logo
UFL remains confident in growth despite 2025 attendance, TV rating declines

UFL remains confident in growth despite 2025 attendance, TV rating declines

USA Todaya day ago

UFL remains confident in growth despite 2025 attendance, TV rating declines
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Greg Olsen expresses excitement for upcoming Olympic flag football
Former TE Greg Olsen is excited for some NFL players to showcase their skills in the upcoming 2028 Summer Olympics and the debut of flag football.
Sports Seriously
ST. LOUIS — The UFL was hopeful its second season as a unified spring football league would afford it opportunities to expand upon the attendance it drew in 2024.
Instead, the league's overall attendance declined by 5%, according to the Sports Business Journal.
Seven of the UFL's eight home markets had their average attendance drop in 2025, with the Michigan Panthers' 30.4% increase in attendance serving as the outlier. Four markets – Arlington, Birmingham, Houston and Memphis – averaged fewer than 10,000 fans per game.
The league's TV viewership also declined, as its games had an average of 645,000 viewers in 2025, down from 812,000 in 2024.
While the results weren't what the league was hoping, its leadership continues to insist it is willing to do whatever it takes to create growth across its eight markets.
"We're not shying away from it," UFL president Russ Brandon said of the league's attendance challenge at the league's championship game media day in St. Louis. "It's certainly something that we're running towards."
UFL CHAMPIONSHIP GAME: TV channel, start time, odds, more to know
UFL attendance: Why league is confident it will grow
The UFL's leadership was quick to point out the spring league is still in its infancy. It played its first game as a unified spring league just 15 months ago after the USFL and XFL merged ahead of the 2024 season.
"We haven't even gotten to our 'Terrible Twos' yet," UFL owner Dany Garcia said with a smile.
Brandon noted the 2024 merger – which closed on Jan. 13, just more than two months ahead of the league's March 28 start date – prevented the UFL from focusing significant resources on market growth ahead of its first season together.
"We were drinking out of a fire hose operationally to get up and running," Brandon explained.
The UFL was better positioned to start addressing its attendance challenges in 2025. It spent resources adding personnel and advertising in each of the league's eight home markets while attempting to create more connectivity between those markets and the UFL Hub in Arlington.
Even so, the league was still learning about itself and the audience with which it was trying to connect.
"Our first-year merge was murky for us to understand; what does the market actually think of us, and who are we?" Garcia said. "This is the year that we got the clarity, and now we know who we are, and now we push forward."
What will pushing forward entail? Brandon offered that the league is "looking at every way to re-engage and look at our marketplace in each separate silo as we move forward."
"We know this: We have a great product. We know it's affordable," Brandon said. "We're trying to activate as much as possible in each of these local markets. And we have a great plan, I believe, in place to do that."
He also noted the league isn't worried at all about the ratings decline, opining they were still "phenomenal" compared to other programming.
"People would give their eyeteeth for the amount of eyeballs that are watching our games on TV," he said.
But for now, the UFL's executive vice president of football operations Daryl Johnston acknowledged the league wants its focus to remain on celebrating the Michigan Panthers and DC Defenders as they square off in the league's season-concluding championship game.
"When the time comes and the time is right, then we'll start to reflect back and find out some of the whys," Johnston said, referencing the league's attendance challenges, "and then how can we implement that moving forward to make sure that we're getting better every year."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Clemson star wide receiver Bryant Wesco Jr. named a top player to watch for 2027 NFL draft
Clemson star wide receiver Bryant Wesco Jr. named a top player to watch for 2027 NFL draft

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Clemson star wide receiver Bryant Wesco Jr. named a top player to watch for 2027 NFL draft

Clemson star wide receiver Bryant Wesco Jr. named a top player to watch for 2027 NFL draft The 2025 college football season hasn't even kicked off yet, but Clemson wide receiver Bryant Wesco Jr. is already drawing long-term attention from NFL scouts and analysts. Despite being just one year into his college career, the rising sophomore is already being viewed as a top prospect for the 2027 NFL Draft. A former consensus top-35 recruit out of Midlothian (Texas) High School, Wesco wasted no time making an impact in his true freshman season at Clemson. He led the Tigers in yards per reception (17.3), finishing the year with 41 catches for 708 yards and five touchdowns across 12 games, including 11 starts. His breakout year earned him freshman All-American honors from multiple outlets, including Pro Football Focus (PFF). PFF's Max Chadwick recently spotlighted Wesco as one of college football's most intriguing future NFL Draft prospects. 'Wesco's 707 receiving yards trailed only Jeremiah Smith and Ryan Williams among true freshmen wideouts while his 2.21 yards per route run were fifth and led the Tigers this season,' Chadwick wrote. He also pointed to Wesco's dominant performance in Clemson's ACC Championship victory over SMU as a defining moment. In that game, Wesco hauled in eight passes for 142 yards and two touchdowns — setting a new ACC Championship Game record for receiving yards by a freshman and tying for the second-most by any player in the game's history. Wesco's production didn't stop there. The ACC title game was one of three 100-yard receiving performances for him in 2024, making him just the fifth true freshman in Clemson history to accomplish that feat since the NCAA granted permanent freshman eligibility in 1972. His 17.3 yards per catch marked the highest average by a Tiger with at least 40 receptions since Tee Higgins in 2019 (19.8), and the best by a Clemson freshman with 40 or more catches since Justyn Ross in 2018 (21.7). Both PFF and ESPN are bullish on Wesco's future heading into the 2025 season, ranking him among the top receivers in the country. PFF placed him at No. 7 among returning wideouts, while ESPN slotted him at No. 8 — further evidence of the high expectations surrounding the young Tiger. Alongside fellow sophomore standout T.J. Moore, Wesco is expected to be a focal point of Clemson's passing game this season. And while there's still a long road ahead before the 2027 NFL Draft, Wesco is already turning heads with his elite combination of speed, body control, and big-play ability Contact us @Clemson_Wire on X, and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Clemson Tigers news and notes, plus opinions.

Katie Ledecky gives Stanford commencement keynote address, tells 2012 Olympic story
Katie Ledecky gives Stanford commencement keynote address, tells 2012 Olympic story

NBC Sports

timean hour ago

  • NBC Sports

Katie Ledecky gives Stanford commencement keynote address, tells 2012 Olympic story

Katie Ledecky returned to Stanford, her alma mater, to give a 21-minute keynote address at the commencement for the university's largest graduating class in history. Ledecky, 28, noted she is no more than seven years older than the graduates: 1,110 earning doctoral degrees, 2,655 master's degrees and 2,140 bachelor's degrees. 'I can tell you everything you need to know about freestyle and flip turns,' she said. 'I cannot tell you everything you need to know about life.' Ledecky graduated from Stanford in 2020 with a major in psychology and a minor in political science. In her speech, she reflected on her first Olympics in London in 2012, when she was the youngest U.S. athlete across all sports at age 15. She remembered then-Prince William and Princess Kate being in the crowd for the 800m freestyle final. She remembered being in a lane next to the defending Olympic gold medalist and home favorite Rebecca Adlington of Great Britain. 'So I know the crowd will be chanting Bec-ky, Bec-ky,' she said. 'I had programmed myself to think they are shouting Le-deck-y, Le-deck-y.' Ledecky mentioned that coaches advised her not to go out too fast. Yet she took the lead from the start. 'About midway through the race, I remember thinking, where is everybody,' she said. 'There's a brief second where I wonder if I'm doing something wrong, like I've gone out too fast. Then I tell myself, just keep going. And I did. I won by over four seconds.' The anecdote was part of Ledecky's theme: how to go the distance in whatever field the graduates choose. 'You don't have to win the race,' said Ledecky, who estimated she has swum 26,000 miles in her life to set up about 5 1/2 miles of Olympic finals. 'You just need to win your race. And winning your race means falling in love with the process. Fall in love with the process, not the podium.' She ended her speech by saying, 'Take your mark, and go out there and make your mark.' Nick Zaccardi,

Packers TE Tucker Kraft wants to do more damage downfield in 2025
Packers TE Tucker Kraft wants to do more damage downfield in 2025

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Packers TE Tucker Kraft wants to do more damage downfield in 2025

Packers TE Tucker Kraft wants to do more damage downfield in 2025 Tucker Kraft was one of the NFL's most efficient pass-catching tight ends on short throws during the 2024 season, but the tackle-breaking Green Bay Packer wants to take his game to the next level by becoming a better weapon down the field in 2025. Including the postseason, Kraft caught 47 of his 55 passes on targets thrown under 10 yards in the air last season, per Pro Football Focus. But he was only targeted 10 times on passes 10 or more yards in the air, highlighting his limited opportunities as a downfield receiver. The Packers leaned on Kraft in the short game, using him as a check down option, in the flat on short routes or on screens to get the ball in his hands quickly and easily and make the most of his incredible ability to break tackles after the catch. But there's a next step for Kraft as a third-year player with huge potential. No tight end in the NFL is a consistently dominant threat on throws over 20 yards down the field, but the intermediate range -- between 10 and 19 yards -- is where the best of the best do most of their damage. Five tight ends had 300 or more receiving yards in that intermediate area in 2024: George Kittle (second-team All-Pro), Mark Andrews, Travis Kelce (Pro Bowl), Trey McBride (Pro Bowl) and Zach Ertz. Kraft, meanwhile, ranked 22nd among tight ends in receiving yards and tied for 34th in receptions in the intermediate area. This past week, Kraft said he wanted to get better at separation against man-to-man coverage and reading coverage schemes pre-snap to help power an improvement as a downfield receiver in 2025. Kraft did plenty of damage when given the opportunity downfield last season. He caught eight of his 10 targets on throws over 10 yards in the air, creating 270 receiving yards and three touchdowns. Quarterbacks had a perfect 158.3 passer rating when targeting him on throws of both 10-19 yards down field and 20 or more yards, so there's evidence of what Kraft can do when provided the opportunity. Winning more against man coverage would provide more opportunities. And it's clear the Packers want to make Kraft more of a focal point of the passing game after he turned only 70 total targets into 707 receiving yards and seven scores in 2024. The game's best pass-catching tight ends can beat linebackers and safeties to all areas of the field when defenses elect to play man coverage, get into passing windows and find soft spots in zone coverages, and make plays in the scramble drill when quarterbacks extend plays. Kraft can catch the short pass and make magic happen after. To become a truly elite tight end, Kraft must become a higher volume target in the downfield parts of the field -- a goal he's set and ready to chase in 2025. Tucker Kraft, downfield receiving stats in 2024 (PFF)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store