Five years since ITV F1

Today marks a fairly important anniversary in F1 Broadcasting folklore. At 19:15 on Sunday 2nd November 2008, Britain was celebrating a new Formula 1 champion. But, that day and time also marks the last time that ITV went off the air after a Formula 1 race, the corporation choosing to favour the UEFA Champions League and The FA Cup over broadcasting Formula 1.

I’ve blogged a lot about ITV F1 in the past eighteen months, some of which I have linked below:

A look back at ITV’s first live Formula 1 broadcast in 1997
International Motor Sport: why it desperately needs to return to terrestrial television
The new face of Formula 1
The [2008] deal that changed it all

It is easy to look back on ITV’s Formula 1 coverage like it was some kind of inferior product just because it had adverts. But in reality, ITV moved the goal posts from what BBC were offering before 1997. Based on site from day one, ITV had a full team led by Jim Rosenthal, Tony Jardine and Simon Taylor in the studio. James Allen and Louise Goodman were in pit lane with Martin Brundle and Murray Walker commentating. The air-time that ITV dedicated was significantly more than BBC before them, the build-up eventually becoming an hour in length as their air-time expanded further as years progressed.

The only major draw back for ITV aside from adverts was having to negotiate broadcasting hours for the early morning Asian races with GMTV, this notably resulted in many Asian Qualifying sessions not being broadcast live (this being an era where ITV were not allowed to broadcast ITV live on ITV2) and a trimmed down version of the race broadcast live from the London Studios. Undeniably their coverage did start to become stale throughout the Schumacher years, although given the quality of the racing, you could probably forgive them for that. Despite this, it is difficult to look back on their final three years of pre-race coverage, with Steve Rider and Mark Blundell with too many fond memories, sadly.

Replacing Murray Walker was an impossible job for Allen. It is a strange one for me, having grown up listening to Allen’s commentary, it didn’t feel or sound right at times, some of his moments especially in the early days sounded forced. Later on, his commentary did improve, although ITV’s coverage disappointingly turned into The Lewis Hamilton Show. Rider talked about this in his book, saying that after years of covering Schumacher’s dominance, there was a new stride in the team, with them finally able to cover a winning British driver at long last, and that it was only right that it would be covered adequately as possible. Allen’s replacement in the pit lane, Ted Kravitz worked on ITV’s F1 coverage from the beginning, starting off as an assistant producer in 1997, moving into an on-air role from 2002 onwards. It is somewhat disappointing looking back at Kravitz’s ITV days, only now with BBC’s and Sky’s expansive coverage do you realise how underused Kravitz was back then versus his BBC and Sky contributions since 2009.

Whilst Apollo 440’s ‘Blackbeat’ song was definitely no ‘The Chain’, the early intro titles for ITV were fairly good, although things went down hill in the latter years with Moby’s ‘Lift Me Up’ and the complete change of opening titles. In terms of their coverage highlights, USA 2005 has to be an instant highlight. ITV covered the events surrounding that race impeccably and fantastic. It was not all bad for Allen and Brundle, if USA 2005 was ITV’s best ever race, then Brazil 2008 will probably go down as one of the finest commentary calls in motor racing history, and by far their finest hour…

Brundle – Is that [Timo] Glock going slowly? That’s Glock!
Allen – Oh my goodness me! [Lewis] Hamilton’s back in position again! A hundred thousand Brazilian hearts sink as he crosses the line…
Brundle – YES!
Allen – …to become the 2008 Formula One World Champion!

It was one of those commentary moments, one that I will personally never forget watching. On that day, at that time, Allen and Brundle’s made that moment and critically, unlike many other Formula 1 commentators around the world, they called it right. A peak audience of over 13 million viewers watched that ending, the most watched Formula 1 moment in UK broadcasting history. I can’t finish off any nostalgia piece about ITV F1, without linking to this tribute, which they aired during their final weekend. Enjoy, if you can!

Schumacher vs Vettel: One of a Kind?

Last Sunday, Sebastian Vettel became only the fourth driver in Formula One history to win four Drivers’ Championships. Only three drivers have now won four championships consecutively: Juan Manuel Fangio, Michael Schumacher and Vettel. Arguably, if you are to look at the statistics, Vettel is now one of the greatest drivers’ this sport has ever seen. But, is what he has done so far enough to put him into Formula One folklore as a legend?

In my opinion, no. The simple answer is that Vettel needs to move teams and grow his wings. Break out from the Red Bull brand around him, and the familiarity of Horner and Newey. I would love to see Vettel in a McLaren or a Ferrari for example. Whether that will actually happen, I don’t know. But it is an interesting thought. I will always consider Schumacher above Vettel because he won two titles at Benetton, then moved to Ferrari and spent five seasons building the team around him before winning the title in 2000. It was a great story from 1996 to 2000 that led to that moment. Fangio back in the 1950’s won titles with multiple teams. I’d like to see Vettel do the same with another team. One day, I hope.

But the on-track circumstances surrounding Schumacher’s and Vettel’s dominance were extremely different. Schumacher’s Ferrari dominance was during an era of refuelling, where races would often be decided during the pit-stops in the middle of a fierce tyre war with Michelin debuting in 2001. Also, TV coverage back in the early 2000’s was not as good for the terrestrial television viewer, whilst there probably was a great battle for sixth position, the TV director chose not to focus on it, with F1 Digital+ leading the way. Compare that to now. Pirelli is the sole tyre supplier who are between a rock and a hard place and we now have fancy gimmicks (rightly or wrongly) such as DRS and KERS. There is no denying that, despite how flawed and frustrating DRS has been as of late, the Formula 1 of 2013 is more superior in most respects to that of the early 2000’s. The TV coverage undeniably helps.

The question you have to ask is: does one person’s dominance for a long period of time have a negative impact on the sport? On one hand, you could say that one man’s greatness and dominance should be admired. Which is true. But where Formula 1 is concerned, the casual audience simply does not care about those down the order. They don’t care about who finishes 8th on Sunday, for example. All they are tuning in for is to see who wins. And if the same person is winning week after week, then that is going to have a profound effect.This does not apply to all the casual viewers, I imagine there are some who thoroughly enjoy a battle down the field as much as a lead battle. But generally, I suspect most casual fans tune in for the scrap at the front. So, has Formula 1’s UK viewing figures dropped over the past few years, and if so, is this due to Vettel’s dominance? The early 2000’s in the United Kingdom with Schumacher seen an ‘F1 turn off’ with viewing figures plunging from 4 million to 3 million during Schumacher’s reign, to 2.5 million in 2006.

 A comparison of the UK F1 ratings during Schumacher's (2000 to 2004) and Vettel's (2010 to 2013) respective dominance.
A comparison of the UK F1 ratings during Schumacher’s (2000 to 2004) and Vettel’s (2010 to 2013) respective dominance.

Throughout Schumacher’s championship winning years, the general trend was downwards. 2001 dropped from 2000, 2002 dropped from 2001 and 2004 dropped from 2003. 2003 was more or less in line with 2002, and is within the margin of error, as shown on the graph above. This should be considered no surprise given the raft of regulation changes between 2002 and 2003 designed to tighten the pack up. It worked, as the title race went to the final round, albeit it did not stop Schumacher from winning a fourth consecutive championship.

It was 2004 where figures plunged, like 2002, Schumacher dominated the year and the championship was wrapped up by the Summer. Between 2000 and 2004, ITV’s Formula 1 audience had shrunk by a quarter. The broadcasting hours that they were giving Formula 1 were relatively stable: an hours build-up with about fifteen minutes analysis on a good day. With that in mind, and you can see why the drop was purely due to the action on the track given that nothing had changed outside of the race itself in terms of coverage (aside from the crew moving to studio to paddock for the start of the 2004 season).

 A comparison of the UK F1 ratings during Schumacher's (2000 to 2004) and Vettel's (2010 to 2013) respective dominance. Percentages represent comparisons with the base year, 2000 and 2010 respectively.
A comparison of the UK F1 ratings during Schumacher’s (2000 to 2004) and Vettel’s (2010 to 2013) respective dominance. Percentages represent comparisons with the base year, 2000 and 2010 respectively.

The above re-iterates my point about Formula 1 losing a quarter of its audience between 2000 and 2004, a significant amount. Interestingly, the decline did not stop there, Fernando Alonso did not reverse the UK ratings doldrums, only Lewis Hamilton could do that in 2007. Fast forward to 2010 and another young German emerges. This time, in a Red Bull, and now Formula 1 was live on BBC. More coverage, and more exposure across with coverage on radio, television and interactive. The result? Ratings in 2011 soared to a fifteen year high, despite Vettel emerging as the next big talent. Now, was the rise because of the racing or because of the coverage? A combination, in my view. The two went hand-in-hand. In this case, the casuals were interested, and they kept watching and coming back in their droves.

Inevitably the television deal with Sky Sports changed that, combined with the Olympics and Euro 2012, and viewing figures soon dropped. The first graph I think tells the whole story here when comparing with Schumacher’s dominance. The dotted line does not account for Sky’s longer air-time whereas the continuous line does. Figures dropped between 2011 and 2012 by half a million viewers, the same amount as ITV’s coverage dropped between 2001 and 2002 and then 2003 and 2004. Percentage wise the drop was slightly bigger, but concerning all the same. The 2013 season is not yet over, therefore it is impossible to say anything definite, however it appears that there has been a slight rise between 2012 and 2013, which I have put in the graph above.

The picture appeared brighter in the Summer. Unsurprisingly, Vettel’s dominance means that the audience has eroded slightly. We will only know the full picture at the end of the season. At this point in Schumacher’s championship winning years, Formula 1 had lost 15 percent of its audience between 2000 and 2003. In comparison, that compares with 5 percent (when taking into account Sky’s longer air-time) audience loss between 2010 and 2013. All in all, that is really not a bad state of affairs when things could have been significantly worse. It will be very interesting to see what happens with 2014. No doubt we will get the headlines “will rule changes stop Vettel’s dominance?” and the such like. Only time will tell.

Vettel’s title win improves on 2012 Indian Grand Prix rating

The Indian Grand Prix yesterday was seen by approximately 4 million viewers, overnight viewing figures suggest. The figure represents an increase on 2012, where only Sky Sports F1 shown it live, but a hefty drop on 2011. BBC One’s live airing averaged 2.53 million viewers from 08:30 to 11:45. Sky Sports F1, failed to make ITV Media‘s multi-channel top ten for last Sunday meaning it was perhaps unsurprisingly under 626,000 viewers. In comparison, BBC One’s live airing in 2011 had 4.18 million viewers, so we can already see the big drop.

BBC One’s repeat airing had under 1.38 million viewers. Nevertheless, we can see that there is a fairly big drop on 2011, although up on last year. For what it is worth, I will continue recording Sky’s full programme numbers even though they have split it into three. For 2014, if it is a three piece programme for the entire season, then I will only record the main race segment figure for the purpose of these blogs.

Indian Grand Prix – Official Ratings
2011 – 5.61 million
2012 – 3.46 million / 3.67 million (using ‘35 percent theory‘)
– overnight figures were 3.48 million / 3.66 million
2013 – 4.13 million / 4.27 million (overnight rating)
– rough estimate and subject to revision

The 2013 figure may fluctuate a few hundred thousand either way, but I think we can definitely say it was up and 2012, but down on 2011. I think it is an okay rating, but not spectacular when you consider that it was the title decider. It will be interesting to see the ratings for the final few races. Abu Dhabi and Brazil should be okay, but USA could be very low, with Sky exclusivity and BBC airing at 22:30.

The 2012 Indian Grand Prix ratings report can be found here.

Motor sport ratings (week ending 20th October, 2013)

Sadly there is not a lot to the motor sport ratings round-up from BARB this week. Motors TV did not report any ratings, whilst the final round of the IndyCar Series failed to make BT Sport 2’s top ten, meaning it had under 12,000 viewers.

The F1 Show recorded one of its lowest figures to date for a studio based edition on Friday 18th October. The figure, the lowest of the year, averaged 18,000 viewers. It was a low week across the channel, only five shows averaged above 10,000 viewers, which is really disastrous overall nearly two years in. I think the mid-week schedule outside of race weekends has to be more structured, because there is absolutely zero flow to the schedules at the moment, it could be described as one programme after the other with no real meaning.

Scheduling: The 2013 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix

With both championships now over, the last three races are probably more of a formality. The first of those three races takes us to Abu Dhabi, where both the GP2 Series and GP3 Series come to a conclusion.

Sky are also screening in full the 2009, 2010 and 2011 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix’s in the build-up to the weekend’s race. A reminder too of their new format, first implemented in India, where the race show will be split into three: track parade, race and Paddock Live. Paddock Live is fifteen minutes longer this week, meaning that the ‘race show’ is fifteen minutes shorter. Clearly someone up high has decided that three quarters through their second year doing Formula 1 is the perfect time to tweak it. Right

Tuesday 29th October
20:00 to 22:15 – F1: 2009 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix (Sky Sports F1)
– commentary from Jonathan Legard and Martin Brundle
– repeated on Friday 1st November at 18:00

Wednesday 30th October
20:00 to 22:15 – F1: 2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix (Sky Sports F1)
– commentary from Jonathan Legard and Martin Brundle
– repeated on Saturday 2nd November at 15:20

Thursday 31st October
11:00 to 11:45 – F1: Driver Press Conference (Sky Sports F1)
19:00 to 19:15 – Gear Up for Abu Dhabi (Sky Sports F1)
21:00 to 22:00 – F1: Preview (BBC Radio 5 Live)
20:00 to 22:15 – F1: 2011 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix (Sky Sports F1)
– commentary from Martin Brundle and David Coulthard
– repeated on Sunday 3rd November at 20:15

Friday 1st November
06:15 to 06:50 – GP2: Practice (Sky Sports F1)
08:45 to 10:50 – F1: Practice 1 (Sky Sports F1)
08:55 to 10:35 – F1: Practice 1 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
12:45 to 14:55 – F1: Practice 2 (Sky Sports F1)
12:55 to 14:35 – F1: Practice 2 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
14:55 to 15:35 – GP2: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
16:15 to 17:00 – 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 2nd November
06:00 to 06:35 – GP3: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
08:05 to 09:30 – GP2: Race 1 (Sky Sports F1)
09:45 to 11:10 – F1: Practice 3 (Sky Sports F1)
09:55 to 11:05 – F1: Practice 3 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
12:00 to 14:30 – F1: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
12:55 to 14:05 – F1: Qualifying (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
14:30 to 15:20 – GP3: Race 1 (Sky Sports F1)
17:10 to 18:15 – F1: Qualifying Highlights (BBC One)
19:45 to 20:00 – Inside F1 (BBC News Channel)

Sunday 3rd November
07:55 to 08:45 – GP3: Race 2 (Sky Sports F1)
09:10 to 10:15 – GP2: Race 2 (Sky Sports F1)
11:30 to 16:15 – F1: Race (Sky Sports F1)
=> 11:30 – Track Parade
=> 12:00 – Race
=> 15:15 – Paddock Live
12:50 to 15:00 – F1: Race (BBC Radio 5 Live)
16:15 to 17:15 – Architects of F1: Jo Ramirez (Sky Sports F1)
16:30 to 18:00 – F1: Race Highlights (BBC One)

Wednesday 6th November
19:00 to 19:30 – Midweek Report (Sky Sports F1)