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TUF 11 Finale: 1.4 HH

June 23, 2010 by Kelsey Philpott 4 Comments

MMAPayout.com has learned that the TUF 11 Finale on Spike TV drew a 1.4 HH rating on the strength of 2 million average viewers over its three hour broadcast on Saturday night. However, the show peaked at 2.4 million viewers for the main event that saw Court McGee defeat Kris McCray.

The program also garnered a 2.3 in the M18-34 and 1.8 in the M18-49 demographics.

Payout Perspective:

The broadcast is probably a poor result when you compare it to previous TUF Finale events; the 1.4 HH is the lowest TUF Finale rating since Season 4 did a 1.1 HH (the season that Serra and Lutter won title shots).

I think this is ultimately a reflection of the quality of the fight card. Interesting fights will bring a crowd. No disrespect to McGee vs. McCray or Hamill vs. Jardine, but neither was a fight that anyone had a great deal of interest in seeing. This is especially true when you consider that the last Spike card featured Florian vs. Gomi and the next free television card (on Versus) will feature Jon Jones vs. Vlady Matyushenko. There’s a huge discrepancy there.

——-

Where does the UFC go from here? It would seem that more of the status quo is in order:

  • Two big name coaches: Team St-Pierre vs. Team Koscheck
  • No big format change: the talk within the industry is that it’s more or less the same format (nothing drastic)
  • Same promises: once again, officials are already leaking bits of news that it’s “the most exciting TUF ever”.

I’d obviously like to see them make a change. I tend to side with being proactive rather than reactive, but I’m not sure it’s that simple, either. If the company is planning to leverage TUF as a component of its international expansion strategy, then it can’t very well change the entire format right now.

With that said, I do think that each show is going to require some tinkering to fit in with its local market. Some of the crap that happened on the show in the US won’t fly in the UAE and China – or even markets like Australia.

Filed Under: ratings, TUF, TV

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Larsenator says

    June 23, 2010 at 6:23 am

    Indeed! Cultural differences are one of the most important factors in international marketing.
    We Danes HATED the first TUF’s with all the Leben, Browning etc. NONSENSE!!!!!!
    And yes you are SO right: That S*** will not fly in non-US countries (not just the middle east and Asia!)!

    Reply
  2. Stan Kosek says

    June 23, 2010 at 9:53 pm

    It was the highest rated program on all of TV for males 18-34 on Saturday, so numbers down overall a little, but still kicking ass in the demos they need to keep ad money coming in.

    Reply
  3. Diego says

    June 24, 2010 at 5:06 am

    It was a solid result, I think built on the strength of the contestants and their performances in the cage during the show. Yes there was some drama between Tito and Chuck and I imagine Kos will do his best to make drama during his stint as coach, but it seem to me that the real strength of the TUF brand is the fighters they put in the cage. As long as we keep seeing good fights (and not the crapfest that was the heavyweight season) I figure TUF has a lot of miles left on it. That’s good for the UFC and good for MMA.

    Reply
  4. Paul says

    June 24, 2010 at 12:06 pm

    Agreed ref the HW tuf, a total shambles!!!

    More emphasis should be put on the athletes past expierience and most certainly pe selection conditioning! Which for some reason has become a common thread throughout TUF, POOR poor conditioning. Poor conditioning = poor fights no matter how much skill they have, you can look as sharp as you want sparring etc But the fight different ball game. UFC should impose a high level conditioning/fitness test and a minimum MMA expierience length of time training.
    I have not seen this new TUF (Europe) but the HW’s made me not want to bother watching again.

    Anyway just a thought.

    Reply

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