Front paged by Kid Nate.
By any measure the UFC has seen a dramatic reversal in fortunes over the the last decade: going from a deeply indebted promotion, barely limping from event to event, to being an immensely popular self-titled "league" that is now valued at over $1 billion. The explanation for their turnaround is simple: the Ultimate Fighter. With the premiere of the ground breaking reality show they saw a meteoric rise in popularity, going from selling a measly 40,000 payperviews for UFC 50 to over 1 million for UFC 66 in only two years’ time. But ever since Liddell defended his Light Heavyweight Title against Tito Ortiz, an event that was labeled by many at the time as the UFC’s pinnacle and which they would never reach again, their growth has continued unabated. As proof one need to look no further than last year’s record setting payperview sales, which were double the amount sold in that record setting year of 2006. The conventional wisdom now is the UFC has not yet peaked and they are in fact poised for even more success as they move into the mainstream of the American collective sports conscious.
As is usual, the conventional wisdom is probably wrong.
Last week Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter released the sales estimates for UFC 132, reporting that the event, headlined by Cruz vs Faber, did 350,000 buys. The glass half-full position would be that it did better than many predicted, as the card was plagued with injuries and was lacking a major draw at the top of the card. The glass half-empty position would be that it did well below the UFC’s average and well, well below the average for cards containing a title fight. Even more worrisome, it continues the downward trend that the UFC has been experiencing all year.
Here, for comparison, are the number of payperviews offered per year, the total buys,and the per event average for the last 6 years:
Year Number of PPVS Total PPV Sales Per Event Avg
2006 10 5,270,000 527,000
2007 11 4,935,000 449,000
2008 12 6,325,000 527,000
2009 13 8,020,000 617,000
2010 15* 9,080,000 605,000
2011** 8 3,480,000 435,000
* Only UFC events, doesn’t include WEC 48
** Incomplete year
As one can see, at their current pace the UFC will sell only slightly more payperviews this year than they did in 2008 and will see the lowest payperview average in the last 6 years – the post TUF era.
What is going on? How does one explain what seems to be a nearly 25% drop in payperview sales in a year’s time? Injuries? A statistical anomaly? Insufficient data? To get a clearer picture perhaps we should look at the reasons, or should I say reason, behind the UFC’s success since Liddell vs Ortiz.
While everyone has been marveling at the massive rise in popularity the UFC has seen year in and year out, they seem to miss out on one important fact: that almost all the growth post UFC 66 can be attributed to one fighter and one fighter only - Brock Lesnar.
A few tidbits to drive this point home:
And to expand on the comparison between the pre-Brock Championship and Brock Championship eras further: between the peak of UFC 66 and the heavyweight title bout of UFC 91, the UFC held 21 payperviews events, selling a total of 9,250,000 payperviews and averaging 440,000 buys per event (if we remove the Brock cards during this span the average drops to 422,00 buys). Compare that to the 28 events that took place during Brock’s reign as UFC champion which sold a total of 17,825,000 payperviews, an average of 636,600 buys per event (For his part, Brock events average 1,205,000 payperviews sold during this time, while non-Brock events averaged 542,000). This is a 70% increase over the pre-Brock Championship era. One could legitimately make the claim that Brock Lesnar has been more valuable to the UFC than the whole of Canada, their most valuable foreign market and a country that is responsible for a 1/4 of all their payperview revenues.
That Brock Lesnar has had a major impact on the bottom line of the UFC is incontrovertible, but what is questionable is how much of this resulting growth is sustainable. One would imagine that the numerous new fans he has drawn would have have since migrated to being fans of the sport, but recent trends don’t seem to support this. In the last 10 events of the Brock Lesnar Championship era the UFC sold a grand total of 7,770,000 payperviews. In the first 10 events of the Post-Brock era they have sold 4,765,000 payperviews, a precipitous drop of nearly 40% and less than what they sold in their 10 events back in 2006. For whatever reason the fans that Brock brought with him do not appear to be sticking around (a scenario Rich Luker predicted).
Perhaps this sudden downturn is merely an aberration, resulting from a combination of bad luck and poor cards. Perhaps, the UFC is merely on another poor stretch, similar to the one from UFC 106 to UFC 110, the UFC’s worst 5-card drought since 2005 which took place ironically in the midst of Brock’s reign. The curious thing about that stretch, beside the rash of injuries that many blame for its poor showing, is that it happened immediately after Lesnar’s first bout with diverticulitis, when the prevailing view was that he would never fight again. Was this a preview of how the Brockheads would react to a post-Lesnar UFC?
Of course, this is only a hypothesis and may be quickly disproven with a strong Autumn. But one would assume that if the UFC had actually gained significantly in popularity over the last few years they wouldn’t see it only limited to Brock Lesnar events but to their cable television programming as well, but that hasn’t been the case. Here are the yearly Nielsen rating averages for their Spike Fight Night Cards:
YearAverage Rating
2006 1.5
2007 1.43
2008 1.64
2009 1.14
2010 1.2
2011 1.4*
* Only two Fight Nights have been held so far this year.
And with the exception of the Kimbo Slice starring season 10, the Ultimate Fighter has seen its audience deteriorate as well, with last season being the lowest rated in the reality show’s history. As Jonathan Snowden pointed out recently, while "sports programming has seen a ratings increase of 21 percent over the the last five years", the UFC has oddly seen its ratings going in the opposite direction.
So are we seeing one of Kid Nate’s doomsday scenarios come to life? Should we prepare for another dark ages? Obviously no. Even if the UFC retreats back to its 2007 numbers, it will still be a highly profitable company and mixed martial arts will remain a very viable sport.
It just won't have Brock Lesnar to prop up the irrational exuberance and unrealistic expectations held by many.
All payperview numbers and Nielsen ratings were taken from MMAPAYOUT and their Blue Book.
By any measure the UFC has seen a dramatic reversal in fortunes over the the last decade: going from a deeply indebted promotion, barely limping from event to event, to being an immensely popular self-titled "league" that is now valued at over $1 billion. The explanation for their turnaround is simple: the Ultimate Fighter. With the premiere of the ground breaking reality show they saw a meteoric rise in popularity, going from selling a measly 40,000 payperviews for UFC 50 to over 1 million for UFC 66 in only two years’ time. But ever since Liddell defended his Light Heavyweight Title against Tito Ortiz, an event that was labeled by many at the time as the UFC’s pinnacle and which they would never reach again, their growth has continued unabated. As proof one need to look no further than last year’s record setting payperview sales, which were double the amount sold in that record setting year of 2006. The conventional wisdom now is the UFC has not yet peaked and they are in fact poised for even more success as they move into the mainstream of the American collective sports conscious.
As is usual, the conventional wisdom is probably wrong.
Last week Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter released the sales estimates for UFC 132, reporting that the event, headlined by Cruz vs Faber, did 350,000 buys. The glass half-full position would be that it did better than many predicted, as the card was plagued with injuries and was lacking a major draw at the top of the card. The glass half-empty position would be that it did well below the UFC’s average and well, well below the average for cards containing a title fight. Even more worrisome, it continues the downward trend that the UFC has been experiencing all year.
Here, for comparison, are the number of payperviews offered per year, the total buys,and the per event average for the last 6 years:
Year Number of PPVS Total PPV Sales Per Event Avg
2006 10 5,270,000 527,000
2007 11 4,935,000 449,000
2008 12 6,325,000 527,000
2009 13 8,020,000 617,000
2010 15* 9,080,000 605,000
2011** 8 3,480,000 435,000
* Only UFC events, doesn’t include WEC 48
** Incomplete year
As one can see, at their current pace the UFC will sell only slightly more payperviews this year than they did in 2008 and will see the lowest payperview average in the last 6 years – the post TUF era.
What is going on? How does one explain what seems to be a nearly 25% drop in payperview sales in a year’s time? Injuries? A statistical anomaly? Insufficient data? To get a clearer picture perhaps we should look at the reasons, or should I say reason, behind the UFC’s success since Liddell vs Ortiz.
While everyone has been marveling at the massive rise in popularity the UFC has seen year in and year out, they seem to miss out on one important fact: that almost all the growth post UFC 66 can be attributed to one fighter and one fighter only - Brock Lesnar.
A few tidbits to drive this point home:
- Between the high water mark that was Liddell vs Tito at UFC 66 and Brock’s title fight against Randy Couture at UFC 91, the UFC held 21 payperviews. Amongst those 21 payperviews only four of them manage to cross the 600,000 threshold. Two of those four were headlined by the UFC’s biggest star, Chuck Liddell, and the other two had Brock on the card.
- Brock’s first match in the promotion was at UFC 81, a card headlined by a main event of Tim Sylvia vs Antonio Nogueira fighting for the Interim Heavyweight belt. Of course, they headlined in name only and thanks to his heavily promoted presence the bout sold 600,000 payperviews, more than the two previous heavyweight title bouts that featured both Randy Couture and the actual belt. To reinforce Brock’s contribution, Dave Meltzer reported that the card sold extremely well in the same markets that the WWE performs strongly in and that an amazing 300,000 of the buys came from customers who had never purchased a UFC event before.
- Brock’s second appearance in the promotion, which he once again co-headlined, UFC 87, sold 625,000 payperviews. While some of the credit most definitely goes to Georges St-Pierre, it should be noted that St-Pierre sold 100,000 less only a few months earlier for his much hyped rematch against Matt Serra.
- Brock’s title match at UFC 91, against Randy Couture, sold 1,010,000 buys. This almost matched the total for Couture’s two previous bouts against Tim Sylvia and Gabriel Gonzaga at UFC 68 and UFC 74, and was only the second time the UFC had ever crossed the 1 million mark, the previous time being UFC 66.
- Only seven UFC events have reached the 1 million sales mark. Brock Lesnar has headlined four of these events, including the three highest selling events in the promotion’s history – UFC 100, UFC 116, and UFC 121.
- The six cards that Brock has fought on for the UFC have sold a total of 6,045,000 payperviews. That is an astounding 1,007,500 average! Even more impressive, the four title fights he headlined sold a total of 4,820,000 payperviews, an average of 1,205,000!
- Purely anecdotal, but the moderators of Bloody Elbow have attested several times that no fighter drives traffic like Brock Lesnar. Not even Fedor Emelianenko or Kimbo Slice - two perennial favorites - can rival the audience he brings.
And to expand on the comparison between the pre-Brock Championship and Brock Championship eras further: between the peak of UFC 66 and the heavyweight title bout of UFC 91, the UFC held 21 payperviews events, selling a total of 9,250,000 payperviews and averaging 440,000 buys per event (if we remove the Brock cards during this span the average drops to 422,00 buys). Compare that to the 28 events that took place during Brock’s reign as UFC champion which sold a total of 17,825,000 payperviews, an average of 636,600 buys per event (For his part, Brock events average 1,205,000 payperviews sold during this time, while non-Brock events averaged 542,000). This is a 70% increase over the pre-Brock Championship era. One could legitimately make the claim that Brock Lesnar has been more valuable to the UFC than the whole of Canada, their most valuable foreign market and a country that is responsible for a 1/4 of all their payperview revenues.
That Brock Lesnar has had a major impact on the bottom line of the UFC is incontrovertible, but what is questionable is how much of this resulting growth is sustainable. One would imagine that the numerous new fans he has drawn would have have since migrated to being fans of the sport, but recent trends don’t seem to support this. In the last 10 events of the Brock Lesnar Championship era the UFC sold a grand total of 7,770,000 payperviews. In the first 10 events of the Post-Brock era they have sold 4,765,000 payperviews, a precipitous drop of nearly 40% and less than what they sold in their 10 events back in 2006. For whatever reason the fans that Brock brought with him do not appear to be sticking around (a scenario Rich Luker predicted).
Perhaps this sudden downturn is merely an aberration, resulting from a combination of bad luck and poor cards. Perhaps, the UFC is merely on another poor stretch, similar to the one from UFC 106 to UFC 110, the UFC’s worst 5-card drought since 2005 which took place ironically in the midst of Brock’s reign. The curious thing about that stretch, beside the rash of injuries that many blame for its poor showing, is that it happened immediately after Lesnar’s first bout with diverticulitis, when the prevailing view was that he would never fight again. Was this a preview of how the Brockheads would react to a post-Lesnar UFC?
Of course, this is only a hypothesis and may be quickly disproven with a strong Autumn. But one would assume that if the UFC had actually gained significantly in popularity over the last few years they wouldn’t see it only limited to Brock Lesnar events but to their cable television programming as well, but that hasn’t been the case. Here are the yearly Nielsen rating averages for their Spike Fight Night Cards:
YearAverage Rating
2006 1.5
2007 1.43
2008 1.64
2009 1.14
2010 1.2
2011 1.4*
* Only two Fight Nights have been held so far this year.
And with the exception of the Kimbo Slice starring season 10, the Ultimate Fighter has seen its audience deteriorate as well, with last season being the lowest rated in the reality show’s history. As Jonathan Snowden pointed out recently, while "sports programming has seen a ratings increase of 21 percent over the the last five years", the UFC has oddly seen its ratings going in the opposite direction.
So are we seeing one of Kid Nate’s doomsday scenarios come to life? Should we prepare for another dark ages? Obviously no. Even if the UFC retreats back to its 2007 numbers, it will still be a highly profitable company and mixed martial arts will remain a very viable sport.
It just won't have Brock Lesnar to prop up the irrational exuberance and unrealistic expectations held by many.
All payperview numbers and Nielsen ratings were taken from MMAPAYOUT and their Blue Book.