sergio Garcia.
Woods' effect on television has been clear
since the first of his Grand Slam tournament triumphs, a record
12-stroke victory at the 1997 Masters. The full, national rating
for CBS' final-round coverage of that tournament was a 14.1 and
the two-day national number was 11.2 both the highest in
CBS' 45 years of airing the Masters.
On Sunday, he provided an ideal lead-in
for ABC's coverage of the Michigan 500 CART race, which registered
a 2.5 overnight mark even though preliminary numbers indicate
viewership decreased with each half-hour.
NBC had hoped to get a boost for its U.S.
Women's Open golf coverage, which started after the British Open
was off the air both Saturday and Sunday, but that did not materialize.
Karrie Webb was nearly as impressive as
Woods on the course, winning the Women's Open by five strokes
to, like Woods, pick up her third victory in the last four majors.
NBC's overnight ratings, though, averaged a 1.9 for the weekend,
even with 1999. Sunday's 1.9 dropped 5 percent from last year.
Each rating point represents 1,080,000 households,
or 1 percent of the nation's estimated 100.8 million TV homes,
and overnight ratings measure the largest markets, comprising
63 percent of the United States. The share is the percentage of
in-use TVs tuned to a given program.
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