NEW YORK (AP) -- A small-market team and a
short series often are guarantees of low television ratings for
sports in this age of fractured audiences. The 2008 World Series
added to that double whammy the disjointing impact of a long rain
delay and a suspended game.
The Philadelphia
Phillies' five-game victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on News
Corp.-owned Fox drew record-low ratings. The series averaged an 8.4
rating and 14 share, the network said Thursday. That's down 17
percent from the previous low, a 10.1 for the five-game
Cardinals-Tigers series in 2006.
"This World Series got off to a solid start last week and was
poised to build momentum as we expected it to," Fox Sports
president Ed Goren said. "The rain delay on Saturday and suspended
game on Monday, combined with only going five games, obviously
worked against the Series reaching its maximum viewership
potential, but even with that, FOX was No. 1 most nights, posted
some of its best nights in many weeks and was No. 1 last week in
prime time."
Game 5 was the first suspended game in World Series history,
starting Monday and concluding two days later. The final innings
Wednesday earned an 11.9/18, and the entire game averaged a 9.6/14,
the highest of the series.
Game 3, which didn't start until after 10 p.m. on the East Coast
on Saturday because of rain, received a record-low 6.1 rating.
"We had a very good rating (Wednesday)," MLB commissioner Bud
Selig said. "There's no question that if the Series had gone
further, the ratings would have gone up."
The rating is the percentage watching a program among homes with
televisions, and the share is the percentage tuned into the
broadcast among those households with TVs on at the time.
When Brad Lidge struck out Eric Hinske for the final out to give
the city its first major sports championship in 25 years, the
Philadelphia area recorded a 54.5 rating and 73 share.