• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Live Golf Returns With Big Dollar Donations And Average Audiences

  • The TaylorMade Driving Relief event on May 17 drew a total average audience of 2.35 million viewers while raising more than $5.5 million for COVID-19 relief efforts.
  • Viewership was “in the ballpark for golf this time of year,” says sports communications expert, but ‘The Match: Champions for Charity’ on May 24 will likely draw more interest.
Credit: Mike Ehrmann/Pool Photo via USA TODAY Network

Live golf returned to television for the first time in two months on May 17, with the TaylorMade Driving Relief event drawing a total audience of 2.35 million average viewers across NBC, GOLF Channel, NBCSN, along with NBC Sports and PGA TOUR streaming platforms, according to Nielsen and Adobe Analytics. The event raised more than $5.5 million for COVID-19 relief efforts along the way, $4 million of which came from corporate partners.

The live broadcast’s total audience delivery was comparable to final round coverage of the 2019 PGA TOUR on CBS and NBC during the second quarter, which averaged 2.32 million and 2.38 million viewers, respectively. A record average of 10.8 million viewers watched CBS Sports’ coverage of the final round of the 2019 Masters, which finished as the tournament’s most-watched morning golf broadcast in 32 years.

“Some may see the audience for this event as perhaps a bit light, but we need to remember that despite how starved we all are for live sports, it wasn’t an actual PGA event,” Lou D’Ermilio, president of sports communications firm Loud Communications, said. “I suspect the first official PGA event, with a full field, will perform better.”

Despite being on par with other golf events, Driving Relief’s numbers were well behind viewership for other sports-related broadcasts during the pandemic. The NFL draft drew a record-setting number of viewers across all three days of its coverage in April, topping 15 million during the first round. ESPN’s Michael Jordan docuseries, “The Last Dance,” premiered as the network’s most-watched documentary content ever after averaging 6.1 million viewers for episodes 1 and 2 across ESPN and ESPN2.

D’Ermilio said with an audience still “in the ballpark for golf this time of year,” the event was a win for sponsors as well as the NBC network and streaming platforms.

“I’m sure they felt great about having a live sports audience hearing and seeing their messages for the first time in a while,” he said. “Associating their brands with one of the first live sports events since March is most definitely a positive, and so is associating their brands with charities benefitting front line responders, especially now, when many of us are looking for ways to help our communities and these brave people any way we can.”

READ MORE: Noah Rubin’s Behind The Racquet Shines Spotlight On Tennis Stars

The TaylorMade Driving Relief charity skins event was supported by UnitedHealth Group, which pledged $3 million in donations – the skins-style round put a price on each hole won – and Farmers Insurance, which pledged $1 million for a birdies-and-eagle pool to benefit Off Their Plate, a charitable organization helping COVID-19 healthcare workers and impacted frontline shift employees. 

Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson’s team won the event in the closest-to-the-pin playoff for $1.1 million in charitable donations, which secured the victory on the 17th. Following McIlroy’s tiebreaking wedge, which came when six skins were still on the table after the 18th hole, the pair finished with $1.85 million for American Nurses Foundation. Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff won $1.15 million for the CDC Foundation after leading for much of the match.

“The real beneficiaries are those on the front lines fighting this pandemic, and we know The American Nurses Foundation and Center for Disease Control Foundation will continue to do all they can to help meet the needs of those frontline heroes,” UnitedHealth Group senior vice president of marketing Allen Hermeling said. 

Viewers could also contribute to the fundraising efforts through online donations and Text-to-Give options in partnership with GoFundMe. Several notable names called into the broadcast as well to give, including actor and comedian Bill Murray. During Murray’s sideways Skype appearance, he and NBC’s Mike Tirico agreed to donate $15,000 each to the organizations benefiting from the event. Donations are continuing.

The event’s relative success came despite a few technical hiccups, given the limited on site- personnel and available resources. Golf will get a second chance at a live, socially distanced broadcast on May 24, when Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson bring ‘That Match’ back to television with a twist. The ‘Champions for Charity’ edition will feature two-person teams of Woods and NFL legend Peyton Manning versus Mickelson and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Tom Brady. The participants and WarnerMedia have already pledged a total of $10 million. 

“In the absence of all the sports we’ve come to expect this time of year, there is an appetite for made for TV sports, especially if big celebrities are involved,” D’Ermilio said. “I expect The Match to do better than Driving Relief.”

Several additional on-course challenges for charity have already been announced, including Charles Barkley playing a ‘Bogey or Better’ hole for $200,000. Barkley, who adds to the star power of the event, will also serve as an analyst for The Match.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

LeBron James

Adam Silver: All-Star Game Will Be USA vs. World in Daytime Event

The NBA tried a tournament last year that fell in ratings.

As TNT Sports Shifts, WBD Investors Reject $52M Zaslav Pay

Company shareholders reject the executive’s pay in a non-binding vote.

MLB TV Ratings Jump: Fox Up 10%, ESPN Hits Eight-Year High

Each of the league’s national rights holders is posting audience gains.

NBA Playoff Ratings Up 3%, Pacers-Knicks G6 Sets Postseason High

The Thunder and Pacers face off in the NBA Finals starting Thursday.

Featured Today

May 27, 2015; Paris, France; Mirjana Lucic-Baroni (CRO) knocks the clay off her shoe during her match against Simona Halep (ROU) on day four of the French Open at Roland Garros

Roland-Garros’s Iconic Red-Clay Surface Is a Precise Alchemy

The exact science behind maintaining the French Open’s red clay.
Alex Jensen introductory press conference on Monday, March 17, 2025.
June 3, 2025

Alex Jensen Started Utah Utes HC Job While Still Coaching the Mavs

How Jensen began building an NCAA program while patrolling the Dallas sideline.
May 31, 2025

PSG and the City of Paris Can Join European Soccer’s Elite

What a maiden Champions League title would mean for the French club.
May 30, 2025

How the Champions League Anthem Took on a Life of Its Own

The composer didn’t know he wrote a timeless hit three decades ago.
FIFA

Saudis Awarded 2034 World Cup in Uncontested Vote

Saudi Arabia was the only option after Australia decided not to bid.
May 20, 2024

Top Sports Business Jobs This Week (May 2024)

Each week, our staff combs through the thousands of job listings from…
The stands at the Solheim Cup
September 13, 2024

LPGA Apologizes for Solheim Cup Fan Bus Debacle That Left Stands Half-Empty

The USA-Europe women’s team golf event teed off Friday morning.
Sponsored

Game On: Portfolio Players Stories, Brought to You by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley

In Episode 7 of Portfolio Players, go inside the boardroom with Avenue Capital CEO and former Milwaukee Bucks co-owner Marc Lasry on Giannis’s future, women’s sports, and upstart leagues like TGL and Unrivaled. 
October 3, 2022

Real Madrid President Renews Call for Super League

Real Madrid’s president believes that soccer is losing ground.
August 10, 2022

PGA Tour Touts Projected Earnings to Keep Players

The PGA Tour is asking its players to consider their potential futures.
August 10, 2022

Bayern Munich to Make Growth Push in U.S. Market

Bayern Munich is looking to expand its reach in the U.S.
Nintendo-logo
August 3, 2022

Nintendo Profits Underwhelm, Switch Sales Decline

Nintendo failed to meet expectations in the company’s latest earnings report.