Italian Grand Prix records highest rating since 1998

In a season where Formula 1’s television ratings are topsy-turvy, with only large gains and large falls seemingly on the agenda, both BBC and Sky will be pleased to know that the Italian Grand Prix falls into the former category. The race, won by Lewis Hamilton, recorded the highest rating since 1998. BBC One’s highlights programme at 17:35 averaged 3.57 million viewers (21% share), with Sky Sports F1’s live broadcast from 11:30 to 16:05 averaging a further 650,000 viewers (7.3% share), bringing the total to 4.22 million viewers. In 1998, the Grand Prix had 4.65 million viewers as viewers took to the Mika Hakkinen and Michael Schumacher title feud massively in that year. Since then, Italy has always been under 4 million, until last year when it had 4.17 million viewers. The short length does not really help it, after all I am looking at the programme averages with all the above figures. The reason it is the highest since 1998 I think falls down to several reasons.

The first one is that the Grand Prix is ‘made’ for highlights. That quote comes from Jake Humphrey, and although I disagree with the quote in principle (as I think that there really is nothing better than seeing it live), from a broadcasting perspective I can see where he is coming from. The Italian Grand Prix, traditionally is the shortest on the calendar which means that you don’t have to make many edits when it comes to the highlights show, compared to say with the European Grand Prix – Italy lasted 80 minutes, whereas Valencia back in June averaged 105 minutes. Fitting the latter in a 90 minute primetime slot would be difficult, normally it wouldn’t be, but I think most reading this would appreciate that Valencia was probably one of the best races of the season so far.

Secondly, there was not much competition around yesterday aside from the Paralympics, which would have helped both the highlights and the live shows as there was no Live Ford Super Sunday to go up against on Sky Sports 1. As I demonstrated last weekend, the football can take a chunk out of the Formula 1. Saying that I did expect Sky Sports F1’s figure to be slightly higher than 650,000, but the warm weather may have knocked a few viewers off it. The final reason is probably Eddie Jordan. Not specifically him, but his leak last Wednesday. Some may not agree with me here, but it does Formula 1 no good when it is out of the headlines for several weeks, hence why we had a low rating from Belgium. Maybe the BBC seen that and had Jordan leak information to bring Formula 1 back in the headlines and the viewers back to the sport. I know, it seems a little convenient the timing, but it’s just a thought as there was nothing Formula 1 related in the press over the Summer and no one had moved anywhere – surprisingly.

Qualifying had 2.1 million viewers (a 16.7% share) on BBC One, Sky Sports F1 had under 470,000 viewers, so it looks like Qualifying was down on last year’s 2.80 million viewers, but in line with the 2.47 million viewers recorded in 2010.

2012 ratings are sourced from the ITV Media website.

Belgian Grand Prix slumps to five year ratings low

Formula 1’s difficult Summer ratings wise continued as the Belgian Grand Prix recorded the lowest rating for a Grand Prix race since the 2008 season. In terms of averages, from 12:10 to 15:15, BBC averaged 2.77 million viewers, a low 24 percent share of the total audience, while from 11:00 to 16:15, Sky Sports F1 averaged a very low 335,000 viewers. I’ll deal with the Sky Sports average first for those thinking that the low average is due to the long build-up.

For example purposes, assume the 11:00 to 11:30 portion averaged 50,000, which seems a reasonable number. That would mean that from 11:30 to 16:15, Sky Sports F1 averaged 360,000 viewers. That, along with BBC’s 2.77 million viewers averages 3.13 million viewers, which is still a low for the season so far. Using the 35.1 percent theory, then from 12:10 to 15:15, Sky Sports F1 averaged 486,000 viewers. Add that to the 2.77 million for BBC F1 and you get 3.26 million viewers. For the purposes of tracking the ratings in my spreadsheet, I will use the 3.10 million figure which comes from adding 2.77 million and 335,000 together, but in contrast to previous years for the Belgian Grand Prix:

– 2007: 2.56 million
– 2008: 3.68 million
– 2009: 3.38 million
– 2010: 4.08 million
– 2011: 3.76 million
– 2012: 3.26 million (direct comparison)/3.10 million (full programmes)

I know the above paragraph to some may seem tedious, but I am just putting the facts out there that, no matter which way you look at the ratings, that there is a drop in comparison to previous years. It is an undeniable fact that, irrespective of how you use the programme averages, that the Belgian Grand Prix average was the lowest since 2007. The peak yesterday of 4.58 million was the lowest since 2009, 2010 and 2011 both recorded peaks of over 5 million while 2009 had a peak of just under 4.5 million. That doesn’t mean 2009 did worse, arguably 2009 did better than yesterday, 2009 – as have all previous years – been on Bank Holiday weekends whereas yesterday was not, and if you remember both Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton went out on lap 1 in 2009, no doubt removing some of the casual interest. The peak splits down as 3.69 million on BBC One and 889,000 on Sky Sports F1, which is a split of 80.6% versus 19.4%. That is closer than previous splits, the previous peak splits having been around 84% versus 16%.

As a comparison, the 3.13 million viewers that I have quoted in the second paragraph would make the Belgian Grand Prix the lowest rating Formula 1 race since the 2008 Japanese Grand Prix, while the 3.10 million viewer number would take you back to the 2008 European Grand Prix.

One factor for the low rating yesterday was tougher competition, firstly from the Paralympic Games. Normally, Channel 4 on a Sunday afternoon would probably struggle to get over 500,000 viewers, whereas yesterday it probably had three times that number, although I have seen no specifics regarding their afternoon average. Another factor, ironically has to be the football on Sky Sports 1. The first game, Liverpool vs Arsenal, from 13:00 to 15:30, averaged 1.33 million viewers in that time period.

So while the ratings were down, it is not a case of “it’s because of the new deal”, it is simply an unusual case of where there were two other big sporting occasions clashing with the Formula 1 which hurt it’s overall rating. That seems to be the situation constantly throughout the season so far, doesn’t it?

Sky Sports F1 – Top 10 ratings (week ending 26th August, 2012)

From BARB:

1 – 41k – The F1 Show (Friday, 20:00)
2 – 16k – Fast Track (Monday, 18:00)
3 – 16k – F1 Legends (Thursday, 22:15)
4 – 16k – 1988 Season Review (Thursday, 21:00)
5 – 14k – 1989 Season Review (Friday, 21:00)
6 – 13k – F1 Legends (Thursday, 23:15)
7 – 10k – Hungarian Grand Prix Replay (Sunday, 11:00)
8 – 9k – Fast Track (Tuesday, 18:00)
9 – 7k – Fast Track (Wednesday, 18:32)
10 – 7k – German Grand Prix Highlights (Wednesday, 19:31)

The F1 Show recorded its highest figure for a studio show since the edition on July 13th, when it had 45k. The two season reviews also performed respectably.

One thing I am going to do with this weekly blog post is that, while the title will stay the same, I am going to include any other motor sport figures that I spot in the BARB Top 10’s. With that in mind, the Speedway Grand Prix on August 25th had 96,000 viewers at 17:30 on Sky Sports 2.

Scheduling: The Italian Grand Prix

The best double header of the season, without question, continues next weekend with the Italian Grand Prix at the wonderful Monza circuit. This is one of the races that BBC TV will be providing highlights only for, meaning that Sky Sports have exclusive live coverage of the weekend’s action.

One minor point to note, for those that watch is, is that GP3 Qualifying is on earlier than usual on Saturday, with Qualifying starting at 08:00 UK time instead of 08:45 UK time. The same also applies for the GP3 Race on Sunday, with the race beginning at 08:00 UK time instead of 08:25 UK time. The Radio Times website has the normal times, I am basing the below from what the official Formula1.com website says.

Away from TV, I have listed the BBC Radio times below as I usually do for when BBC TV is not live. For Italy, however, none of the practice sessions are live on BBC Radio due to the Paralympic Games, with only Qualifying and Race live on BBC Radio 5 Live. I imagine a link will be put up on the BBC F1 website for those wanting to listen, however.

For those of you wishing to whet your appetite, the BBC Red Button will have Classic Italian Grand Prix’s from Wednesday night onwards. The races that will be re-shown in extended highlights form are 1987, 1988, 1990, 1994 and 1995, thanks to the BBC’s Tom Bowker on Twitter for the information.

Thursday 6th September
14:00 to 14:45 – F1: Driver Press Conference (Sky Sports F1)

Friday 7th September
08:45 to 10:50 – F1: Practice 1 (Sky Sports F1)
10:55 to 11:35 – GP2: Practice (Sky Sports F1)
12:45 to 14:50 – F1: Practice 2 (Sky Sports F1)
14:50 to 15:40 – GP2: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
16:00 to 16:45 – F1: Team Press Conference (Sky Sports F1)
17:00 to 18:00 – The F1 Show (Sky Sports F1)
18:45 to 19:00 – Inside F1 (BBC News Channel)

Saturday 8th September
07:55 to 08:35 – GP3: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
09:45 to 11:10 – F1: Practice 3 (Sky Sports F1)
12:00 to 14:35 – F1: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
13:00 to 14:00 – F1: Qualifying (BBC Radio 5 Live)
14:35 to 16:05 – GP2: Race 1 (Sky Sports F1)
16:15 to 17:05 – GP3: Race 1 (Sky Sports F1)
17:15 to 18:35 – F1: Qualifying Highlights (BBC One)
18:45 to 19:00 – Inside F1 (BBC News Channel)

Sunday 9th September
07:55 to 08:45 – GP3: Race 2 (Sky Sports F1)
09:30 to 10:35 – GP2: Race 2 (Sky Sports F1)
11:30 to 16:05 – F1: Race (Sky Sports F1)
13:00 to 14:30 – F1: Race (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
17:35 to 19:05 – F1: Race Highlights (BBC One)
19:05 to 20:05 – F1: Forum (BBC Red Button)

As always, the timings are subject to slight alterations, so I shall update this blog if and when that happens.

Update on September 5th: As a result on Jerome d’Ambrosio replacing Romain Grosjean at Lotus for Monza, Dani Clos will be alongside Will Buxton for GP2.

Inside Track: Pastor Maldonaldo airing on Sky Sports F1 this weekend

It looks like Pastor Maldonaldo gets his own half an hour programme on Sky Sports F1 this weekend, with Natalie Pinkham presenting the one-off programme as she goes and sees Maldonaldo out in Venezuela during the Summer break. The programme airs at the following times:

– Sunday 2nd September, 16:15
– Sunday 2nd September, 18:30
– Sunday 2nd September, 22:30
– Monday 3rd September, 24:15
– Tuesday 4th September, 20:00

The programme follows a similar extended interview programme with Jenson Button from back in July.