British Grand Prix holds up well against Murray onslaught

So a few weeks ago, I wrote a piece on here regarding the scheduling of yesterday’s British Grand Prix. As I noted in that particular piece:

“One has to wonder if the conclusion of the British Grand Prix is less important than the first few sets of the Wimbledon Men’s Singles final, and also whether the Qualifying session is less important than the Women’s Singles final.”

I have to admit, at that time, I thought no, thinking to myself that it will be an all foreign final and Andy Murray will once again get knocked out in the Quarter or Semi Final. Of course, I was left eating humble pie….

He didn’t win, though. He did however, draw an absolutely mammoth peak of 16.9 million viewers to BBC One yesterday at 18:00 and an 11.45 million viewership average throughout. In comparison, the highest Formula 1 race on record, the 2008 Brazilian Grand Prix, had 8.8 million. So, in reality, the BBC made completely the right decision, as I admitted on Friday on Twitter!

With the mammoth peak, it is no surprise that the F1 was dented, and although the British Grand Prix had its worst viewing figures since 2007, the figures were not bad at all considering the opposition. The weighted programme average was 3.09 million (20.9%) from 12:05 to 15:30. The percentage share, for anyone wondering, is a lot lower than usual due to there being a lot more people watching TV than usual, again due to the Wimbledon final.

I do not have the exact Sky Sports F1 figures, but again you are looking at around about 0.4 million to 0.5 million, which means a combined average of about 3.5 million. Which is actually very respectable when you consider the viewing figures for BBC One. It is not far away from the Monaco Grand Prix figure either. If anything, the Grand Prix did a lot better than I was anticipating. James Allen has helpfully tweeted a peak of 4.2 million for BBC Two, so factoring in Sky Sports F1 will take you to a peak in the 5 million region. I am not sure a ratio is relevant really considering the mammoth opposition, but you are looking at 84% to 16%, approximately give-or-take depending on the exact peak figures.

The delayed Qualifying figure did not do well, a peak of 2.3 million (22.7%) at 13:15 on BBC Two, with an average of 1.9 million viewers. Add an extra 0.2 million or 0.3 million for Sky, which gives you about 2.2 million viewers. Not a very good figure, and the worst for the British Grand Prix Qualifying since 2008. If anything, the rain delay hindered things rather than helped things, as all the casual viewers would have flocked to BBC One when the rain delay started as the Women’s Wimbledon final was getting underway.

One thing that the ratings show is that the scheduling all around has been awful this year from the FIA. The Canadian Grand Prix went against Euro 2012 directly. The British Grand Prix went against the Wimbledon final, and the Hungarian Grand Prix is going to go against the London 2012 Olympics. Who planned this exactly? The schedule should have gone something like this:

– 27th May: Monaco
– 10th June: Europe (Valencia)
– 24th June: Germany
– 1st July: Britain
– 15th July: Canada
– 19th August: Hungary
– 2nd September: Belgium

That just about directly avoids the major sporting events, with nothing directly clashing. I can only assume that there are logistical issues that prevents an event the week before Valencia or a week after in terms of transportation. There would still be a five week break halfway through the season, just slightly different with Hungary after the break rather than before it.

As always, your comments and thoughts are welcome.

Sky Sports F1 – Top 10 ratings (week ending 24th June, 2012)

From BARB:

1 – 531k – Live European Grand Prix (Sunday, 11:30)
2 – 348k – Live European Grand Prix: Qualifying (Saturday, 12:00)
3 – 70k – European Grand Prix Highlights (Sunday, 22:42)
4 – 64k – F1 Legends (Saturday, 09:35)
5 – 64k – Live European Grand Prix: Practice 3 (Saturday, 09:45)
6 – 64k – Live European Grand Prix: Practice 1 (Friday, 08:45)
7 – 61k – Live European Grand Prix: Practice 2 (Friday, 12:45)
8 – 49k – Fast Track (Sunday, 10:38)
9 – 47k – F1 Legends (Sunday, 11:06)
10 – 42k – European Grand Prix: Practice 2 Replay (Friday, 18:00)

Some notably poor figures above. Qualifying and the Race did fine, but all three practice sessions recorded surprisingly low figures, none of the three live showings breaking 64,000 viewers. In fact, the average of three sessions is the lowest since the Malaysian Grand Prix in March.

The channel reach was 2.19 million, which is also the lowest yet for a race weekend for the channel. BBC One’s live race programme entered the top 30 on BARB, with an average of 3.92 million viewers.

As I noted in my ratings piece last Monday, I expected the combined viewership to be the highest since 2000, and this is exactly the case with a viewership of 4.45 million viewers. The number is the second highest of the year, only behind the Chinese Grand Prix, also coincidentally a race that both Sky and BBC broadcasted live.

The Qualifying figure of 348,000 combined with BBC’s overnight rating of 2.24 million (25.2% share), brings a total combined viewership of 2.60 million, about 300,000 viewers down on last year.

European Grand Prix ratings soar to twelve year high

Boring was not the word on anyone’s lips yesterday afternoon, and the viewers seemed to agree as the European Grand Prix soared to a twelve year ratings high on BBC One and Sky Sports F1. The two broadcasters recorded a combined peak of approximately six million viewers. Five million were watching on BBC One with a further one million approximately on Sky Sports F1. The exact Sky Sports F1 peak figure is unknown, but I suspect it is around the one million viewers region.

In terms of averages, the BBC programme from 12:10 to 15:15 recorded an average of 3.83 million, a 32 percent viewing share, with Sky Sports F1 adding half a million viewers on top of it. The split is a mammoth 88% in BBC’s favour versus 12% for Sky Sports F1. This is by far the biggest split between the two broadcasters in the races that both broadcasters’ have broadcast live, with the split normally nearer the 80% to 20% region.

Irrespective of the splits and who had what, the viewing figures were the highest since the 2000 running of the European Grand Prix, which will please broadcasters after the Canadian Grand Prix was hit very hard from Euro 2012. One thing the new deal is doing is making the ratings analysis much more difficult, instead of it just being a constant low four million or high three million depending on whether, there are other factors to take into account depending on whether Sky has exclusive rights to that particular race and what time BBC’s highlights are on, as we seen with Canada. Here is how the European Grand Prix has rated since 2000:

2000 – 4.85 million
2001 – 3.14 million
2002 – 3.20 million
2003 – 2.80 million
2004 – 2.79 million
2005 – 2.42 million
2006 – 2.50 million
2007 – 3.24 million
2008 – 2.64 million
2009 – 4.09 million
2010 – 3.50 million
2011 – 3.89 million
2012 – 4.33 million

So a super rating for it yesterday, even if it is dwarfed by another certain football rating

As of writing, I haven’t seen any Qualifying ratings so can’t comment on those.

Sky Sports F1 – Top 10 ratings (week ending 17th June, 2012)

From BARB:

1 – 47k – The F1 Show (Friday, 20:00)
2 – 25k – The F1 Show (Friday, 22:31)
3 – 20k – Legends (Friday, 19:00)
4 – 18k – Canadian Grand Prix Highlights (Monday, 16:30)
5 – 17k – Canadian Grand Prix Replay (Monday, 19:00)
6 – 16k – 2009 Season Review: Part 3 (Sunday, 21:00)
7 – 12k – 2009 Season Review: Part 2 (Saturday, 21:01)
8 – 11k – Bahrain Grand Prix Highlights (Saturday, 13:32)
9 – 8k – Fast Track (Tuesday, 19:31)
10 – 8k – Canadian Grand Prix Highlights (Tuesday, 21:02)

The F1 Show is unsurprisingly down from a high of 86,000 two weeks ago, but to be honest, I’m surprised it held up as well as it did here against England vs Sweden.

The rest of the schedule did normal figures, if anything slightly higher for some reason. The channel reach, though, just managed to avoid the record low it recorded two weeks ago, with a reach of 564,000 viewers compared with 560,000 viewers a fortnight ago.

Sky’s IndyCar scheduling this weekend

So this weekend there is Live IndyCars on Sky Sports 2 at 02:30. Which is fair enough, that’s just the luck of the draw unfortunately that some races are on in the early hours. What I don’t get, though, is where the repeats are scheduled, or rather the lack of repeats are scheduled on one particular channel. Scrolling through the channels, I see:

– 02:30 to 05:00 – Sky Sports 2 [live]
– 10:00 to 12:00 – Sky Sports 2 [repeat]
– 17:00 to 19:00 – Sky Sports 4 [repeat]
– 20:00 to 22:00 – Sky Sports 3 [repeat]

Two of the three repeats are either against F1 or Football while the other repeat is against the Legends programme featuring Mika Hakkinen on Sky Sports F1.

With scheduling like this, it is as if Sky are not willing to commit to IndyCars given the disastrous three thousand viewers last Saturday. Fact is there, there are a lot of people that want to watch IndyCars, but can’t. Why? Because they have Sky Sports F1 but don’t have the other Sky Sports channels. I outlined the various ratings reasons here, but to summarise, this is how the IndyCar Series has rated so far this season:

Round 1 – St. Petersburg
– first hour and a half shown behind Red Button due to Malaysian Grand Prix overrunning
– Sky Sports F1
– Sunday 25th March, 19:00 to 20:30
– programme average: 21,000 (0.09%)
– peak: 34,000 (0.15%) at 19:05

Round 2 – Barber
– Sky Sports 4
– Sunday 1st April, 20:00
– programme average: under 30,000; outside of BARB Top 10

Round 3 – Long Beach
– Sky Sports 4
– Sunday 15th April, 21:00
– programme average: under 25,000; outside of BARB Top 10

Round 4 – São Paulo
– was originally meant to be shown on Sky Sports 4, but moved to Sky Sports F1 as race time was moved earlier (more here)
– Sunday 29th April, 16:30 to 19:00
– programme average: 16,000

Round 5 – Indianapolis
– Sky Sports 4
– Sunday 27th May, 16:30 to 21:00
– programme average: 28,000
– peak: 53,000 at 17:20

Round 6 – Detroit
– Sky Sports 4
– Sunday 3rd June, 20:30 to 25:00
– programme average: under 35,000; outside of BARB Top 10

Round 7 – Texas
– Sky Sports 1
– Saturday 9th June, 01:30
– programme average: ???

Round 8 – Milwaukee
– Sky Sports 3
– Saturday 16th June, 18:00 to 22:00
– programme average: 3,000 (0.01%)
– race average from 20:00 to 22:00: 4,000 (0.02%)

The above ratings are criminally low, and are in fact lower than all live content that airs on Sky Sports F1, including GP2 and GP3. With that in mind, would it not make sense to move it to Sky Sports F1 to try and boost ratings?

The current schedule for this Sunday on Sky Sports F1 is:

09:30 – LIVE: GP2 Series
10:35 – filler
11:30 – LIVE: European Grand Prix
16:15 – NEW: Legends: Mika Hakkinen
17:15 – filler
19:00 – NEW: European Grand Prix Highlights
20:30 – Legends: Mika Hakkinen (R)
21:30 – GP2 Race 2 (R)
22:35 – European Grand Prix Highlights (R)
24:05 – Legends: Mika Hakkinen (R)
25:00 – off-air

Filler’s are in the wrong place there quite frankly. The schedule, in my opinion, should go:

09:30 – LIVE: GP2 Series
10:35 – NEW: Legends: Mika Hakkinen
11:30 – LIVE: European Grand Prix
16:15 – NEW: IndyCar Series
18:15 – NEW: European Grand Prix Highlights
19:15 – Legends: Mika Hakkinen (R)
20:15 – GP3 Race 1 (R)
21:00 – GP3 Race 2 (R)
21:50 – GP2 Race 1 (R)
23:15 – GP2 Race 2 (R)
24:20 – off-air

The schedule above has nine hours back-to-back of original content without any fillers to get into the way, with the highlights show sensibly on slightly earlier to avoid a clash with Euro 2012.

For those wondering, the Legends’ series has had:

– Nigel Mansell, 18th March: 76,000 (1.03%)
– Jody Scheckter, 25th March: 49,000 (0.65%)
– Alan Jones, 22nd April: 25,000 (0.16%)
– John Surtees, 13th May: 15,000 (0.10%)

So a timeslot change for itself to earlier in between GP2 and the main Formula 1 show on Sky may actually help it. Although I suspect for such a cheap programme, ratings are not as relevant, plus they are repeated multiple times so do their job well. Back to IndyCars though, and this particular Sunday moving the Legends programme to 10:30 would open up a slot for the IndyCar Series repeat to go into at 16:15 and give it some much needed exposure on Sky Sports F1.

Because let’s face it, the IndyCar Series ratings above are not only sad, but also plain embarrassing.