Inside The Numbers: Bowl Ratings and Attendance Back in issue #2, a contact in the television industry sent me a spreadsheet of college football TV ratings for the
2000 season. It was interesting data that gave us a good idea about where the Hokies fell in the ratings game. At the time, my contact promised to send me bowl ratings and attendance figures for a future article. He came through
a few weeks ago, and here we are, at "Inside the Numbers," to take a look. In 1998, there were 22 bowl games. In 1999, that number increased to 23 (the Mobile Alabama Bowl was added), and in
2000, it went up again to 25 (with the advent of the GalleryFurniture.com and Silicon Valley Classic bowls). For the 2001 season, the New Orleans Bowl has been added. It will pit Sun Belt and Mountain West teams against each
other in the Superdome on December 18th. As of April 27, 2001, 25
bowls had received certification from the NCAA for the 2001 season. The MicronPC Bowl has not been recertified yet,
but it is expected to receive recertification, which will make it the 26th bowl for 2001-2002. But that's a sidebar. The purpose of this latest "Inside the Numbers" article is to see how well Virginia
Tech did in both bowl ratings and bowl attendance during the 1998-2000 time period. We'll present statistics for TV
ratings, attendance, and attendance as a percentage of stadium capacity to see how well the Hokies stacked up. First, here's a reminder of how to interpret TV ratings. Understanding TV Ratings Availability: Free over-the-air network TV (CBS, ABC, NBC, Fox) reaches 100 million households. Cable and
satellite networks (ESPN, ESPN2) reach 80 million households. Rating: percentage of households that are watching a network out of those that could watch a network. For
example, a 5.0 rating on CBS means that roughly five million households watched the game (5 out of 100). A 5.0 rating on
ESPN means that roughly four million households tuned in (4 out of 80). Share: the percentage of households watching a particular show out of the total number of households that have
their televisions turned on at the time. Households (HH): the number of "houses" that were actually watching, in other words a raw, numerical
measure of the number of viewing households, as opposed to Rating and Share, which are percentages. Household data is
expressed in thousands, so an HH=2500 is 2.5 million households. Example: The 2000 Big XII Championship game aired in prime time on ABC, had a rating of 8.2, a share of 14.8, and
the number of households was 8,366,000. This means that the total number of households that had a television on during
that time was about 55,500,000 (8.3 million out of 55.5 million is about 14.8%), thus deriving an audience share of
14.8. (Exact percentages will be off due to rounding and actual number of households in the U.S.) The Music City Bowl Tech played in the inaugural Music City Bowl against Alabama in 1998, wiping out the Tide 38-7 in a romp that kicked
off the present-day Hokie hysteria. The 1998 "MCB," as it is affectionately called by Hokie fans, was played
in Vanderbilt's stadium, which had a capacity of 41,000. The bowl has since moved to Adelphia Coliseum, the 67,000-seat
venue that serves as the home of the Tennessee Titans. Here are the TV ratings, attendance, and percentage of capacity figures for the Music City Bowl since its inception: Music City Bowl TV Ratings and Attendance, 1998-2000 Season Capacity Teams Attendance % Cap. Rating Share HH 1998 41,000 Alabama - Virginia Tech 41,248 101% 2.4 4.7 1841 1999 67,000 Kentucky - Syracuse 59,221 88% 2.8 6.2 2130 2000 67,000 Mississippi - WVU 47,119 70% 2.1 4.3 1660 Note: all three MCB's were played on Dec. 28th or 29th, all three were televised nationally on ESPN, and all
three started at 4:00 or 5:00 p.m. It's hard to say how many people would have attended the 1998 Music City Bowl had the stadium been bigger. Many Hokie
and Tide fans could not obtain tickets, due to the huge demand from both schools. Given more space, it's not
unreasonable to think that 50,000 to 60,000 fans would have attended the game. We'll never know. Kentucky traveled very well to the 1999 Music City Bowl, so the attendance figures for 1999 are not a surprise,
despite the presence of Syracuse, which travels very poorly. But why a Kentucky-Syracuse matchup drew better TV ratings
than Virginia Tech-Alabama is a mystery. The games were both played on December 29th, which fell on a Tuesday in 1998
and a Wednesday in 1999, so the day of the week was not a factor. The Sugar Bowl For Sugar Bowl attendance and ratings are skewed by the fact that the Sugar Bowl was the national championship game
in 1999/2000, but not in the other two years. So for this section, we'll take a look at the Sugar Bowl numbers, but
later on, we'll look at national championship game ratings and attendance. Sugar Bowl TV Ratings and Attendance, 1998-2000 Season Capacity Teams Attendance % Cap. Rating Share HH 1998 76,791 Texas A&M - Ohio St. 76,503 100% 11.5 20.4 11408 1999 76,791 Florida St. - VT 79,280 103% 17.5 27.6 17683 2000 76,791 Florida - Miami 64,407 84% 13.0 21.2 13245 Note: all three Sugar Bowls were broadcast nationally on ABC. Game times were all between 8:00 and 9:00 pm. The
game was played on 1/1/99, 1/4/00, and 1/2/01. The great attendance and TV ratings for the 1999 championship game are no surprise, because it was the highly-hyped
championship game, and it featured a marquee team in Florida State. The Hokies got down early but staged a stirring
comeback, ensuring that viewers stayed tuned in. The attendance figure for last year's Florida-Miami game is pathetic and reinforces the Canes' reputation as a team
with fans that don't travel well. According to ESPN.com,
the crowd of 64,407 was the smallest to ever watch a Sugar Bowl in the Superdome. Miami sold less than 10,000 of the
15,000 tickets both schools were required to take, while Florida sold all of theirs. By comparison, the 1995 Sugar Bowl between Virginia Tech and Texas drew 70,283, which was perceived at the time as a
low draw. But it was better than last season's Sugar Bowl by nearly 6,000 fans, and it even topped the 1998 attendance
figure of 67,289 for Florida State-Ohio State. The Gator Bowl This is a very interesting set of data, because the last three Gator Bowls have included Notre Dame, Miami, and
Virginia Tech. This gives us a great chance to compare the drawing power and TV ratings power of the three schools.
Gator Bowl TV Ratings and Attendance, 1998-2000 Season Capacity Teams Attendance % Cap. Rating Share HH 1998 76,940 Notre Dame - Georgia Tech 70,791 92% 6.4 13.4 6333 1999 76,940 Georgia Tech - Miami 43,416 56% 3.8 8.3 3865 2000 76,940 Clemson - Virginia Tech 68,741 89% 4.8 9.8 4943 This table is more proof for two widely-held theories: (1) Notre Dame does very well in the television ratings; and
(2) Miami doesn't travel well at all. Actually, I'm going to promote item #2 from "theory" to
"fact." The attendance figures from the 1998 ND-GT matchup show that not only is Notre Dame a good draw for their own fans,
but they draw fans from the other school, as well. When GT was matched up with the Canes the next year, attendance
plummeted, due to Miami's inability to bring fans and the fact that GT was playing in the game for the second year in a
row. Not to mention that Notre Dame and Georgia Tech both have long, storied football traditions, and to the average GT
fan, that holds more appeal than a matchup with Miami. The Clemson-VT game was well attended for obvious reasons. Number one, it was perceived as a great matchup between
Virginia Tech QB Michael Vick and Clemson QB Woody Dantzler (it turned out to be a mismatch instead). Number two, both
sets of fans travel well, enjoy playing against each other, and have mutual respect for each other's programs. Number
three, Michael Vick was playing in the game (hence, the good TV ratings). All in all, there are no surprises in the Gator Bowl data. National Championship Games Now let's put the 1999 Sugar Bowl (VT-FSU) up against the 1998 Fiesta Bowl (UT-FSU) and the 2000 Orange Bowl
(OK-FSU). I realize I'm misstating the bowl years, but I'm referring to the seasons they applied to, not the actual
calendar years they were played in. Season Game Capacity Date Teams Att. % Cap. Rating Share HH 1998 Fiesta 73,471 1/4/99 FSU - Tennessee 80,470 110% 17.2 26.4 17081 1999 Sugar 76,791 1/4/00 FSU - VT 79,280 103% 17.5 27.6 17683 2000 Orange 75,000 1/3/01 Oklahoma - FSU 76,835 102% 17.8 28.1 18200 Note: all three games were broadcast nationally on ABC and were played at approx. 8:00 pm. Again, no surprises here -- great TV ratings and jam-packed stadiums. The BCS championship game appears to be
building momentum as it gets older and ABC/Disney gets better and better at hyping it (they should just rename the ESPN
network to BCSPN during the month of December, the way the boys in Bristol constantly hype the college
championship). As an aside, I don't know about you, but I'm getting pretty bored with watching FSU play for the national
championship. I'm also having trouble getting over the fact that Tennessee figured it out in 1998 and Oklahoma figured
it out in 2000, but the Hokies didn't figure it out in 1999. What's "it"? How to beat FSU for the national
championship, of course. Yep, that lost Sugar Bowl game still haunts me. The Top 20 The remainder of this article is three tables showing the following figures for the last three years: (1) top 20 bowl
crowds (number of fans) of the last three years; (2) top 20 bowl crowds (as a percent of capacity) of the last three
years; and (3) top 20 rated bowls (in terms of TV households) of the last three years. Please note when viewing the following tables that the three-year span covered includes 70 bowl games. Top 20 Bowl Crowds of the Last 3 Years, Raw Attendance Rank Season Game Teams Attendance Capacity % Cap. 1 2000 Rose Purdue - Washington 94,392 91,000 104% 2 1998 Rose UCLA - Wisconsin 93,872 91,000 103% 3 1999 Rose Stanford - Wisconsin 93,731 91,000 103% 4 1998 Fiesta Florida St. - Tennessee 80,470 73,471 110% 5 1999 Sugar Florida St. - Virginia Tech 79,280 76,791 103% 6 2000 Orange Oklahoma - Florida St. 76,835 75,000 102% 7 1998 Sugar Texas A&M - Ohio St. 76,503 76,791 100% 8 2000 Fiesta Notre Dame - Oregon State 75,428 73,471 103% 9 2000 Peach Georgia Tech - LSU 73,614 71,228 103% 10 1999 Peach Miss St. - Clemson 73,315 71,228 103% 11 1998 Peach Virginia - Georgia 72,876 71,228 102% 12 1999 Cotton Arkansas - Texas 72,723 68,252 107% 13 1998 Cotton Miss. St. - Texas 72,611 68,252 106% 14 1999 Fiesta Nebraska - Tennessee 71,526 73,471 97% 15 1998 Gator Notre Dame - Georgia Tech 70,791 76,940 92% 16 1999 Orange Alabama - Michigan 70,461 75,000 94% 17 2000 Gator Clemson - Virginia Tech 68,741 76,940 89% 18 1998 Orange Florida - Syracuse 67,919 75,000 91% 19 2000 Citrus Michigan - Auburn 66,928 70,349 95% 20 1998 Outback Kentucky - Penn St. 66,005 66,005 100% The top 20 game crowds break down to 3 each of the Rose, Fiesta, Orange, and Peach Bowls; 2 each of the Sugar,
Cotton, and Gator Bowls; 1 Citrus Bowl; and 1 Outback Bowl. The only team to appear in the list for all 3 years is FSU. Teams appearing twice are Tennessee, Wisconsin, Michigan,
VT, Notre Dame, Georgia Tech, Clemson, Mississippi State, and Texas. Virginia Tech's 1998 Music City Bowl with Alabama, which was viewed by 41,000 fans, came in 50th on the list. Top 20 Bowl Crowds of the Last 3 Years, Percent Capacity Rank Season Game Teams Att. Cap. % Cap. 1 1998 Fiesta Florida St. - Tennessee 80,470 73,471 110% 2 1999 Cotton Arkansas - Texas 72,723 68,252 107% 3 1998 Cotton Miss. St. - Texas 72,611 68,252 106% 4 2000 Rose Purdue - Washington 94,392 91,000 104% 5 2000 Peach Georgia Tech - LSU 73,614 71,228 103% 6 1999 Sugar Florida St. - VT 79,280 76,791 103% 7 1998 Rose UCLA - Wisconsin 93,872 91,000 103% 8 1999 Rose Stanford - Wisconsin 93,731 91,000 103% 9 1999 Peach Miss St. - Clemson 73,315 71,228 103% 10 2000 Fiesta Notre Dame - Oregon St. 75,428 73,471 103% 11 2000 Orange Oklahoma - Florida St. 76,835 75,000 102% 12 1998 Peach Virginia - Georgia 72,876 71,228 102% 13 1998 Music City Alabama - Virginia Tech 41,248 41,000 101% 14 1999 Alamo Penn St. - Texas A&M 65,380 65,000 101% 15 1998 Outback Kentucky - Penn St. 66,005 66,005 100% 16 1998 Sugar Texas A&M - Ohio St. 76,503 76,791 100% 17 2000 Mobile AL TCU - Southern Miss 40,300 40,646 99% 18 1999 Independence Mississippi - Oklahoma 49,873 50,459 99% 19 2000 Outback Ohio St. - South Carolina 65,229 66,005 99% 20 1999 Humanitarian Boise St. - Louisville 29,283 30,000 98% A quick scan of the top 10 reveals what games are consistently packed: 1.) National championship games After that, it's a hodge-podge populated by teams that travel well, big-name bowls, and bowls with small capacities
that happen to hit on a compelling regional matchup. Virginia Tech appears twice on the list for the 1998 MCB and the 1999 Sugar Bowl. The 2000 Gator Bowl, at 89%
capacity, finished at 39th out of 70 bowls. Top 20 TV-Rated Bowl Games of the Last 3 Years, by Households Rank Season Game Net Teams Rating Share HH 1 2000 Orange ABC Oklahoma - Florida State 17.8 28.1 18200 2 1999 Sugar ABC Florida St. - Virginia Tech 17.5 27.6 17683 3 1998 Fiesta ABC Florida St. - Tennessee 17.2 26.4 17081 4 2000 Rose ABC Purdue - Washington 14.0 23.9 14295 5 1999 Rose ABC Stanford - Wisconsin 14.1 26.8 14181 6 1998 Rose ABC UCLA - Wisconsin 13.3 24.6 13263 7 2000 Sugar ABC Florida - Miami 13.0 21.2 13245 8 1999 Orange ABC Alabama - Michigan 11.3 20.6 11409 9 1998 Sugar ABC Texas A&M - Ohio St. 11.5 20.4 11408 10 2000 Fiesta ABC Notre Dame - Oregon State 10.7 17.7 10933 11 1999 Fiesta ABC Nebraska - Tennessee 9.5 15.0 9589 12 1999 Citrus ABC Florida - Mich. St. 9.0 19.6 9108 13 1998 Orange ABC Florida - Syracuse 8.4 14.4 8328 14 2000 Citrus ABC Michigan - Auburn 7.6 15.3 7747 15 1998 Citrus ABC Arkansas - Michigan 7.1 14.9 7071 16 1998 Gator NBC Notre Dame - Georgia Tech 6.4 13.4 6333 17 1998 Aloha ABC Colorado - Oregon 5.5 17.6 5473 18 2000 Gator NBC Clemson - Virginia Tech 4.8 9.8 4943 19 1998 Holiday ESPN Nebraska - Arizona 6.0 9.8 4557 20 2000 Cotton Fox Tennessee - Kansas St. 4.4 9.1 4489 As expected, the three national championship games are at the top, winning by a significant margin. They all pulled
Ratings in the 17's. What happens next is interesting: the Rose Bowl games (none of which have been national championship games -- next
year's Rose Bowl will be the first time it rotates through as the championship) form a second tier (4-6) Rated in the
13's and 14's. They are matched in that second tier only by last year's Sugar Bowl between Florida and Miami, with a
13.0 Rating. It finishes #7 on our list. I find that interesting because it supports the notion that the Miami Hurricanes draw good television ratings. That's
not to discredit the Florida Gators, because they're a good TV draw, too, and that Sugar Bowl was helped by the fact
that Miami had an outside shot at the national championship. But nonetheless, I think it's noteworthy that last year's
Sugar Bowl was the only non-championship, non-Rose-Bowl game to pull a Rating of 13 or higher. After that, bowls 8-10 form a third tier of BCS bowls that pulled Ratings around 11. From that point on, bowls 11-20
all have Ratings lower than 10. Virginia Tech appears in the list twice, at #2 and #18. VT's Music City Bowl appearance, with a rating of 2.4 (1.841
million households), finished #52 out of 70 bowls. The Data As always, the data used in this report can be viewed as an HTML document or downloaded as a Microsoft Excel
spreadsheet. To view the data in your web browser as an HTML document go here: http://www.techsideline.com/tslextra/issue007/footballbowlratings2000.htm MS Excel File (Excel 97 compatible): http://www.techsideline.com/tslextra/issue007/footballbowlratings2000.xls (Right-click the link and do a "Save Link As" or "Save Target As" to save the Excel file to
disk.)
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