Scheduling: The 2017 Valencian MotoGP / Brazilian Grand Prix

Two riders. One championship. Marc Marquez. Andrea Dovizioso. One of them will become 2017 MotoGP World Champion in Valencia.

As always, the MotoGP weekend will air exclusively live on BT Sport, with highlights in a Monday evening time slot on Channel 5. Suzi Perry is back fronting BT Sport’s coverage alongside the likes of Gavin Emmett and Neil Hodgson; Keith Huewen and Julian Ryder will be on commentary.

The race is significant from a broadcasting perspective as it will mark Nick Harris’ last race commentating on Dorna’s MotoGP World Feed, having been involved in the motoring world for 36 years! His successor from 2018 onwards has yet to be announced.

Elsewhere, the Formula 1 season is not quite over, with the penultimate round of the championship in Brazil airing exclusively live on Sky Sports F1. Following Channel 4’s highlights programme is 1: Life on the Limit, which follows Formula 1’s pursuit for safety over the years. It is the first time that the film has aired on Channel 4, with various airings on ITV4 in the past year and a half.

Due to international football, the BBC’s coverage from Brazil is on Radio 5 Live Sports Extra for the complete weekend.

MotoGP – Valencia (BT Sport 2)
10/11 – 08:00 to 15:00
=> 08:00 – Practice 1
=> 10:45 – Reaction and Build-Up
=> 12:00 – Practice 2
11/11 – 08:00 to 15:15
=> 08:00 – Practice 3
=> 11:00 – Qualifying
12/11 – 07:30 to 09:15 – Warm Up
12/11 – 09:30 to 15:00
=> 09:30 – Moto3 race
=> 11:15 – Moto2 race
=> 12:45 – MotoGP race
=> 14:00 – Chequered Flag

MotoGP – Valencia (Channel 5)
13/11 – 19:00 to 20:00 – Highlights

Channel 4 F1
11/11 – 19:30 to 21:00 – Qualifying Highlights
12/11 – 22:30 to 00:45 – Race Highlights
12/11 – 00:45 to 02:45 – FILM: 1: Life on the Limit

Sky Sports F1
Sessions
10/11 – 11:45 to 14:00 – Practice 1
10/11 – 15:45 to 18:00 – Practice 2 (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
11/11 – 12:45 to 14:15 – Practice 3
11/11 – 15:00 to 17:40 – Qualifying
12/11 – 14:30 to 19:15 – Race
=> 14:30 – Track Parade
=> 15:00 – Pit Lane Live
=> 15:30 – Race
=> 18:30 – Paddock Live

Supplementary Programming
08/11 – 20:30 to 21:00 – F1 Report: Preview
09/11 – 13:00 to 14:00 – Driver Press Conference
09/11 – 20:00 to 20:15 – Paddock Uncut
10/11 – 18:00 to 19:00 – Team Press Conference
10/11 – 19:00 to 19:30 – The F1 Show
16/11 – 20:30 to 21:00 – F1 Report: Review

BBC Radio F1
10/11 – 11:55 to 13:35 – Practice 1 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
10/11 – 15:55 to 17:35 – Practice 2 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
11/11 – 12:55 to 14:05 – Practice 3 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
11/11 – 15:55 to 17:05 – Qualifying (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
12/11 – 15:30 to 18:00 – Race (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)

If anything changes, the schedule will be updated.

Mexican Grand Prix loses 40 percent of TV audience with no live FTA presence

The Mexican Grand Prix dropped around 40 percent year-on-year, with live coverage exclusively on Sky Sports, overnight viewing figures show.

Race
Live coverage of Lewis Hamilton’s championship winning race attracted a weighted average of 1.09m (4.8%) from 18:00 to 21:30 across Sky Sports F1 and their Main Event channel. The weighted average represents an increase of 23 percent on Sky’s 2015 average audience for Mexico of 885k (4.0%).

Sky Sports F1’s coverage averaged 768k (3.5%), with Sky Sports Main Event bringing in 373k (1.6%) across a shorter three-hour time slot from 18:30. As always, audience figures presented here exclude viewers who watched via Sky’s online Now TV and Sky Go platforms.

Channel 4’s highlights programme aired from 22:30 to 00:45 to an audience of 1.05m (15.4%), slightly lower than Sky’s live programme average. Saying that, for the time slot, the audience share for Channel 4’s show is solid, even if the average audience is low by Formula 1’s standards.

The combined average audience of 2.13 million viewers is the lowest since the Canadian Grand Prix in June, which averaged 1.93 million viewers in similar circumstances. The audience for Mexico is the reverse of the previous round in Austin, with Austin live on free-to-air television.

Last year, the Mexican Grand Prix aired live on free-to-air television, and the year-to-year decline of 43 percent reflects that fact. An audience of 3.77 million viewers watched the race last year live on Sky and Channel 4. This year’s average audience number also ends the streak of five races on the bounce where F1’s audience has increased compared with 2016.

Compared with the 2015 United States Grand Prix, where Hamilton claimed his third World Drivers’ Championship, Sky’s audience is marginally lower this year, whilst Channel 4 as you would expect is significantly down on the BBC’s numbers from back then.

USA 2017 Mexico 2017 Difference
Channel 4 2.78 million
(live)
1.05 million (highlights) 1.73 million
Sky Sports 0.73 million 1.09 million 0.36 million
Total 3.51 million 2.13 million 1.38 million

A peak audience of 1.63m (6.5%) watched Max Verstappen win the Grand Prix live on Sky, with 1.05m (4.2%) watching via the dedicated F1 channel, and a further 572k (2.3%) watching via Main Event. Later, a peak of 1.55m (16.6%) watched Channel 4’s race edit begin at 23:00.

The combined peak audience of 3.17 million viewers is also the lowest since Canada in June, with a similar trajectory to the average. The peak figure is down 39 percent compared with the equivalent number of 5.13 million viewers recorded last year.

Qualifying and Analysis
Sky Sports aired coverage of qualifying across the F1 channel and Main Event to a weighted audience of 423k (2.1%). The F1 channel averaged 343k (1.7%) from 18:00 to 20:40, with Main Event averaging 129k (0.6%) from 19:00 onwards.

Highlights on Channel 4 averaged 873k (6.1%) from 22:00 to 23:35, resulting in a combined average of 1.30 million viewers, a drop of around 270,000 viewers compared with last year’s figure of 1.57 million viewers.

The fact of the matter is that Formula 1 suffers badly when race highlights air in a late-night time slot. Those of you that have followed this site historically will know that the free-to-air broadcaster cannot air the race until a specific number of hours after the race has ended. In the case of Mexico, Channel 4 will have been unable to air the race earlier, I dare say costing the broadcaster at least half a million viewers if not more.

So, where did the 1.38 million viewers ‘disappear’ to between USA and Mexico? Sky Go and Now TV will make up some of the gap. Both of those outlets would have recorded a higher audience than USA, with some Channel 4 floating viewers opting to buy a Now TV day pass for the race. Sky never release the numbers publicly, and in any event, the numbers are likely to be small in the context of the 1.38 million viewer gap.

Channel 4’s highlights programme will have a larger proportion of ‘catch-up’ viewing compared with usual, some recording their show to watch on Monday. Lastly, BBC’s Radio 5 Live programming will have benefited with no live free-to-air television coverage. Combined, those three factors will claw some of the gap back, but not all of it by any stretch of the imagination.

The harsh reality is that floating viewers will not chase down Formula 1 on Sky. When Formula 1 is not live on free-to-air, viewers choose other options. On Sunday evening, that may have been BBC One’s offering of Strictly Come Dancing and Blue Planet II, both of which attracted over ten million viewers.

I cannot emphasise just how much F1 loses out when prime time races air exclusively live behind a pay-wall. The sport is missing a vital opportunity to reach thousands of new motor racing fans. You cannot get that level of exposure anywhere else. Arguably, this element is by far the biggest failing of the 2012 to 2018 contract cycle, initiated by the BBC in July 2011.

Because of the championship battle ending in Mexico, Channel 4 have decided to air the Brazilian Grand Prix in the same time slot as Mexico, when they are contractually able to air it from 20:00 onwards (last year they chose 22:00). I suspect the rating for Brazil will be nasty…

The 2016 Mexican Grand Prix ratings report can be found here.

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