NEW YORK (AP) — Even without the
home team involved, the World Cup final between Germany and Argentina
set a television viewership record in the United States, capping a
tournament that exceeded expectations for interest on both ESPN and
Univision.
The month-long
World Cup also was responsible for more than 3 billion interactions on
Facebook and 672 million messages on Twitter, the social media companies
said on Monday.
An estimated
26.5 million people in the U.S. watched Germany's extra-time win on
Sunday afternoon, the Nielsen company said. The game had 17.3 million
viewers on ABC and another 9.2 million on the Spanish-language
Univision. In addition, just over 750,000 people were watching the game
during a typical minute online through services provided by each
network.
The 2010 finale
between Spain and the Netherlands, along with the U.S. team's 2-2 draw
against Portugal earlier in this year's tournament, both had 24.7
million viewers.
Given the
growing interest in the tournament as it went along, the size of the
audience for the final game wasn't that big a surprise, said Scott
Guglielmino, ESPN senior vice president of programming. The tournament
as a whole exceeded expectations for ESPN, and surprised Guglielmino in
the way it permeated U.S. culture as no World Cup has before.
The
average viewership for all 64 World Cup matches was up 39 percent over
2010 on ESPN and its sister station ABC, and 34 percent on Univision,
Nielsen said.
"We all knew
that everything was in place to be well-delivered to the audience and we
needed a good performance by the teams, and that happened," said Juan
Carlos Rodriguez, Univision sports president.
At least until some
cautious games in the knockout round, play was more wide-open with
increased scoring and that was appealing to viewers, the executives
said. The event also had stories that transcended the games itself, with
Uruguay's Luis Suarez suspended for biting another player and host
Brazil's historic meltdown against Germany.
On
ESPN, tournament games averaged 4.56 million television viewers,
compared to the 1.04 million viewers for games in the 2002 World Cup
that were in Korea and Japan.
World
Cup organizers FIFA said that more than a billion fans worldwide
accessed information about the tournament through its digital platforms.
"This has been the first truly mobile and social World Cup," said FIFA
President Sepp Blatter.
Facebook
said 88 million people made a total of 280 million posts or "likes"
about the final game. The most social "moment" of the tournament on
Facebook, however, was right after Germany scored four goals in seven
minutes during its semifinal victory against Brazil.
On Twitter, the Brazil-Germany match exceeded the final game for most tweets.
Both
ESPN and Univision invested heavily to make the tournament an immersive
experience, signing up former players for hours of discussion between
match times.
Univision went
high-tech, with virtual reality displays that pitted famed players from
different eras against one another. The company also worked with an
Israeli company to invest in technology that allowed its feed of games
to appear on the network some five or six seconds before its
English-speaking rival.
"We're
the real home of soccer in America, regardless of language," Rodriguez
said. He predicted that ratings for the Copa America Centenario
tournament in 2016, which will match the best teams in North and South
America, will exceed this year's World Cup on his network.
The
ratings performance was a little bittersweet for ESPN and Univision,
however. Both networks were outbid for the rights to broadcast the 2018
World Cup in Russia.
So there
was a little gamesmanship involved. Guglielmino said the intention was
to create a "high bar" for Fox when it broadcasts the 2018 tournament.
Given that the games in Russia will take place at inconvenient times in
the U.S. market, Fox may be hard-pressed to beat these ratings.
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