Football competition hurts Chinese Grand Prix ratings

Competition from Sky Sports 1’s Ford Super Sunday and ITV’s coverage of The FA Cup yesterday dented Formula 1’s ratings yesterday, overnight figures show. BBC One’s re-run show averaged only 1.35 million viewers, the lowest ever figure for a Chinese Grand Prix re-run. On Sky, their second Ford Super Sunday game from 14:00 averaged 1.21 million viewers, whilst ITV’s FA Cup coverage had over 4 million viewers.

The dent in the re-run rating did not increase the live ratings, as both BBC and Sky were down year-on-year. BBC One’s live coverage brought 2.58 million (35.6 percent) to the channel, compared with 2.85 million (39.4 percent) last year. Sky averaged 455,000 viewers from 06:30 to 11:00, compared with 480,000 from 06:30 to 11:30 last year. Overall, here is a summary of the overnight race ratings:

2008 – 4.42 million (2.44m + 1.98m)
2009 – 4.63 million (3.23m + 1.40m)
2010 – 4.70 million (3.17m + 1.53m)
2011 – 4.74 million (3.27m + 1.47m)
2012 – 4.93 million (2.85m + 1.60m + 480k)
2013 – 4.38 million (2.58m + 1.35m + 455k)

The live race on BBC One peaked with 3.88 million, compared with 4.21 million last year; Sky’s peak being 846,000 viewers versus 887,000 viewers last year. Whilst the football was a valid reason for the BBC’s re-run ratings, it does not explain the drop for the race ratings, especially when you consider that a Brit was on pole.

Whilst the race was down year-on-year, Qualifying and Practice performed very well, soaring to record highs for China despite the farce that Qualifying turned into. BBC’s live coverage averaged 1.13 million, up on 1.09 million last year. The re-run averaged 1.90 million (20.6 percent) versus 1.17 million (11.9 percent) last year, albeit last year’s Qualifying re-run was on BBC Two. Sky’s coverage was marginally up – 283,000 viewers versus 251,000 viewers last year. Here is a round-up of Qualifying in China:

2008 – 1.96 million (0.63m + 1.33m)
2009 – 2.90 million (1.00m + 1.90m)
2010 – 2.30 million (1.13m + 1.17m)
2011 – 2.93 million (1.38m + 1.55m)
2012 – 2.53 million (1.09m + 1.17m + 251k)
2013 – 3.31 million (1.13m + 1.90m + 287k)

Finally practice on BBC Two performed very solidly for the channel. Live coverage of practice 2 averaged 201,000 viewers, whilst the re-runs averaged 311,000 viewers and 470,000 viewers.

Scheduling: The 2013 Bahrain Grand Prix

From China, the teams and drivers quickly move onto the Bahrain Grand Prix. As usual, Sky will be screening five previous races from the circuit – in this case 2006 through to 2010. GP2 is also back on the schedule after not appearing in China, this being round two of their season. Below are all the details you need:

Tuesday 16th April
20:00 to 22:15 – F1: 2006 Bahrain Grand Prix (Sky Sports F1)
– commentary from James Allen and Martin Brundle
– repeated on Friday 19th April at 23:10
22:15 to 00:30 – F1: 2007 Bahrain Grand Prix (Sky Sports F1)
– commentary from James Allen and Martin Brundle
– repeated on Saturday 20th April at 15:05

Wednesday 17th April
20:00 to 22:15 – F1: 2008 Bahrain Grand Prix (Sky Sports F1)
– commentary from James Allen and Martin Brundle
– repeated on Saturday 20th April at 20:15
22:15 to 00:30 – F1: 2009 Bahrain Grand Prix (Sky Sports F1)
– commentary from Jonathan Legard and Martin Brundle
– repeated on Sunday 21st April at 06:30

Thursday 18th April
13:00 to 13:45 – F1: Driver Press Conference (Sky Sports F1)
18:15 to 18:30 – F1: Gear Up for Bahrain (Sky Sports F1)
20:00 to 22:15 – F1: 2010 Bahrain Grand Prix (Sky Sports F1)
– commentary from Jonathan Legard and Martin Brundle
– repeated on Sunday 14th April at 20:45
21:00 to 21:30 – F1: Preview (BBC Radio 5 Live)

Friday 19th April
07:45 to 09:55 – F1: Practice 1 (Sky Sports F1)
07:55 to 09:35 – F1: Practice 1 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
09:55 to 10:35 – GP2: Practice (Sky Sports F1)
11:45 to 13:55 – F1: Practice 2 (Sky Sports F1)
11:55 to 13:35 – F1: Practice 2 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
13:55 to 14:35 – GP2: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
15:00 to 15:45 – F1: Team Press Conference (Sky Sports F1)
16:00 to 17:00 – The F1 Show (Sky Sports F1)
18:45 to 19:00 – Inside F1 (BBC News Channel)

Saturday 20th April
08:45 to 10:10 – F1: Practice 3 (Sky Sports F1)
08:55 to 10:05 – F1: Practice 3 (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
11:00 to 13:40 – F1: Qualifying (Sky Sports F1)
11:55 to 13:05 – F1: Qualifying (BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra)
13:40 to 15:05 – GP2: Race 1 (Sky Sports F1)
17:10 to 18:25 – F1: Qualifying (BBC One)
19:45 to 20:00 – Inside F1 (BBC News Channel)

Sunday 21st April
08:45 to 09:50 – GP2: Race 2 (Sky Sports F1)
11:30 to 16:00 – F1: Race (Sky Sports F1)
13:00 to 14:45 – F1: Race (BBC Radio 5 Live)
16:00 to 16:45 – GP Uncovered: Stirling Moss (Sky Sports F1)
17:00 to 18:35 – F1: Race (BBC One)

As always, if anything changes, I will update the schedule.

Your Formula 1 2013 television viewing habits revealed

Throughout the past month, you have been giving your thoughts and details as to how you plan to consume Formula 1 this season versus 2012. The findings are not meant to be representative of the entire population, but merely a snapshot, of what my blog readers think as the season is in its early stages. In total, nearly 250 people contributed to the survey from many different corners of the globe. For analysis purposes, I have chosen to remove anyone not based in the United Kingdom or Ireland. This does not reduce the contribution significantly, but I feel it is worth noting.

General Conclusions
– 20 percent of readers have changed their viewing habits between 2012 and 2013
– 65 percent of Sky subscribers have watched Sky Sports F1 since launch compared with only 15 percent of people with Virgin Media
– 19 percent of Sky subscribers have not watched Sky Sports F1 compared with 58 percent of Virgin Media subscribers

The main overriding general conclusion concerns the big flip between Sky and Virgin Media. On Sky, from launch customers with either the HD or the Sports pack could view Sky Sports F1. But if you were with Virgin Media, you could only view it with the Sports pack and subscribers to the cable service have not had access to Sky Sports F1 in HD. No doubt the Virgin Media set of figures would be higher if Sky Sports F1 was placed differently pack-wise – but that is out of their control as they would need permission off Sky first.

Audience trends
– Sky Sports year-on-year remains identical
– BBC TV and Radio consumption drops year-on-year
– ‘Other’ viewing drops year-on-year

The above came as a surprise to myself, when you consider that the opposite has happened to the viewing figures so far this year. Like I said earlier, the above is not meant to be applied to the general population. For example, this blog is a specialist Formula 1 blog whereas the total Formula 1 audience stretches into the millions – many casual. It is nevertheless an interesting snapshot to see the Sky’s trend year-on-year is stable, suggesting that they are appeasing the more dedicated fan.

Change versus 2012
The final three questions asked whether readers were more likely or less likely to watch BBC or Sky versus 2012. I was expecting this to be largely ‘no change’ for most readers but the result was significantly different to what I anticipated. Only 43.5 percent said that there was no change as to whether they consume BBC coverage in 2013 versus 2012, compared with 53 percent for Sky. For both channels though, the amount of people more likely to consume their coverage in 2013 was higher than those less likely to consume the coverage. Whilst the overall audience trend appears near identical year-on-year, it appears within that a lot of viewers have moved about, possibly switching who they view Formula 1 with.

As I said at the beginning, the poll is by no means definitive, but is there to just give a snapshot of the picture from my blog readers. As always, your thoughts and comments are welcome.

The full poll results can be found here, and the original post is here.

“Promote: 5.1 Audio as well as ‘stunning HD'”

Today the Sky F1 Insider Twitter account thought they would give readers inside access to their scripts for the weekends, by taking a picture of the front page of all six shows.

Sky F1 script.

The front page of each script contains a list of all the on-air and off-air talent for each show, from Martin Turner downwards. It looks like for each show, fifteen people are credited on there, alongside the on-air people, varying from five for The F1 Show to more for other shows.

Finally, we then get a big strap, which says:

PROMOTE: 5.1 AUDIO AS WELL AS “STUNNING HD”

Now, at this point I will say that I have no idea if things such as this are common in broadcasting or if it just specific to Sky, but I would ask:

a) what is the benefit of promoting it during the show?
b) what is the benefit of promoting it during every show when most viewers are the same and therefore already know about this
c) why is this big and bold on the front and made out to be the most important thing. I would be more interested in delivering high quality VT’s than the audio and picture that I am receiving.
d) is this a Sky F1 directive, or is this a directive from high up? If it is the latter, I would love to know why

I don’t know the answer to the above, but I don’t understand the logic in promoting this – all the viewers watching will already know about it, so in my opinion it has very little purpose – apart from them boasting about their own product.

Sky Sports F1 – Top 10 ratings (week ending 31st March, 2013)

From BARB:

1 – 110k – The F1 Show (Thursday, 20:00)
2 – 22k – 2009 German Grand Prix (Saturday, 21:01)
3 – 17k – Inside Track: Horner on Malaysia (Friday, 21:00)
4 – 15k – Ted’s Malaysian Race Notebook (Tuesday, 23:05)
5 – 15k – The F1 Show (Sunday, 10:00)
6 – 14k – Inside Track: Horner on Malaysia (Sunday, 20:32)
7 – 14k – Martin’s Malaysian Grid Walk (Tuesday, 23:20)
8 – 14k – The F1 Show (Friday, 20:00)
9 – 13k – Inside Track: Horner on Malaysia (Thursday, 24:45)
10 – 13k – Malaysian Grand Prix Replay (Monday, 19:01)

Superb rating for The F1 Show, its second highest rating ever, only behind the launch show in March 2012, which had over 200k.