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Only 4% of households watch any sports outside of the NFL? Come on, there is no way that's true. Individual teams pull that in their markets. Hell we have a women's basketball team that pulls higher ratings than that. Ohio State pulls 20 ratings for games against Akron in Columbus.
Game 7 of the NBA Finals just got a 17.7 rating nationally.
I doubt that's what the WSJ article says but it's behind the pay wall.
It actually does say it:
>>It is a well-kept secret of sports on television: Aside from the National Football League and the biggest games of the year in a handful of other sports, such as Tuesday night's Major League Baseball All-Star Game, the TV audience for sports is tiny, amounting to about 4% or less of households on average, according to media-research firm Nielsen's data provided by a major media company. Less than 3% of households with television in any given market, on average, will tune in to watch their hometown National Basketball Association teams play, and less than 2% will watch their National Hockey League teams.
Yet in the average market, sports channels such as ESPN and regional sports networks account for 19.5% of fees paid by cable and satellite operators, according to media-research firm SNL Kagan. The average monthly cable bill in the U.S., before taxes, is now $73.44, Kagan estimates.<<
Interview and WSJ Story. Not a SME to vouch for accuracy or how they compiled data from Nielsen.

