Popularity Contest: Baseball vs. Football
NFL scores big with fans, but the
national pastime isn’t past its time
By Jo Craven McGinty in the Wall Street Journal
Baseball is slow, low-scoring and
quiet—the opposite of the fast, loud and violent game of football. But is
baseball really dying in the shadow of its flashier rival?
While football is undoubtedly very
popular, the numbers show that the demise of the sport known as the national
pastime has been considerably exaggerated.
Since it is spring and the
pinstripes are finally out, let’s take a swing at another of America’s favorite
pastimes: debating the popularity of Major League Baseball and the National
Football League—and to make it interesting, let’s keep score.
If luring raw numbers of fans to stadiums
is the best measure of success, baseball blows football away.
Last year, 73.7 million people
attended professional baseball games. That’s less than the peak of 79.5 million
in 2007, before the financial crisis siphoned off some fans, but the total
number of people going to NFL games has never come close. Last year, only 17.6
million people attended professional football games, the high for the sport.
But wait! Total attendance ignores
the fact that Major League Baseball teams play 162 games in the regular
season—or 2,430 games total—compared with only 16 regular-season games for NFL
teams, or 256 in all. So on a per-game basis, an average of 30,345 people
attended each MLB contest, compared with 68,776 for each NFL game (usually in
bigger stadiums).
Point: Tie between MLB and NFL. (I know, a cop-out, but we’re
comparing spheroids and balls here.)
OK, let’s view the question from
another perspective: the attention each sport commands.
The NFL season is short. The regular
season enthralls the nation for a mere 17 weeks. It’s the sport equivalent of a
raucous fling.
MLB by contrast inspires devotion.
It absorbs the public’s attention for 180 days, a season twice as long as the
NFL’s.
NFL games are largely confined to
Sundays, with single games played on Mondays and Thursdays for most of the
season. Baseball is played every day—often during the workweek. Yet on
Tuesdays, the day with the worst attendance last year, baseball still, on average,
pulled in 27,000 fans.
Point: MLB
If baseball wins for a devoted fan
base, the NFL has the edge when it comes to money.
According to Forbes magazine, which
compiles the information annually, the NFL’s revenues exceeded $9.5 billion in
2014, while MLB’s revenue was just over $7.8 billion. MLB isn’t hurting, but
the winner here is unambiguous.
Point: NFL
So, which sport do people say they
like better?
Since 1937, Gallup has asked survey
participants which sport they prefer to watch. The question leaves a lot to the
imagination. As Gallup editor in chief Frank Newport notes: “I might say my
favorite sport to watch is football, but in fact, I don’t watch much football
at all.”
That said, in 2013, the last time
the question was asked, 39% of those surveyed said football is their favorite
sport to watch, while only 14% said they favor baseball. Until the 1960s,
baseball had the edge.
Pew Research Center takes a
different approach in its poll. It asks whether fans followed the World Series
or the Super Bowl very closely, fairly closely, not too closely, or not at all
closely.
Twenty-three percent said they
followed the Super Bowl very closely, while 16% said they followed the World
Series very closely.
In some ways it is an unfair
comparison. Following the World Series closely requires paying attention to a
series of games played on seven different days, including weekdays. The Super
Bowl is a single-elimination game played on a Sunday.
Point: NFL, on a technicality
When it comes to which game is
viewed more, the NFL rules, according to statistics compiled by Nielsen. The
biggest mismatch is the championship games.
Last year, the Super Bowl attracted
an average of 112 million viewers, putting it among the most watched events in
television history, many of which are Super Bowls. Meanwhile, only 13.8 million
on average watched the World Series across seven telecasts.
The NFL also beat MLB on mobile
devices. Fans spent 5.3 billion minutes on NFL Mobile, compared with 4.6
billion minutes on MLB At Bat, according to Nielsen. And on computers, NFL.com
had an average unique audience of 3.3 billion, compared with 2.4 billion for
MLB.com.
Point: NFL
Among markets with both professional
football and baseball teams, MLB teams outranked the NFL in the number of adult
fans who have watched, attended or listened to games in six cities, including
Atlanta, Tampa, Detroit, Boston and New York, according to Nielsen.
But 13 NFL teams outranked MLB teams
playing in the same market, in Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver,
Houston, Kansas City, Miami, Minneapolis, Pittsburgh, San Diego, Seattle and
Washington.
Point: NFL
When it comes to gambling, the NFL
blows away MLB—and some people suspect this helps explain football’s
popularity.
Last year, bettors wagered $1.75
billion on football in Nevada, compared with $721 million on baseball.
According to Rodney Paul, a sports
economist and professor of sports management at Syracuse University, there is a
statistically significant relationship between the volume of betting on
football and television ratings for the sport.
“The level of interest in the
gambling market before a game starts is a good predictor of what will happen
with viewership when the game does actually start,” he says. “If gambling on
the game is popular, viewership will be popular.”
Point: NFL
By most of these measures, the NFL
comes out ahead—perhaps arguably in some instances. But as the figures show,
baseball is far from dead.
Attendance is steady, revenue is
strong, and fans spend substantial amounts of time on the game—statistics that
don’t always get emphasized in the news media’s narrative about the Old Ball
Game.
“Baseball is still very popular,”
says Sean Forman, president of Sports Reference, a website devoted to sports
statistics. “It’s just popular in a different way than football is.”
The entire post with
graphics, pics, and comments can be found at:
http://www.wsj.com/articles/popularity-contest-baseball-vs-football-1428679449

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