The same scheduling shift that lifted ratings for the NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen sank the Elite Eight.
Pushed to the workweek as part of this year’s revised NCAA Tournament schedule, all four men’s Elite Eight games declined double-digits from the comparable windows in 2019, when the games aired on the weekend.
Tuesday’s UCLA-Michigan regional final on TBS posted the steepest decline, its audience of 6.89 million down 57% from the corresponding game in 2019 — Michigan State’s upset of Zion Williamson-led Duke in a Sunday afternoon window on CBS (16.20M).
The Bruins’ upset win delivered the largest audience of the Elite Eight, marking the first time in recent memory that no game in the round cracked the seven million viewer mark. By comparison, all four games in 2019 averaged at least seven million. In a typical year, the most-watched game of the round delivers a Final Four-level audience in the 15 million range.
Gonzaga-USC averaged 5.40 million earlier in the night, down 49% from Auburn-Kentucky on CBS in 2019 (10.49M) and the least-watched Elite Eight game on any network since at least 2008 (complete records prior to 2009 were not available).
The previous low was set the previous night by Houston-Oregon State on CBS, which averaged 5.92 million — down 23% from Texas Tech-Gonzaga in 2019, which aired in a Saturday evening window on TBS (7.72M).
Monday’s Baylor-Arkansas nightcap drew 6.45 million, down 39% from Virginia-Purdue on TBS in ’19 (10.49M).
Through the regional finals, Michigan-Florida State in the Sweet Sixteen ranks as the most-watched game of the NCAA Tournament, averaging 9.03 million viewers. That is the only game thus far to crack the eight million viewer mark, compared to eight such games at the same point in 2019 and six in 2018.
Notably, that Michigan-FSU game aired in the late Sunday afternoon window that would typically have been occupied by the marquee Elite Eight game. Under this year’s schedule, the Sweet Sixteen moved from Thursday and Friday to the weekend, and the Elite Eight moved from the weekend to Monday and Tuesday.
Least-watched men’s Elite Eight games (2008 – )
[Nielsen estimates from ShowBuzz Daily 3.30, 3.31]
The post Steep declines for men’s Elite Eight appeared first on Sports Media Watch.