About Sports Media Watch

From television ratings and rights deals to the latest personnel moves, Sports Media Watch and its founder Jon Lewis have been covering the sports media industry on a daily basis for nearly two decades.

Since its founding by Lewis in 2006, Sports Media Watch has established itself as a well-known source in the sports media industry thanks to its understanding of complicated data, such as television ratings; an emphasis on quality content; and in-depth coverage of leagues large and small, from the NFL to college volleyball.

With its emphasis on clear, concise reporting, SMW has the goal of translating the language of sports business into that which is easily understood by both the average fan and industry professionals. It has arguably brought the discussion of sports television ratings into the mainstream — for better or worse — and through easy-to-digest facts, figures and analysis has helped provide the context for innumerable debates about the relative popularity of college conferences, professional leagues and star players.

Lewis and Sports Media Watch have been cited and/or quoted in many of the major domestic news publications ranging from The New York Times and Washington Post to The Wall Street Journal and Boston Globe.

Beyond anything else, SMW is motivated by a high interest in the sports business niche and could not exist without its author having a lifelong affinity for the inner-workings of sports television. That interest is shared by many of its loyal commenters and has helped sustain the site’s existence — one of the only the sites born of the mid-2000s blogosphere still principally run by one person — into what is approaching its third decade.

For the sports media obsessive, the alum advocating for his alma mater, those who work in the field, those who play on the field, and anyone else interested in the what, where, how and why of sports television, Sports Media Watch seeks to provide clarity.

Sports Ratings Tracker
Sunday’s Chiefs-Bills NFL national window averaged 30.84 million viewers on CBS, marking the second-largest audience of the NFL season, behind only the Eagles-Chiefs Super Bowl rematch on FOX in Week 2. Read more
Games 1 and 2 of the Dodgers-Blue Jays World Series averaged 7.0 and 6.6 million viewers respectively on Canada’s Rogers SportsNet, marking the two most-watched Blue Jays games on record, according to the network’s reporter Hazel Mae. Read more
Thursday’s ESPN NBA doubleheader averaged 2.07 million viewers, up 53% from the opening Thursday of last season on TNT. That is a bigger year-over-year increase than ESPN had for its season-opening doubleheader the previous night (2.33M, +44%). Read more
TNT Sports averaged 372,000 for its season-opening NHL doubleheader on Wednesday, specifically 516,000 for Bruins-Capitals and 240,000 for Kings-Golden Knights — up 10% and down 24% respectively from last year. The Kings game overlapped with the competing Dodgers game on TBS (3.7M).
ABC led a fifth-straight college football weekend as Vanderbilt-Alabama topped the week six charts with 6.41 million viewers. MIami-Florida State placed second with 6.03 million. Read more
CBS averaged a 9.1 rating and 19.58 million viewers for Sunday’s NFL singleheader (mostly Broncos-Eagles), up 17% from last year and marking the network’s most-watched singleheader since 2013. Read more
Tuesday’s Fever-Aces WNBA semifinal Game 2 averaged 1.7 million viewers on ESPN, marking the largest second round playoff audience since Comets-Sparks Game 2 on NBC in the 2000 Western Conference Finals, also the most-watched ever on the ESPN family of networks. Read more

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