Bob Raissman |
According to a story by Rob Raissman at NYDailyNews.com, through
28 games aired on the Yankees Entertainment & Sports Network (five games
aired on other outlets), the Bombers’ TV household rating was down 39% compared
to the same 28 game span in 2012.
In the key demographic (men 25-54) over the same stretch of
games, the Yankees’ rating on YES was down 56% compared to last season. Among
people 25-54, the rating was down 55%.
Raissman believes the ratings are down because of the lack
of star power. Throughout the history of YES, the Yankees have been a ratings
juggernaut. The team has won consistently with a star-studded cast. Now they
are winning without one.
A-Rod is not coming back anytime soon. If he could, he would
move the ratings needle. Rodriguez is a walking soap opera. Now, more than
ever, fans would tune in to see if he has anything left.
Jeter, the face of the Yankees, draws eyeballs too. His
popularity is a given. His story line is much bigger. Can he confound the
doubters who say he will never be the same? That’s worth watching.
Granderson and Tex
have a lot to prove. Will they return to form? Or will they flop? Their
stories, and stature, will attract more viewers too.
The Yankees’ ratings also could be impacted because of
competition from Knicks playoff games and, to a lesser extent, Rangers and
Islanders postseason tilts. The ratings also show on nights Matt Harvey pitches
for the Mets on SNY, he eats into Yankees ratings, too.
Winning usually produces big-time ratings. And the Yankees
are finding a whole lot of ways to win with their gutty guys. Maybe it’s only a
matter of time before pin-striped eyeballs figure this out and return to YES.
Tom's Take: Obvious lesson for radio..star power helps win the ratings. How man y stars do you have on your line-up?
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