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This has bugged me for quite some time. Why is the game played on Sunday? Why not Saturday night? It has gotten to the point where even if it starts at 6-6:30 we (people with young children) need to leave parties before it's over to get them in bed for school the next day. Some of us actually go to work the next day too! Hell the game could be played as late as 9pm on Saturday night and it would not matter to me and I'm thinking many more. I might understand the whole idea of needing days to practice if the game was played the weekend after the Conference Championship games, but with two weeks in between Saturday just would ssem to make so much more sense.

 

And don't even get me started with the "championship" games in the NCAA.

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The super bowls on sunday cause football games are on SUnday (except for some saturday games late in the season and playoffs), the monday nighter, and the thanksgiving thursday and season opener thursday. Sunday is Typically football day. And on the west coast the game is over by around 9pm.

590991[/snapback]

 

I really can't understand what point you were trying to make because you make a statement and then give a bunch of details as to why that point is full of stojan.

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Also to consider, the host city typically gets revenues through the Monday morning departures. If the fans and media came in Friday and left Sunday, the host city is losing 20% of the projected revenues that a host city has come to anticipate.

 

Yes I understand a good deal of media is there frome the prior week, but a good number of journalists from non-sports publications do not show up until later in the week.

 

Still, I really do wish it was either on Saturdays, or shift the schedule so that it falls on the Sunday prior to MArtin Luther King's birthday.

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oh thats a bunch of crap! It's about money and the perception that Sunday will bring in a larger audience. Dr. Fong is nuts on! Its just like the NCAA that does not need a football playoff system because they think they make more money with the bowls. In both cases the NFL and the NCAA are wrong. Super Saturday and football playoffs would bring in larger audiences

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Also to consider, the host city typically gets revenues through the Monday morning departures. If the fans and media came in Friday and left Sunday, the host city is losing 20% of the projected revenues that a host city has come to anticipate.

590995[/snapback]

 

 

Bingo! Excellent point, never thought of it that way

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I have been saying the same thing for years. I even send an email to the NFL asking why the paradigm of Sunday Super Bowls could not be broken and I never got a response (predictably). I have yet to stay at an entire Super Bowl party because we always have to leave to put the kids in bed. Those advertisers should recognize that we might not be watching those pricey commercials.

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I really don't understand why anyone would think that bars, restaurants, grocery stores, hotels, and the like would not sell balls out on Saturday. With that, I think I just read the best argument to the NFL for a Saturday Super Bowl. "I'm not watching it while I'm driving home, and putting my kids to bed, therefore I'm not watching the cute commercials".

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Wow!! you know more than the NFL and the NCAA's. Don't know what you do for a living, but obviously, you're wasting your time whatever it is. You should be running the NFL since you're so smart.

 

I'm not that smart, but one thing I do feel confident about is, if the NFL could as you think make more money by palying the game on a Saturday night, the game would be played on Saturday. For that matter if they could make more money if the game was played at 2:00 in the afternoon on a Wednesday, they'd move it in a second.

 

So I think the game is played when it's played because it does bring in the biggest audience. Sunday night has always been known for the highest rated TV night. There are many more people who work Saturday afternoons and evenings than Sundays. Remember a Saturday 7:00pm start is 4:00 on the west coast. Not to mention above all the majority of games are played on Sundays which IS likely a large reason that football is the most popular sport to begin with.

 

Would I prefer a 5:00pm start on Sunday, sure. But it starts when it does to give it the best ratings. And it is over by 10:00 on a Sunday which considering you likely slept in Sunday morning to begin with(at least as opposed to a weekday) 10:00 is not too bad

 

 

oh thats a bunch of crap!  It's about money and the perception that Sunday will bring in a larger audience.  Dr. Fong is nuts on!  Its just like the NCAA that does not need a football playoff system because they think they make more money with the bowls.  In both cases the NFL and the NCAA are wrong.  Super Saturday and football playoffs would bring in larger audiences

590996[/snapback]

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The Super Bowl is all about corporate sponsorship. It stopped being primarily an event for the fans to attend many many moons ago. Big money folks want to fly into town on Thursday evening or Friday morning, be schmoozed on Friday and Saturday nights at numerous "invite only" parties and events and then watch the game on Sunday. That's part of the reason why the game will never be held on Saturday.

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No, I say move it to the Sunday before President's Day, I have that day off paid. I have to work on MLK's birthday, and after all Guff, it is all about me.

 

0:):D;);)

 

Also to consider, the host city typically gets revenues through the Monday morning departures. If the fans and media came in Friday and left Sunday, the host city is losing 20% of the projected revenues that a host city has come to anticipate.

 

Yes I understand a good deal of media is there frome the prior week, but a good number of journalists from non-sports publications do not show up until later in the week.

 

Still, I really do wish it was either on Saturdays, or shift the schedule so that it falls on the Sunday prior to MArtin Luther King's birthday.

590995[/snapback]

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No, I say move it to the Sunday before President's Day, I have that day off paid. I have to work on MLK's birthday, and after all Guff, it is all about me.   

 

0:):D  ;)  ;)

591085[/snapback]

 

MLK day/Presidents weekend, who cares? Just give us that Monday off and everyone would be happy, The host city would have their full share of revenues, the corporate sponsers would have their 3 day shmoozefest, and we, the real fans who watch the commercials, won't be driving home at halftime, missing the expensive commercials.

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MLK day/Presidents weekend, who cares? Just give us that Monday off and everyone would be happy, The host city would have their full share of revenues, the corporate sponsers would have their 3 day shmoozefest, and we, the real fans who watch the commercials, won't be driving home at halftime, missing the expensive commercials.

591089[/snapback]

 

I really do not mind the current SB schedule, and like you I am EST.

 

When the kids were younger we hosted the party, or partied at a neighbor's to make it easier. Even now, the kids are grown, and we are having a few friends over and staying home. 0:)

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oh thats a bunch of crap!  It's about money and the perception that Sunday will bring in a larger audience.  ...

590996[/snapback]

 

The business model of the NFL (and other pro sports) has evolved since the beginning. Sundays were available because colleges played on Saturday (Friday nights were for the high schools). First, they wanted to sell you a seat. Then they wanted to sell you a beer, a hotdog and a program. Next thing you need a place to park your car.

 

Advertising revenue from billboards was a nice addition, but with the advent of radio then televsion, broadcasting rights became the prime mover. You could reach way more people with these new fangled gadgets. The broadcasters have made quite a few demands over the years, so that's why you have a 6:30 kickoff and multitudes of commercial breaks. I would vote for moving the game to Saturday, but right now it would seem that Sunday makes more economic sense for the NFL and the networks (I don't have any hard numbers, and quite frankly, neither do you.)

 

But there's hope. The entire model of television is based on advertising. I wrote in another thread about the advertising revolution that is coming with targeted ads. Right now, advertisers blast out the message to everyone and hope the are reaching potential customers. When the system changes to where it is efficient to target potential customers (10 years?), the walls will come tumbling down. I see a pay-per-view model in the future, and we'll still have to watch ads but probably only ones for products we'd be interested in (e.g. In Mormon households the Bud Light ads will be replaced by some guy hawking the "Left Behind" series or "Got Milk?"). The whole idea will be fueled by good market research. But if that research says that more of us will watch on Sunday rather than Saturday, then we'll be stuck with what we got.

 

Of course, I could be wrong.

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