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An NFL Game is Only ~11 Minutes of Actual play

CloakNNNdagger

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An average NFL game: more than 100 commercials and just 11 minutes of play
Zachary M. Seward
November 24, 2013

For five months of the year, the National Football League dominates Sundays in the United States; it’s more popular than church.

The NFL’s popularity is all the more remarkable when you inspect the fare it has to offer each week on television. An average professional football game lasts 3 hours and 12 minutes, but if you tally up the time when the ball is actually in play, the action amounts to a mere 11 minutes.

Part of the discrepancy has to do with the basic rules of American football. Unlike hockey or basketball, the 60-minute game clock in football can run even when the ball is not in play. That means a lot of game time is spent standing around or huddling up before each play begins.

The 11 minutes of action was famously calculated a few years ago by the Wall Street Journal. Its analysis found that an average NFL broadcast spent more time on replays (17 minutes) than live play. The plurality of time (75 minutes) was spent watching players, coaches, and referees essentially loiter on the field.

An average play in the NFL lasts just four seconds.

Of course, watching football on TV is hardly just about the game; there are plenty of advertisements to show people, too. The average NFL game includes 20 commercial breaks containing more than 100 ads. The Journal’s analysis found that commercials took up about an hour, or one-third, of the game.

Football’s stop-and-go nature makes it particularly prime for commercials, unlike soccer, which forces broadcasters to creatively insert ads during the 45 minutes of continuous play in each half. Broadcasts of NFL games in Europe, incidentally, include far fewer commercials.

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This piece is 4 years old, but updated numbers, short of some "streamlining" of the replay process, remain essentially the same. They put the game we are watching as fans in more accurate perspective as far as many related aspects.
 
I've watched games on DVR and can be done within 40 minutes. Looks like I'm wasting some time, though, if there's only an average of 11 minutes of action! :D
 
I watch a lot of condensed version games on Game Pass and it's usually about 20-23 minutes to get through a game.

Now, if that article, study, whatever, means from the time the ball is snapped until a runner is down, or pass is incomplete, maybe it's 11 minutes, but coming up to the line, seeing the formations, motions, how the defense is lined up, etc. are all part of the action to me.
 
It says it's calculated as the time the ball itself is actually in play.

Horsesh*t though as presnap is just as integral a part of the game as anything. Then of course no sport on the planet is buoyed by post-play analyses as much as football.

I get it, the broadcast is stretched to it's limits with dead clock situations and commercials, but this is a considerably slanted take.
 
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