The Super Bowl is an American phenomenon. Despite its completely unavoidable presence in the U.S., Super Bowl Sunday is pretty much a nonentity outside of North America, where soccer is king. Even so, it’s still a much bigger moneymaker than any other single sporting event. Here’s a breakdown of how this works out.
Not-so-super viewership
106
millionpeople watched all of last year’s Super Bowl telecast, almost entirely in the U.S. and Canada
109
millionpeople watched all of last year’s UEFA Champions League final, a hugely popular soccer match
Super brand value
$420Mthe Super Bowl’s value as an brand, making it the largest brand of all
$230Mthe Olympics’ value, despite the fact it’s a much larger event
$120Mthe World Cup’s value; it routinely tops the Super Bowl in total viewers
Super ad rates
$312million in Anheuser-Busch ads alone since 1990
$3
millionthe amount NBC charged for 69 ad spots last year
$2.8
millionthe amount CBS is able to charge per ad this year source
Big game, big profits. Despite the fact that it’s just a single game, it often can top the advertising value of both the the World Series and the NCAA Men’s Basketball Final Four, which each take place over multiple games.
So why isn’t it spreading?
complication American football is a much more complicated sport than soccer and basketball, which both have easily and quickly spread into China, for example. Blame the penalties.
mediocrity The NFL had been trying to tap the European market for years with a secondary league which folded in 2007. Now the NFL has real games in Europe, a better strategy. source
*Sob* It’s true. The football color commentary icon, who is 73, is now hanging up his mic. He only had a major video game franchise and a long history of saying crazy things under his belt. Man, we just don’t know what we’re going to do anymore. He’s like an icon of everything wrong – and right – with America. source