The first TV ratings are in for TGL, the new six-team indoor golf league founded by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy.
Tuesday night’s debut match—which did not feature Woods or McIlroy in action—drew an average of 919,000 viewers on ESPN in its 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. ET time slot, according to Nielsen. The audience average topped one million between 9:15 and 10:15.
The Bay Golf Club (featuring Ludvig Aberg, Shane Lowry, and Wyndham Clark) defeated New York Golf Club (Xander Schauffele, Rickie Fowler, and Matt Fitzpatrick) 9–2 in the 15-hole match. Each hole is usually worth one point, with no points awarded for a tie. Every match will play all 15 holes, no matter the score, for season-ending tiebreaker purposes.
Woods and McIlroy were in attendance at the 1,500-seat SoFi Center in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., and each joined ESPN play-by-play announcer Matt Barrie at separate points in the broadcast booth.
TGL is technology-centric, featuring golfers hitting tee and approach shots into a giant simulator screen, and then chipping and putting at a “greenzone” area with artificial turf, real sand, and a green that can rotate and transform in between holes.
So, is 919,000 viewers for the first match of a new golf league good or bad?
Consider that the number is 28% higher than ratings of a Duke-Pittsburgh men’s college basketball game that drew 717,000 viewers on ESPN in the same window last year, according to Sports Media Watch. Coincidentally, another Duke-Pitt game was the lead-in for TGL on Tuesday, drawing 751,000 viewers.
According to Sports Media Watch’s research, the TGL debut drew more viewers than:
- Any LIV Golf broadcast on The CW in 2023 and 2024
- Last week’s PGA Tour season-opener, The Sentry, on Golf Channel and NBC
- December’s “Crypto.com Showdown,” featuring LIV and PGA Tour stars on TNT Sports
All things considered, drawing close to one million viewers for the first match of a new golf league appears to be a success for TGL and ESPN, which has a multiyear media rights deal.
That number should grow next week, when Woods makes his debut as his team, Jupiter Links Golf Club, faces Los Angeles Golf Club on Tuesday at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN. On Jan. 27, McIlroy will play against Woods and Jupiter.
TGL’s 15-match regular season runs through March 4, with playoffs occurring later that month. The league’s challenge will be sustaining a consistent audience on ESPN and ESPN2 after any initial intrigue—from its stars like Woods and McIlroy to innovations like its 40-second shot clock—potentially wears off.