• Loading stock data...
Thursday, April 10, 2025
Nominations Are Open for Front Office Sports Honors! Submit Now

Fox’s Audience Drops 21% For USWNT’s World Cup Exit

  • Team USA’s loss to Sweden averaged 2.52M viewers.
  • Game’s early 5 a.m. ET start on Sunday impacted numbers.
Sweden knocks out the US and TV ratings.
Credit: Jenna Watson-USA TODAY Sports

These TV numbers will only rub salt into Fox Sports’ 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup wounds.

Fox’s coverage of the USWNT’s Round of 16 loss to Sweden averaged 2.52 million viewers on Sunday morning.

That’s down 21% from the 3,196,000 average for FS1’s telecast of the USWNT’s Round of 16 victory over Spain in 2019.

What happened?

Blame it on timing. Plus, the USWNT’s dismal performance in the prior Group Stage.

Fox telecast of Sweden’s penalty kicks victory over the U.S. began at 5 a.m. ET. 

Sure, plenty of people set their alarm clocks early on the East Coast – or rose in the middle of the night on the West Coast – to watch the match. 

But not enough. Especially compared to the match window for the comparable match four years ago from France, which began at 11:39 a.m. ET. Now Fox faces the prospect of televising the rest of the tournament without its biggest TV draw.

What makes matters worse is that if the favored USWNT had won their Group Stage as expected, their games would have aired in ratings-friendly prime-time windows in the U.S.

Instead, Team USA went out early with a whimper.

All Fox can do is dream about what might have been if the favored USWNT had pulled off a historic three-peat.

United States Women's World Cup disaster.

Carli Lloyd’s Brutally Honest Analysis Shines Amid World Cup Disaster

Fox Sports analyst Carli Lloyd correctly warned that a cocky, complacent USWNT…
August 7, 2023

Still, despite two of their four match windows airing either overnight or early morning, Fox projects the USWNT’s matches will end up averaging 3,795,000 viewers, up 2% from 3,726,000 for the comparable four matches in 2019.

Fox’s lead analyst Alexi Lalas called USWNT’s ignominious departure a “failure of historic proportions.”

Said Lalas: “This U.S. team has never finished worse than third in a World Cup, so obviously going out in the Round of 16 is not good. And when I look at the previous versions of this team that won the World Cup in 2015, in 2019, this is the weakest of the three, and so ultimately, they just weren’t good enough. The way they did it was commendable, but still, the damage was done early on.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

NFL Schedule Set to Drop in May—With Major Changes in Store

Several additional factors are going into this year’s game slate.

LA28 Flag Football Push Pits Goodell and Players Against NFL Owners

A final decision could be forthcoming on active NFL player participation.

Man City Blinks: Fan Pressure Halts Ticket Increases in Rare Move

The powerful club will not raise ticket prices next season.
Northwestern

Northwestern Settling Hazing Lawsuits As Fitzgerald Case Continues

Former coach Pat Fitzgerald is suing the school for $130 million.

Featured Today

The pin flag on the second green flaps in the wind during the second round of the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club.

Inside The Masters: Traditions, Restrictions, and Gnomes

How the most exclusive major employs its own strict rules and operations.
Mar 16, 2023; Sacramento, CA, USA; Missouri Tigers guard Kobe Brown (24) reacts after scoring a basket agianst the Utah State Aggies during the second half at Golden 1 Center.
exclusive
April 6, 2025

‘It’s On Principle’: NBA Players On Filing for House Settlement Checks

The checks are relatively small. That’s not the point, players say.
Mar 29, 2025; Newark, NJ, USA; Duke Blue Devils forward Cooper Flagg (2) before playing against the Alabama Crimson Tide in the East Regional final of the 2025 NCAA tournament at Prudential Center.
April 5, 2025

As College Basketball Teams Got Older, Duke Embraced the Fountain of Youth

How the Blue Devils went old-school in the transfer portal era.
Mar 1, 2025; Gainesville, Florida, USA; Florida Gators guard Walter Clayton Jr. (1) and center Olivier Rioux (32) and guard Alijah Martin (15) and forward Thomas Haugh (10) huddle after the game against the Texas A&M Aggies at Exactech Arena at the Stephen C. O'Connell Center
April 4, 2025

How Florida Built a Final Four Roster With ‘Under-Recruited’ Players

“We’ve never gotten a single player because we’re the highest bidder.”
Apr 8, 2025; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Scottie Scheffler hit on no. 7 during a practice round for the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club.

Can Masters TV Ratings Rebound From Big Drop Last Year?

Viewership for the final round was down 20% in 2024.
Monica McNutt
April 8, 2025

Monica McNutt Reflects on Viral Stephen A. Smith Exchange 10 Months Later

“This is layered for me,” McNutt said at the FOS event in Tampa.
April 8, 2025

College Volleyball’s Audience Is Spiking—and Networks Are Noticing

Women’s college volleyball is booming as networks and fans embrace the sport.
Sponsored

League One Volleyball’s Defining Moment: A Championship Years in the Making

Volleyball has long thrived at the youth level—now it’s transforming professionally. The LOVB Finals mark a pivotal moment for the sport.
April 6, 2025

Auriemma and Staley: Women’s Hoops Should Have Its Own TV Deal

The current TV deal is tied with 39 other NCAA championships.
Apr 4, 2025; Tampa, FL, USA; Connecticut Huskies guard Paige Bueckers (5) and forward Sarah Strong (21) react on the bench during the fourth quarter in a semifinal of the women's 2025 NCAA tournament against the UCLA Bruins at Amalie Arena.
April 5, 2025

Women’s Final Four Delivers Nearly 4M Viewers, Still 64% Drop

Both of this year’s games were blowouts, which didn’t help returns.
hard-knocks-2020
April 3, 2025

NFL Expands ‘Hard Knocks’ Pool of Teams: Who’s Eligible for 2025?

The NFL is relaxing rules surrounding its reality TV show.
NWSL
April 2, 2025

NWSL Could Make Tens of Millions Selling New TV Games

Almost 200 games are up for grabs over the next two years.