LIV TV Ratings, Search for Second Broadcast Partner Remain Stagnant
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LIV TV Ratings, Search for Second Broadcast Partner Remain Stagnant

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LIV TV Ratings, Search for Second Broadcast Partner Remain Stagnant

Despite the recent additions of Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton, LIV Golf is still struggling to attract viewers. 

Last Saturday, the final round of LIV Las Vegas drew 297,000 viewers on the CW. The telecast finished 51st for all sports programs that day, on par with the Golf Central pregame show in advance of PGA Tour coverage. 

The PGA Tour audience for the third round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open was nearly six times that size, coming in at 1.7 million viewers and ranking No. 3 in sports programming for the day. And those were actually the worst third-round ratings for the event in more than a decade, coming in 32 percent lower than the previous year (2.54M). 

Two weeks ago, LIV’s Mayakoba tournament got a significant break when the final round of the PGA Tour’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am wasn’t played due to weather. LIV produced a record 432,000 viewers—but a CBS Sunday re-air of the third round from Pebble Beach brought in three times that audience. 

Even when factoring in the inherent advantage of the PGA Tour being on network television, it is pretty clear that the audience is resonating more with the legacy product. 

The audience is also resonating with a wide variety of other golf products. Consider that the Good Good Desert Open—a par-3 tournament with influencers—had nearly 100,000 live viewers on YouTube last week. A day later, LIV’s first-round coverage was available on YouTube and had about one-fifth the audience (the Good Good Desert Open has more than one million views total as of this writing). 

PGA Tour ratings, while still small compared to other major sports, have held steady in recent years. The Tour’s ESPN+ streaming product has made golf the most-watched sport on the platform from January to August the past two years. 

LIV has a streaming story to tell also but the YouTube numbers show that very few people are watching. 

Point blank: LIV has not shown any meaningful progress in attracting viewers, a problem that has left the circuit without a broadcast partner for early tournament coverage. 

Searching for a Second TV Partner

Without real fan interest, LIV’s long-term viability is limited. 

LIV has proven it has no problem spending money and they can continue to throw cash at top players to get them involved. But until fans start to watch consistently, it will be hard to find a TV deal that generates revenue. And until the league generates real TV revenue, it won’t be a functioning business beyond the bottomless pit of cash the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund spends on it. 

LIV has a revenue-sharing deal with the CW, which broadcasts the final two rounds of each event. The first round, however, is only aired on YouTube and the CW app—meaning there is no TV revenue coming in for 33 percent of the golf shown. 

Officials at LIV have stated they are looking for a second broadcast partner but we haven’t heard any news to this point. 

Last year, LIV made about $3 million in TV revenue. The PGA Tour made more than $500 million. 

There is another year remaining on the CW contract and it remains uncertain where LIV goes from here. Potential unity with the PGA Tour is possible, which would change the dynamic completely.  

For now, the biggest reason to be skeptical about LIV as a standalone product is that there is no juice with the product. 

Why Aren’t People Watching

It is an inexact science to figure out why more people aren’t watching LIV—but there are a handful of potential answers. 

The first is familiarity. The PGA Tour has historic venues and tournaments with storied legacies. Golf fans are used to watching a course like Riviera, host of this week’s Genesis Invitational. They know every hole. They know why the course is revered. There is a lot of context built into why winning there matters. 

We will have to wait to see if the PGA Tour takes any ratings hit from players like Rahm and Hatton leaving. It very well could, especially at a marquee event like the Players Championship where so many top LIV players aren’t competing. 

But there is no doubt that much of the PGA Tour’s infrastructure will keep it afloat in the short-term, barring a mass exodus of players. 

On the LIV side, fans don’t seem to be identifying with the format. One common complaint is that there are no stakes in a tournament where the rich battle the rich for individual and team titles, the golfers belonging to arbitrary teams. There are also very few, if any, notable courses that get people excited. 

For the most part, players didn’t earn their way onto the tour and can’t earn their way off the tour. There are no major invitations at stake or Ryder Cup points in play, for now. And while LIV has stolen several of golf’s most interesting personalities, only two of the top 20 players in the Data Golf rankings are from LIV. 

Wrapped into all of the above is that the golf seems substantially less serious while also not being noticeably different from the PGA Tour. It doesn’t veer hard into real drama or the absurd, leaving it caught somewhere in the middle. 

The broadcast itself has a lot of positives—it is fast-paced, shows a ton of golf shots, includes interesting graphics, has limited commercial interruption for obvious reasons and is scheduled to include a feature where every shot can be seen live—but some have noted that they don’t like hearing incessant background music coming from on-course hospitality. 

It’s also worth pointing out that some viewers won’t even give it a chance because of the controversial source of funding. 

The Road Ahead

The next two LIV events are unlikely to see any ratings increase. The events will be in Saudi Arabia and Hong Kong next month, much of the golf coming while Americans are sleeping. 

Maybe a surprise addition will stir some interest, but it’s hard to imagine those ratings getting better. This is especially the case because LIV has scheduled several events at the same time as the PGA Tour’s best tournaments. 

LIV Hong Kong goes up against the Arnold Palmer Invitational. LIV Houston will face the Memorial Tournament. LIV Nashville counters the Travelers Championship. LIV Andalucia is on at the same time as the Genesis Scottish Open. And LIV Greenbrier is competing against the FedEx St. Jude. 

The best golfers in the world will be on the PGA Tour those weeks. 

If you are a LIV fan looking for positives, the Australia stop is coming up in April and will be played during the Zurich Classic, which is one of the PGA Tour’s lesser events. Australia was a huge success a year ago, especially in person. The July event in Spain could also draw large crowds. 

But for the time being, the numbers say golf fans are not flocking to LIV. 

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 8 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife and dog (of course the dog's name is Hogan).

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      Moose384

      3 months ago

      Listen, I like playing golf but the sport is not entertaining to watch by most people. Maybe in a close day 4 final round of a big tourney with some big names battling it out, other than that its pretty boring. LIV’s advantage is not the golf, its the quick play format and having the best personalities like Bubba, DJ, Rahm and Smith. LIV really poached the best personalities, not always the best players.

      Reply

      SDL

      3 months ago

      The announcing on Liv tournaments is preposterous… hyperbole and over-excitement in reaction to the most mundane of actions and outcomes (plus the ridiculous background music). To me it has the feel of a Friday corporate scramble being described by enthusiastic football commentators trying to drum up enthusiasm for a recently relegated club. It is not a viewable product, IMO, even with the elite players involved.

      Reply

      fliv

      3 months ago

      The reason people are not watch is everyone knows it is fake – they have tried to be over excited about. The Good Good Gold Tournament is brought about by geniune followers from the ground up – organic growth – they dont have that – they have attracted a few people chasing money – and few supporters

      but its all fake – the teams are fake – had one peron on 3 teams LOL – like you can jump teams on Ryder Cup. If they can swap team spots – how is that even important. One minute someone will be so excited to be on Cleeks – new minute they turn up wearing rangegoats – and by the way RangeGoats?? FFS – if that is not a clue why they are not watching.

      Reply

      Miami WG

      3 months ago

      LIV is a closed circuit. It’s like a country club, with its own ‘competition’ among the members. Who cares about that? Not. Me.

      Reply

      PHDrunkards

      3 months ago

      As opposed to the exact same thing in the NFL, NBA, NHL, MLS,???? No teams ever go up or go down. Now THAT is a pathetic, EXCLUSIVE, country club of the ELITES owned by the ELITES, who don’t want a system where their teams would have a chance of going down and losing their prestigious “status.” It’s totally closed, and so mighty and righteous and completely useless and boring to watch as it’s always the same every year, completely meaningless as nothing changes and they aren’t challenged to play international teams year in year out during their very short, 6 month season, and don’t have to worry about losing finances because they don’t go down.
      There are no farm systems that at least, the MLB has, in other parts of the world like in the Dominica for example. But even the MLB is a pansy league as nobody goes down from there, either.

      Reply

      Golf Travel

      3 months ago

      WOW… What a stretch. All of those sports have drafts that give teams the chance to build. They all have farm systems called the NCAA. LIV (which is what this article is about) is a joke. It’s a glorified corporate outing. Nobody is watching. Nobody cares. The format sucks. The team aspect is laughable. All spots were invited not earned and there is no clear way on or off the tour.

      PHDrunkards

      3 months ago

      Europe! Europe! Europe!
      Hahahahahahahaha

      Matthew

      3 months ago

      What a ridiculous take you made cryptodog……sorry I mean PHD. You list leagues that make billons per year and compare it to a league that has to pay billions and even pay to be on TV in the US. Now THAT is funny!

      I miss, I miss, I make

      3 months ago

      Bottom Line. The Bottom line. With the money LIV has spent on signing bonuses alone there is no way too break even. LIV exists as long as the PIF supports it. It is 100% subsidized by PIF.

      Reply

      PHDrunkards

      3 months ago

      So how does the US exist?
      The US is in $34 Trillion DEBT.
      Who owns the US?
      Look at the list:
      As of January 2023, the five countries owning the most US debt are Japan ($1.1 trillion), China ($859 billion), the United Kingdom ($668 billion), Belgium ($331 billion), and Luxembourg ($318 billion).
      That’s just a small portion.
      Why do you think PIF and the Saudis are being allowed to do business in the US by bringing money in via things like LIV?
      Because the US cannot afford NOT to bring money in

      Reply

      Jimmy

      3 months ago

      dat you, cryptodog?

      Mike

      3 months ago

      I feel you make some good and poor points in the article. I don’t begrudge anyone for taking LIV money, but for the TV watching-golf fan, this has been a disaster. I’m watching PGA events & esp Majors without the best players. And in the non-signature events on the tour, it’s generally a fair proportion of no-names on the leaderboards also.

      I’ll still watch the majors in the Ryder Cup, probably because I always have. But there’s definitely something missing.

      Reply

      Moose384

      3 months ago

      Golf media did a good job beating down LIV before it could dig it heals in, we’ll see what the future brings. I gave it a chance and found I enjoyed it more than a standard PGA event. Team concept is great and players are more relaxed and entertaining. I think the negative press has brought those guys together like a family…hope people can see through the media haze and form there own opinions.

      Reply

      Kevin

      3 months ago

      I keep hearing Rick Shiels, NLU, and now MGS, “say there are no stakes on LIV”. What stakes are there on Rick’s Channel? But he still expects people to watch him.

      What are the ratings for Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday morning on the PGA Tour?

      Reply

      bmac8

      3 months ago

      PGA we have watched for years and know the courses.

      YouTube we are invested with the players. They’re more personal and share their struggles. Like Rick and his chipping.

      LIV is courses we don’t know, with rich guys who got richer.

      Good Good’s tournament is the future.

      Reply

      Bob

      3 months ago

      A lot higher than LIV!!

      Reply

      PHDrunkards

      3 months ago

      But how many people GLOBALLY watched on the LIVGOLF+ app???

      Reply

      Bob

      3 months ago

      a handful

      Reply

      BH

      3 months ago

      CryptoDog comment inbound in 3….2…..1…..

      Reply

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