10 of the 18 AFL club come from VIC, and they definitely do not see their team each week. In fact my team gets barely any FTA coverage into Melbourne this year.leeroy*NRL* wrote:Xman wrote:no, if you count ratings by games, as Wookie does, it works out far worse.leeroy*NRL* wrote:Wrong it works out better splitting the live games for overall ratingsXman wrote:one thing you fail to consider is the AFL only show 1 live game on FTA to every city each round. All the rest of the games are split. Your code has 3 live games to your entire audience per round. The NRL have a far bigger advantage not the other way round
Live game into adelaide maxing the audience
Live game into perth maxing the audience
Live game into melbourne maxing the audience
Then all other states see it on FOX
So on one saturday night you can get
Adelaide v collingwoood
And west coast v sydney
All played live into each state on FTA
its a great plan
And thats what the nrl should be doing.
Its like what the nrl did with two games on friday
Maxing the ratings
But the AFL does it on Saturday and sunday
By splitting games into different cities every city only sees 4-5 AFL games. The NRL cities get to see all 8 games. This clearly affects the total figures for the year
Yes but at the same time
Each state is seeing its home team
Therefore guranteeing high ratings
For example
Eagles,crows,port,freo,
Sydney gets fta every week
And melbourne get there big sides
A few games a week.
We only get 3 FTA games
Rest are on fox
We are limited.. the AFL has a better tv model.
Evening knowing some games are overlapped and played at the same time..
For example
West coast v sydney
Perth ratings 200k sydney 80k
Collingwood v crows
Melbourne ratings 350k adelaide 220k
Played at same time
Into 4 different markets
While also being on fox.
Sure, we have a good TV model, but if youre looking at total TV ratings for the year, showing all but one game concurrently each weekend is the worst way to show total ratings. As I said, 4-5 games total for each city over 23 rounds is around 100-120 games per year on TV for each market. The NRL show 8 games for 25 rounds, so 200 games