February 4, 2024
Read in Browser [[link removed]]
POWERED BY
The Pro Bowl is arguably the sole part of the NFL universe that doesn’t enjoy mass popularity, and long before the league’s current Taylor Swift–enhanced cultural dominance, the event was a relative afterthought among both die-hard and casual fans. But given how the NFL is approaching the remade Pro Bowl Games, perhaps you’re looking at them all wrong.
— Eric Fisher [[link removed]]
You May Dislike the Pro Bowl Games. But Perhaps Reconsider Your KPIs
Nathan Ray Seebeck-USA TODAY Sports
The NFL on most fronts is a runaway train of popularity, particularly in the past year, posting one television audience increase [[link removed]] after another [[link removed]], elevating its attendance [[link removed]] numbers, and now enjoying the further boost [[link removed]] of Taylor Swift’s megawatt stardom.
There has been a rather notable exception to that lofty standing: the NFL’s all-star game.
Previously known as the Pro Bowl, the event languished for years as a traditional tackle football game with little in the way of genuine tackling, and one of its defining features was which stars skipped the event as opposed to who actually played. Fans registered their displeasure with steadily lower ratings, and the 2022 game’s average draw of 6.7 million was just 40% of the NFL’s normal regular-season draw that season. Even commissioner Roger Goodell voiced that broad feeling of unhappiness, bluntly saying in May ’22, “The game doesn’t work. We need to find another way to celebrate the players.”
In response, the league soon moved in radical fashion and dramatically remade [[link removed]] the Pro Bowl into the Pro Bowl Games, a multiday event featuring skills competitions and highlighted by a flag football game featuring NFL all-stars. That shift did not immediately produce a larger audience, with the debut Pro Bowl Games in 2023 sinking [[link removed]] another 7.5%, to an average of 6.2 million.
Undeterred, the league is back with the second iteration of the Pro Bowl Games, with Sunday’s seven-on-seven flag football game capping off an event that includes several format tweaks for 2024, perhaps most notably the introduction [[link removed]] of a tug-of-war competition that gives a new spotlight to often-overlooked linemen and somewhat recalls the made-for-TV Superstars series that peaked in the 1970s.
So what exactly is the purpose of the Pro Bowl Games?
Like many other major league all-star events, the Pro Bowl Games carry a series of NFL business objectives that go far beyond simply drawing a mass television audience. Among them:
Providing an additional marketing platform for corporate sponsors Advancing other league grassroots and participatory programs, such as flag football, which has now risen [[link removed]] to Olympic status Reaching younger fans, particularly through social media Showcasing the league’s top talent, which can later manifest in other revenue lines, such as merchandise sales Gathering players in a much more relaxed setting than the typical, high-pressure cadence of the NFL schedule
“This is an amazing opportunity [for players] to have that level of camaraderie and brotherhood after a long-fought season and be there with their families,” Matt Shapiro, NFL vice president of event strategy and integration, tells Front Office Sports. “There are a lot of social moments, but also a lot of competitive moments. When fans tune in, there’s absolute fun being had, but there’s no doubt that a competitive streak also comes out.”
Not Alone
The NFL’s continued reshaping of the Pro Bowl Games is thematically similar to what several other major leagues are doing to reinvigorate their all-star games. The NBA is returning [[link removed]] to a traditional, conference-based game format. The NHL, which just concluded its Feb. 1–3 All-Star weekend, reverted [[link removed]] to a player-led draft system previously used in 2011–12 and ’15. And MLB now stages its annual draft in conjunction with its all-star festivities, and the league has bulked up [[link removed]] the production level of that event.
Those shifts form a response to many of the same issues the NFL has faced in recent years, including declining ratings, player participation issues, and a struggle to find a balance between injury prevention and on-field competitiveness.
“We’re sending mixed signals,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver told [[link removed]] ESPN. “And if we want guys to treat this like a real game … we have to treat it that way.”
The NFL, not surprisingly, is paying close attention to those endeavors, even as the league still is in a rather different situation, holding the Pro Bowl Games at the tail end of its season, whereas the other games exist as midseason showcases.
“There’s certainly been observation of what everybody is doing, connections across the board,” Shapiro says. “It’s about observing best practices, trying to learn. There are similarities, for sure, but also significant differences in what the play, the competition looks like across all these leagues. So each league is definitely trying to work through what’s best for their players and their fans.”
Youth Movement
It’s not a Nickelodeon alt-cast [[link removed]] or a Toy Story–themed production [[link removed]], but the youth audience is squarely in the crosshairs of the NFL and media partner ESPN for the Pro Bowl Games.
Similar to last year, Sunday’s broadcast will feature a simulcast on Disney XD in addition to the core presentation on sister networks ESPN, ESPN+, and ABC. Broadcast access will extend far beyond regular-season and playoff norms, and quarterbacks will wear microphones. So, too, will AFC and NFC coaches Peyton and Eli Manning. Many of the individual skills competitions and top moments from the flag football competition will also be cut up extensively for social media distribution [[link removed]].
“This event is really built for social,” Shapiro says. “It’s seeing players’ personalities, helmets off, getting to a couple of different practices [in addition to the competitions], the great content of players coming together. So that is a big piece of this whole thing.”
Such tactics paid off last year as the initial Pro Bowl Games skills competition last year, airing on a Thursday night, drew double-digit percentage audience increases in the overall ages 18–34 group, and males within that demographic, compared to a Pro Bowl skills event held in 2022. And ESPN is looking for an even bigger boost this year.
Initial figures for this year give the network some additional hope. Thursday’s Pro Bowl Games skills competition drew [[link removed]] an average audience of 1.14 million, up 8% and the best figure for that part of the event since 2018. More dramatically, the broadcast grew 40% year-over-year among the ages 2-17 demographic, and 34% in the ages 12-17 group.
“This is an event that allows us to build deeper relationships with NFL fans, particularly the younger ones,” Tim Reed, ESPN vice president of programming, tells FOS. “Between the format of this event and the type of access we can provide, it’s definitely not the type of production you see in an ordinary NFL week. So we certainly see this as something that provides a unique set of benefits.”
SPONSORED BY SAILGP
The Surge of SailGP
If you haven’t heard of SailGP [[link removed]], now’s the time to tune in.
Founded by five-time America’s Cup winner Sir Russell Coutts and billionaire Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, SailGP is a leading competitive sail racing league featuring world-class athletes and thrilling races at iconic global venues.
In November, the league announced its biggest news yet [[link removed]]—the record-breaking acquisition of its U.S. team by tech investor and founding Uber engineer Ryan McKillen, Margaret McKillen, and two-time world champion sailor Mike Buckley.
SailGP has set its sights on the world’s largest media market, the U.S., with four Season 4 stops taking place in America. Chicago and Los Angeles opened the season in 2023, and the league will finish with New York and San Francisco this summer.
Learn more here [[link removed]] about the acquisition, SailGP’s remarkable growth, and how you can join the excitement.
Editor’s Picks Viewership Records and Crying Swifties: Taylor Swift and the NFL’s Budding Business Relationship [[link removed]]by Margaret Fleming [[link removed]]Impact on the league, from TV records to a new fan base. Tuned In: Tom Brady Confirms Start As No. 1 Fox Analyst Alongside Kevin Burkhardt [[link removed]]by Michael McCarthy [[link removed]]Brady tells ‘Front Office Sports’ that he’ll join Fox this fall as lead analyst but will not form a three-person booth with Greg Olsen. Taylor Swift Effect? Super Bowl to See Three Health and Beauty Brand Ads [[link removed]]by Michael McCarthy [[link removed]]Three new ad spots target female consumers or prominently feature women. Powerful Factors Fueling Unrivaled Demand for Super Bowl Tickets [[link removed]]by Eric Fisher [[link removed]]Average ticket resale, listing sale prices reaching record levels. Advertise [[link removed]] Awards [[link removed]] Learning [[link removed]] Video [[link removed]] Podcast [[link removed]] Sports Careers [[link removed]] Written by Eric Fisher [[link removed]] Edited by Peter Richman [[link removed]], Catherine Chen [[link removed]]
If this email was forwarded to you, you can subscribe here [[link removed]].
Update your preferences [link removed] / Unsubscribe [link removed]
Copyright © 2021 Front Office Sports. All rights reserved.
80 Pine Street Suite 3202 New York, NY 10005