In earning their first NBA title in 53 years, the New York Knicks gifted the league and ABC the biggest TV turnout since Michael Jordan celebrated his final championship in 1998.
According to Nielsen Big Data + Panel estimates, the Knicks’ five-game defeat of the favored San Antonio Spurs averaged 20.6 million viewers per night, making this year’s installment of the Finals the most-watched since the Chicago Bulls beat the Utah Jazz in six games. Over the course of what would prove to be Jordan’s sixth and final NBA Finals triumph, NBC 28 years ago averaged a record-high 29 million viewers.
The Knicks’ historic victory doubled the TV turnout from a year ago, when ABC averaged 10.2 million viewers per broadcast.
Game 5, in which the Knicks once again demonstrated that no Spurs lead was ever safe, served up 24.54 million viewers on ABC Saturday night, peaking at 33 million as the clock ran out at Frost Bank Center. That edged ABC and ESPN’s combined deliveries for Game 3, which boasted 23.79 million viewers.
While the NBA Finals enjoyed a bit of a boost by way of Nielsen’s upgrade to its ratings measurement scheme, the Knicks-Spurs series likely would have been the most-watched since at least 2017 without the currency lift. That five-game Warriors-Cavs outing averaged 20.4 million viewers per game and now stands as ABC’s second most-watched title tilt since it resumed airing the best-of-seven series in 2003.











