NFL on ABC
NFL on ABC is the branding for the American Broadcasting Company's telecasts of National Football League games, a package that originated in 1948 but achieved enduring prominence through its production of Monday Night Football starting in 1970.[1][2] The series debuted on September 21, 1970, with a matchup between the Cleveland Browns and New York Jets, marking the NFL's first regular primetime broadcast and revolutionizing sports television by prioritizing entertainment value alongside athletic competition under producer Roone Arledge.[3][1] ABC committed $25.5 million for the initial four-year deal, defying skepticism from NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle about viewer interest in weekday evening games, yet it quickly established Monday nights as a cultural staple with innovative features like multiple camera angles, celebrity analysts, and halftime entertainment.[4][2] ABC held exclusive rights to Monday Night Football for 36 seasons until 2005, during which the program amassed high ratings, influenced announcing styles with figures like Howard Cosell and Don Meredith, and expanded the NFL's national footprint, though it faced criticism for occasional sensationalism and production missteps in later years.[1][2] Following the shift of primary Monday Night Football duties to ESPN in 2006, ABC retained select NFL broadcast rights under Disney's portfolio, including simulcasts, playoff games, and a portion of the renewed media package through 2033 that incorporates ABC for high-profile matchups.[5]History
Pre-Monday Night Football Era (1960–1969)
ABC's broadcasts of National Football League games from 1960 to 1969 were confined to select team-specific arrangements, as the league's primary national television rights were held by CBS for regular-season contests during this period.[6] The Chicago Bears and Chicago Cardinals initiated ABC coverage of their games starting in 1960, entering their third season of such telecasts by 1962.[6] These broadcasts typically handled road games or non-national slots, supplementing the teams' local market reach amid evolving league blackout policies that restricted home game telecasts within 75 miles of stadiums.[6] The Washington Redskins also utilized ABC for portions of their coverage beginning in 1962, shifting from a prior Amoco-sponsored syndicated network to ABC for road games and select markets.[6] This arrangement continued through 1964, after which the Redskins transitioned to DuMont in 1965.[6] By 1964, the Bears and Cardinals were in their fourth season with ABC, reflecting sustained but localized partnerships rather than expansive national exposure.[6] In 1964, ABC pursued broader NFL involvement by planning five Friday night regular-season games, aiming to capitalize on untapped scheduling slots.[6] However, the initiative faced immediate backlash from high schools, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, and the rival American Football League, citing competitive harm to amateur and alternative professional football; the NFL and ABC subsequently abandoned the plan.[6] These limited efforts and aborted expansion underscored ABC's growing interest in pro football television amid the AFL-NFL rivalry, setting the stage for the network's acquisition of Monday night rights in 1970.[7]Inception and Peak of Monday Night Football (1970–1989)
ABC launched Monday Night Football on September 21, 1970, marking the NFL's entry into prime-time television with a game between the New York Jets and Cleveland Browns at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, where the Browns prevailed 31-21.[2][8] This broadcast originated from ABC Sports president Roone Arledge's vision to transform NFL coverage into an entertainment spectacle, securing rights amid a new multi-network deal following the AFL-NFL merger and aiming to fill Monday evenings against competing sitcoms and dramas.[9][3] Arledge assembled an unconventional announcing trio—play-by-play voice Keith Jackson, opinionated journalist Howard Cosell, and former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Don Meredith—whose lively, personality-driven commentary blended sports analysis with showmanship, setting it apart from daytime broadcasts.[10][11] The format quickly resonated, drawing strong initial viewership despite skepticism from affiliates and advertisers wary of the Monday slot's historical underperformance for sports.[9] Early games captured "boffo ratings," establishing Monday Night Football as a viable prime-time draw and prompting NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle's support for expanded national exposure.[12] By the mid-1970s, announcer adjustments enhanced its appeal: Frank Gifford replaced Jackson on play-by-play in 1973, while Meredith's folksy insights and Cosell's sharp critiques fueled memorable exchanges that amplified the broadcast's theatricality.[10] The show's production innovations, including slow-motion replays and celebrity cameos, further elevated NFL games into cultural events, routinely outperforming non-sports programming.[11] Through the 1970s and 1980s, Monday Night Football attained its zenith as a television powerhouse, consistently achieving top ratings and embedding itself in American routines as a weekly ritual transcending mere athletics.[13] High-profile matchups, such as playoff implications and star-driven narratives, drew audiences that made it ABC's anchor, with the Cosell-Gifford-Meredith booth emblematic of its peak entertainment-sports fusion.[3] By the late 1980s, evolving lineups—including O. J. Simpson's addition in 1989—sustained its dominance, though subtle shifts foreshadowed future challenges; nonetheless, the era solidified its status as a national pastime, influencing broadcast norms across sports.[14]Transitions and Challenges (1990–2005)
ABC's Monday Night Football coverage persisted through the 1990s with relative stability in its core broadcasting team, anchored by play-by-play announcer Al Michaels, who had assumed the role in 1986 and continued until 2005. The network secured multi-year television contracts, including the 1990–1993 agreement ratified by the NFL that encompassed ABC alongside CBS, NBC, ESPN, and TNT, ensuring continued Monday night exclusivity.[15] This period saw ABC air Super Bowl XXV on January 27, 1991, at the end of the 1990 season, as part of the prior renewal. However, early signs of strain appeared as audience fragmentation from expanding cable options began eroding the once-dominant prime-time hold, though initial ratings remained robust, such as the 12.7 household rating achieved in late 1990.[16] By the mid-1990s, competitive pressures intensified with Fox's acquisition of NFC Sunday afternoon rights in 1994 following a landmark antitrust settlement, which reshuffled viewer habits and indirectly pressured national packages like Monday Night Football. Ratings softened further into the late 1990s; through the first three weeks of the 1998 season, Nielsen ratings declined 11 percent year-over-year, prompting ABC to shift kickoff times later to compete with emerging Monday entertainment programming. In January 1998, ABC retained the Monday package in an eight-year deal valued at $550 million annually, fending off NBC's bid, but this commitment amplified financial vulnerabilities as rights costs escalated.[17][18] The 2000s brought acute challenges, including persistent ratings erosion—down 21 percent across the first seven years of the 1998 contract—and annual losses estimated at $150 million for ABC, driven by rights fees outstripping ad revenue in a broadcast model increasingly strained by cable alternatives. To counter viewer fatigue, ABC introduced unconventional elements, such as comedian Dennis Miller as a color commentator from 2000 to 2001, aiming to revitalize the broadcast's entertainment appeal amid critiques of monotony. These measures yielded mixed results, as the franchise grappled with broader industry shifts, including Disney's 1995 acquisition of ABC and the merger of ABC Sports into ESPN.[19][20][1] Ultimately, these dynamics led to ABC's decision in April 2005 to cede Monday Night Football rights to sister network ESPN under a new NFL agreement totaling over $12 billion across partners, reflecting ESPN's ability to absorb costs via subscriber fees unavailable to ad-dependent broadcasters. The 2005 season averaged a 10.8 household rating, culminating in ABC's final game on December 26, 2005, between the Denver Broncos and San Diego Chargers. This handover ended 36 consecutive seasons on ABC, transitioning the package to cable exclusivity while preserving it within Disney's portfolio, amid recognition that broadcast networks could no longer sustain escalating NFL fees without ancillary benefits.[21][22][1]Departure from NFL Rights (2006–2015)
In April 2005, the National Football League announced a new six-year broadcast agreement with ESPN, valued at approximately $8.8 billion, which shifted Monday Night Football—ABC's signature NFL package since 1970—exclusively to ESPN starting in the 2006 season.[19] This deal ended ABC's direct carriage of regular-season NFL games after the 2005 campaign, during which ABC had broadcast 36 seasons of Monday Night Football, averaging viewership peaks of over 20 million households in its early years but declining to around 12-15 million by the mid-2000s amid competition from cable and other networks.[1] The transition reflected Disney's strategic prioritization of its cable asset ESPN, which could command higher subscriber fees for sports content, over ABC's over-the-air broadcast model, which faced advertiser revenue pressures and lacked the bundling leverage of cable.[23] ABC's final Monday Night Football game aired on December 26, 2005, featuring the Denver Broncos defeating the Cincinnati Bengals 31-28 in overtime, marking the symbolic close of an era that had generated billions in revenue and cultural impact for the network.[1] As part of the handover, ABC simulcast the first three weeks of ESPN's 2006 Monday Night Football slate—September 11 (New Orleans Saints at Cleveland Browns), September 18 (Philadelphia Eagles at Indianapolis Colts), and September 25 (Baltimore Ravens at San Diego Chargers)—before ceasing all NFL involvement to focus on non-sports primetime programming.[24] Concurrently, Disney dissolved the standalone ABC Sports division, integrating its operations into ESPN headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut, by early 2006, which streamlined production but eliminated ABC's independent NFL production unit.[24] From 2006 through 2015, ABC held no regular-season NFL broadcast rights, forgoing the annual package of 10-17 primetime games it had aired under prior contracts that dated back to the AFL-NFL merger era. This hiatus stemmed from the NFL's evolving media strategy, which emphasized cable exclusivity for high-value properties like Monday Night Football to maximize revenue through carriage fees—ESPN's deal included $875 million annually for the package—while ABC pursued entertainment-focused schedules amid declining broadcast TV audiences.[23] During this decade, ABC occasionally aired non-regular-season NFL events, such as select Pro Bowls (e.g., 2007 and 2010), but these were limited and produced under ESPN's umbrella rather than independent ABC rights. The absence highlighted broader industry shifts, where broadcast networks ceded ground to cable and later streaming for live sports, with ABC's NFL void filled by internal reallocations to reality and scripted programming that yielded comparable or higher ratings in some slots.[25]Return via ESPN Simulcasts and Expansion (2016–Present)
In January 2016, ABC broadcast its first NFL game in a decade through a simulcast of ESPN's Wild Card playoff matchup between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Miami Dolphins on January 3, marking the network's return to league coverage after losing exclusive rights in 2005.[26] This arrangement leveraged the shared ownership under The Walt Disney Company, allowing ABC to air ESPN-produced content without separate production crews or branding deviations, as all subsequent ABC NFL telecasts adopted ESPN's graphics and commentary.[27] The NFL initiated these simulcasts to broaden audience reach beyond cable subscribers, reversing prior exclusivity on ESPN amid declining linear viewership trends.[28] The Wild Card simulcast model persisted into the 2016–17 season and expanded sporadically to other postseason events, including additional Wild Card games in subsequent years, while ABC also began simulcasting portions of the NFL Draft starting in 2018 to test over-the-air exposure.[29] By 2020, ABC extended simulcasts to select regular-season Monday Night Football games, beginning with high-profile matchups to capitalize on the primetime package's popularity, which ESPN had held exclusively since 2006.[30] This shift reflected strategic adjustments in Disney's portfolio to combat cord-cutting, using ABC's broadcast signal to supplement ESPN's 17-game MNF slate amid rising rights costs.[31] A pivotal expansion occurred with the NFL's March 2021 media rights agreement, an 11-year extension valued at over $23 billion for the ESPN/ABC package effective from the 2023 season through 2033, which formalized ABC's role in simulcasting up to 20% of MNF games annually alongside exclusive playoff rights including one Wild Card game, a divisional playoff every four years, and Super Bowls in 2026 and 2030.[32] Under this deal, ABC's involvement grew to include flexible scheduling for Saturday afternoon games flexed from MNF slots, as seen in 2023 when networks adapted to labor disruptions by increasing broadcast availability.[33] In the 2022 season, ABC simulcast six MNF games (Weeks 1, 2, 3, 15, 17, and 18), a record at the time that boosted combined viewership by an average of 15% over ESPN-only telecasts.[34] Further growth in 2024 saw ABC add six additional MNF simulcasts—Baltimore Ravens at Tampa Bay Buccaneers (October 21), Tampa Bay at Kansas City Chiefs (November 4), Houston Texans at Dallas Cowboys (November 18), Baltimore at Pittsburgh Steelers (December 2), and others—bringing the season total to over 10 joint broadcasts, driven by mutual interests between the NFL and Disney to maximize linear reach amid streaming fragmentation.[31] These expansions have maintained ESPN's production uniformity across platforms, with ABC serving as an over-the-air complement rather than a distinct broadcast entity, though occasional exclusive ABC windows for flexed games preserve some network-specific scheduling autonomy.[35] Overall, the partnership has reinstated ABC as a key NFL outlet, prioritizing audience aggregation over standalone production, with viewership data indicating simulcasts outperform cable-only averages by 10–20% in key demographics.[36]Broadcast Personnel
Current Commentators and Studio Team
The primary broadcast team for NFL games on ABC, which primarily consist of simulcasts of ESPN's Monday Night Football and select playoff matchups, features Joe Buck as the lead play-by-play announcer, Troy Aikman as the lead color commentator, and Lisa Salters as the primary sideline reporter.[37][38] This trio has handled the main Monday Night Football telecast since 2022, marking their fourth consecutive season in 2025.[39] Buck and Aikman have collaborated for 24 seasons overall, including prior stints at Fox Sports.[37] ABC also employs alternate announcing crews for select regular-season games, particularly during doubleheader weeks. One such team includes Chris Fowler on play-by-play, with analysts Dan Orlovsky and Louis Riddick, sideline reporter Katie George, and contributor Peter Schrager, assigned to five regular-season contests in 2025.[40] The studio team for pregame, halftime, and postgame coverage is shared with ESPN's Monday Night Countdown, hosted by Scott Van Pelt. Analysts include Ryan Clark, Jason Kelce, and Marcus Spears, with Michelle Beisner-Buck serving as the primary reporter.[41] This lineup provides analysis leading into and throughout ABC's NFL broadcasts, focusing on game previews, injury updates, and strategic breakdowns.[42]Notable Former Commentators
Howard Cosell served as a color commentator for ABC's Monday Night Football from its inception in 1970 until 1983, bringing a distinctive, often polarizing style marked by sharp critiques and celebrity flair that helped elevate the broadcast's cultural prominence.[43] His tenure ended amid reported tensions, with Cosell publicly announcing his exit from the NFL coverage in August 1984 to focus on other pursuits.[44] Don Meredith, a former Dallas Cowboys quarterback, provided color analysis from 1970 to 1973 and again from 1977 to 1984, offering folksy insights and humor that contrasted Cosell's intensity and contributed to the booth's entertainment dynamic.[45] Meredith's departures included a brief hiatus after 1973 for acting commitments, but he returned until retiring from broadcasting following the 1984 season.[46] Frank Gifford, a retired New York Giants player, anchored Monday Night Football primarily as play-by-play announcer from 1971 to the late 1990s, spanning nearly three decades and providing steady narration through the program's peak viewership years.[47] ABC phased him out after the 1997 season amid reported performance concerns and personal scandals, marking the end of his 28-year association with the telecasts.[48] Al Michaels took over play-by-play duties in 1986, continuing until ABC's final Monday Night Football game on December 26, 2005, during which he reflected on the network's 36-year run with the series.[1] His smooth delivery and experience from prior ABC sports coverage, including Olympics, helped maintain the broadcast's appeal amid shifting NFL partnerships.[49] Other significant former contributors included O. J. Simpson, who analyzed games from 1983 to 1985 before legal issues overshadowed his career, and Dan Dierdorf, a color commentator from 1987 to 1999 known for his technical breakdowns as a former Pro Bowl offensive lineman.[45] These figures, drawn from ABC's exclusive NFL era ending in 2005, exemplified the blend of former players and media personalities that defined the network's coverage.[50]Other Professional Football Coverage
American Football League (AFL) Telecasts
ABC secured the television rights to broadcast American Football League (AFL) games through a five-year contract signed on June 9, 1960, valued at approximately $2 million annually for the league.[51][52] This agreement predated the NFL's first league-wide national television package and provided the AFL with essential revenue and exposure to compete against the established NFL, which held rights with CBS.[7] Under the deal, ABC aired regular-season AFL games starting with the league's inaugural season on September 9, 1960, typically scheduling one national game per week, often on Friday or Saturday evenings to avoid direct competition with NFL Sunday afternoon broadcasts.[53] Coverage expanded over time, reaching 40 games across 17 dates by 1963, including Sunday afternoons, Thanksgiving Day matchups, and postseason contests such as the AFL Championship Game from 1961 to 1964.[53] Unlike the NFL's restrictive blackout policies, ABC's contract permitted AFL teams to telecast locally any games not selected for national broadcast, enabling additional revenue from regional deals and broadening the league's visibility.[7] ABC's production pioneered several technical advancements in professional football telecasts, including the use of shotgun microphones to capture on-field sounds, mobile cameras for dynamic sideline and end-zone angles, and extensive close-up shots of players, coaches, and spectators to enhance viewer engagement.[53] These innovations, directed by producer Bill Creasy, emphasized entertainment value and helped legitimize the AFL as a viable alternative to the NFL, drawing audiences through vivid presentations despite initial black-and-white broadcasts.[53] ABC's involvement concluded after the 1964 season when the AFL negotiated a more lucrative five-year agreement with NBC, which offered higher payments and committed to color telecasts starting in 1965.[51] The shift to NBC provided the AFL with increased financial stability leading into its 1970 merger with the NFL, though ABC's early coverage laid foundational precedents for national professional football broadcasting.[7]United States Football League (USFL) and World League of American Football (WLAF)
ABC secured a two-year television rights agreement with the United States Football League (USFL) in 1982, prior to the league's inaugural spring 1983 season, committing approximately $18 million to broadcast regular season games.[54] The contract mandated a minimum of three Sunday games per week, with ABC selecting at least one for national broadcast or multiple for regional coverage, typically in afternoon slots.[55] This complemented ESPN's prime-time offerings, and ABC reported profitability from its 1983 coverage.[55] ABC exercised its renewal option for the 1985 summer season, televising regular season contests alongside the league's championship games each year from 1983 to 1985.[56] Following the USFL's demise after its 1985 antitrust lawsuit against the NFL, ABC shifted to the NFL-backed World League of American Football (WLAF) in 1990, signing a two-year deal announced on February 6 to air regular season and postseason games starting in spring 1991.[57] In the 1991 season, ABC broadcast 10 regular season games—primarily Sunday afternoons—plus one semifinal and the inaugural World Bowl on June 9.[58] The 1992 schedule featured regional regular season telecasts on ABC, though the World Bowl shifted to USA Network.[59] U.S. viewership on ABC proved underwhelming, factoring into the league's operational pause after two seasons despite international expansion aims.[60]Arena Football League, XFL, and United Football League (UFL)
ABC first broadcast an Arena Football League (AFL) game with ArenaBowl XII on August 23, 1998, marking the league's debut on a major broadcast network via ABC's Wide World of Sports.[61] From 1998 to 2002, ABC annually televised the ArenaBowl championship game, providing the league with prime-time exposure typically in late summer.[62] In December 2006, ESPN secured a five-year agreement with the AFL, including a minority ownership stake, to air regular-season games, playoffs, and the ArenaBowl across ESPN, ESPN2, and ABC starting in 2007; ABC specifically carried select playoff contests, such as the 2008 ArenaBowl XXII.[63] This partnership ended prematurely amid the league's financial difficulties, with ABC's final AFL telecast occurring in 2008.[64] ABC's involvement with the revived XFL commenced in 2020 under multi-year broadcast agreements with ESPN and Fox Sports, which allocated games across ABC, ESPN networks, Fox, and FS1; ABC aired five regular-season games that year before the league suspended operations due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[65] Following the XFL's bankruptcy and relaunch under new ownership in 2022, an exclusive deal with ESPN/ABC was announced in May 2022, designating ABC for select high-profile games, including playoffs, through the 2023 season; ABC broadcast seven games that year, none in primetime due to scheduling conflicts with NBA coverage.[66] After the XFL merged with the USFL to form the United Football League (UFL) in 2024, ABC retained coverage rights via ESPN's partnership, televising a portion of the regular season, conference championships, and the UFL Championship Game.[67] For the 2025 season, ABC and ESPN platforms aired 22 UFL games, including both conference finals on June 8 and the championship on June 14, with all contests simulcast on ESPN+.[67] This arrangement emphasizes ABC's role in spring football broadcasts, complementing ESPN's primary carriage on cable outlets.[68]Production Format and Innovations
Signature Elements and Style
ABC's NFL broadcasts, particularly during its tenure as the exclusive Monday Night Football (MNF) network from 1970 to 2005, emphasized a prime-time entertainment format that blended rigorous play analysis with showmanship, distinguishing it from daytime or traditional sports coverage. This approach included celebrity halftime performances, sideline reporters interacting with fans and players, and booth commentary infused with humor and debate, as exemplified by the trio of Howard Cosell, Don Meredith, and Frank Gifford, who treated games as cultural events rather than mere competitions.[10] A hallmark audio element is the theme "Heavy Action," composed by Johnny Pearson in 1970 for KPM Music library, featuring a prominent brass and strings fanfare that debuted in MNF openings around 1989 and became synonymous with ABC's high-energy presentation.[69] The track's orchestral intensity underscored dramatic pre-game sequences, which evolved from simple highlight reels in the 1970s to sophisticated computer-generated montages by the 1990s and early 2000s, incorporating team helmets, player silhouettes, and slow-motion action synced to the music's crescendo.[70] Technological signatures included early adoption of augmented reality graphics, such as the virtual yellow first-down line introduced league-wide in 1998 and prominently featured in ABC's MNF telecasts starting that season, aiding viewer comprehension of down-and-distance without physical markers.[71] ABC also integrated the Skycam—a cable-suspended, remotely operated camera providing dynamic, low-altitude perspectives—into MNF productions from 2001 onward, enhancing immersion during key plays like passes and runs, and later deploying it for Super Bowl XXXVII in 2003.[72] In the post-2015 era of ESPN simulcasts, ABC retains MNF branding with refreshed graphics packages, including sleek scorebugs and player-tracking overlays, while preserving the "Heavy Action" motif in remixed forms for intros, as seen in 2023's orchestral update combining nostalgia with modern production.[73] This continuity emphasizes polished, viewer-engaging visuals over minimalist designs, with occasional ABC-specific emphases like enhanced halftime analysis segments.[74]Technical and Scheduling Developments
ABC's NFL broadcasts, particularly Monday Night Football, debuted on September 21, 1970, with a weekly scheduling format that occupied prime time slots consistently through the 2005 season, featuring one primary game per Monday without initial flexible adjustments based on team performance.[1] This rigid structure contrasted with later NFL scheduling evolutions, as ABC selected matchups largely from the prior season's records rather than real-time adjustments, limiting adaptability to in-season developments.[75] The production emphasized innovative techniques under Roone Arledge, who introduced multiple camera angles—including end-zone and elevated perspectives—to provide viewers with unprecedented field-level immersion, alongside frequent slow-motion replays and freeze frames to enhance analysis.[76][77] By the 1980s, technical enhancements included graphical overlays such as elongating colored bar graphs for real-time statistics during Monday Night Football telecasts, marking early steps in on-screen data visualization.[78] Productions scaled to deploy 12 to 20 cameras per game, supported by 150 to 200 personnel, elevating the broadcast's cinematic quality and setting standards for primetime sports coverage.[79] In its final ABC season of 2005, the show transitioned to a horizontal score bar at the screen's bottom, replacing traditional bug formats for improved visibility.[80] Scheduling remained anchored to Mondays until the NFL rights shifted exclusively to ESPN in 2006, ending ABC's standalone era after 36 years.[1] ABC's NFL coverage resumed in 2016 via simulcast of ESPN's Wild Card playoff game on January 7-8, marking the network's first NFL telecast in a decade and ensuring over-the-air accessibility for postseason content. This evolved into expanded Monday Night Football simulcasts, with ABC airing select regular-season games alongside ESPN, including a full-season commitment in 2023 prompted by Hollywood strikes that disrupted alternative programming.[81] For the 2025 season, ABC scheduled simulcasts for 11 consecutive weeks from Week 1 through Week 11, reflecting contractual expansions in Disney's NFL package to broaden broadcast reach.[82] Modern technical aspects leverage high-definition formats, with early adoption of 720p HDTV for Monday Night Football in the mid-2000s to accommodate advancing viewer equipment, though core production feeds align with ESPN's multi-camera setups enhanced by league-wide tools like augmented graphics.[83]Ratings, Impact, and Commercial Aspects
Viewership Trends and Ratings Data
ABC's NFL coverage, centered on select Monday Night Football (MNF) broadcasts simulcast with ESPN, has shown resilience amid broader shifts in linear television viewership. During ABC's exclusive MNF run from 1970 to 2005, the package routinely ranked among the highest-rated prime-time programs, with peaks in the late 1970s and 1980s driven by marquee matchups and innovative production; however, averages began declining in the 1990s due to rising cable fragmentation and competing entertainment options.[84] Since ESPN assumed primary rights in 2006, with ABC airing occasional high-profile games like season openers or playoffs, MNF viewership initially dipped but rebounded in the 2020s, peaking at 17.4 million average viewers per game in the 2023 season—the strongest since 2000 and surpassing prior ESPN eras.[85] This uptick reflected stronger game scheduling, star quarterbacks, and NFL popularity, though total audiences including streaming outpaced linear figures. The 2024 season saw a decline to 15.0 million average viewers across ESPN/ABC's 22 regular-season games, aligning with a 2% overall NFL regular-season drop amid doubleheader dilution and election-year distractions.[86][87] ABC-specific telecasts, often reserved for premium windows, continue to draw robust numbers relative to other prime-time fare. For instance, the 2022 MNF opener on ABC averaged 10.3 million viewers, bolstered by the debut of new announcers Joe Buck and Troy Aikman.[88] Early 2025 weeks showed variability, with select MNF games on ABC reaching 13.18 million viewers, though weekly averages hovered around 11-12 million amid competition from NBC's Sunday Night Football.[89][90]| Season | Average Viewers per Game (millions, ESPN/ABC MNF) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | ~13 (estimated from trends) | Pre-peak resurgence[91] |
| 2023 | 17.4 | Record high since 2000[85] |
| 2024 | 15.0 | Down from prior year; 22 games[86][87] |