Super Bowl Can’t Hold the Candle to the Biggest Game in Soccer

Source: Statista

While Americans are getting ready for what they consider the biggest sporting event of the year, the 53rd Super Bowl, the rest of the world couldn’t care less. Well that may be a bit harsh, but from an American perspective it’s easy to overestimate the global appeal of the biggest game in (American) football.

Speaking of football, soccer, i.e. the proper kind of football from a European perspective, far exceeds the Super Bowl in terms of global interest. The FIFA World Cup Final, played every four years to culminate a month-long tournament of 32 nations, really is the biggest game in the world, regularly reaching more than a billion people across the globe.

According to FIFA, last year’s World Cup final between France and Croatia reached an average live audience of 517 million viewers, with more than 1.1 billion people tuning in over its 90 minutes. The 2018 Super Bowl pales in comparison, having had an average viewership of 103 million in the U.S. plus an estimated 50 to 60 million around the world.

Super Bowl LIII Draws Lowest Viewership Since 2008

Source: Statista

Considering that Sunday’s Super Bowl wasn’t exactly action-packed in terms of points scored, it doesn’t come as a huge surprise that it continued the negative trend in TV viewership that started in 2016. According to preliminary figures from Nielsen, CBS’ telecast of Sunday’s Patriots win averaged 98.7 million viewers, the lowest it’s been since 2008, when 97.5 million had witnessed the New York Giants’ 17-14 win over Tom Brady and his New England Patriots. Including all digital platforms, average viewership amounted to 100.7 million, which is still the lowest level since 2009.