We are about as close to a 51st state of the US as it is possible to get, and until quite recently nobody really followed it here. I think there was a sunday morning C4 roundup programme, but i don't think we had live coverage of the Superbowl or any other game until recently (I remember trying to listen to it on Radio 5 in the 1990s). Even now, with 3 home games a season and live TV coverage, it is only a very small minority that watch it. And that's in the UK. I imagine Africa, Asia, and South America couldn't give a shit.
Originally Posted by
Loya Jirga wrote on Tue, 03 February 2015 11:01
I love american football, it is a terrific sport and can produce some amazing drama (like last night). But it is a minority sport really, probably not even as popular as cricket or rugby.
Originally Posted by
Otis wrote on Tue, 03 February 2015 10:54
It used to be quite popular in the 90s. I definitely remember watching live superbowls then. I'd say it was more popular now, but that comes with increased TV channels.
Originally Posted by
Loya Jirga wrote on Tue, 03 February 2015 10:45
I remember they used to have a shop up Talbot Green that used to sell all sorts of American Football gear.
Originally Posted by
TruBlue wrote on Mon, 02 February 2015 14:29
In 2013 258,000 watched on Sky Sports 1. The same night Valencia v Barcelona got 373,000. The Sunday 4pm game got 2m.
Originally Posted by
Optimistic Nick wrote on Mon, 02 February 2015 13:45
In 2014 the Super Bowl didn't register in the top 10 of the Sky Sports 1 charts.
Originally Posted by
Cathaze Blue wrote on Sun, 01 February 2015 21:40
That counts bars and pubs showing it as one viewer though doesn't it? I was watching it in a bar with about 150 in it, I'd imagine there were a few other cities and bars up and down the country doing the same thing.