In the absence of, well, any available professional sports to air on its network, on Sunday ESPN turned to NBA 2K, Madden NFL 20, and Rocket League tournaments, 12 hours to be exact, to fill the void. “ESPN Esports Day” is a marathon of live events and taped esports coverage that aired on ESPN2 over the last year, according to a press release. The marathon began with three hours of previous Madden NFL 20 content, including recaps of the Madden Classic, Club Championship, and Challenge tournaments.
The Madden block was followed by the F1 Esports Virtual Grand Prix, a live race featuring F1 drivers behind the virtual wheel. Rocket League followed with ESPN2 hosting the Season 8 World Championship Grand Finals, and led into the heavily anticipated NBA 2K tournament, which brought 16 NBA players to participate in a 16-bracket event. ESPN’s esports marathon ended with a repeat presentation of the EXP Apex Legends Pro-Am from last July.
Esports has grown considerably over the last few years, but the industry has seen a surge in interest over the last few weeks. Craig Levine, global chief strategy officer for the CS:GO ESL Pro League, said in a previous interview with The Verge that “as other sports and entertainment have gone dark, we’ve probably inadvertently benefited.”
Pro athletes unable to train are flocking to Twitch and YouTube to stream themselves playing virtual versions of the sports that made them famous. F1 driver Lando Norris took part in a virtual, and shorter, version of the Australian Grand Prix using F1 2019 on March 22nd. The race pulled in 70,000 concurrent viewers on Norris’ Twitch channel alone, with a total of around 175,000 people watching the race, which combined Norris’ channel and others at one point.
Twitch, one of the main platforms for streaming, has seen an impressive growth as more people spend time at home. The platform went from 982 million hours watched in February to over 1.1 billion hours in March, according to livestreaming tools and services provider StreamElements. That’s a 20 percent growth in viewership. Having pro athletes compete in virtual tournaments, and bringing their fans to sites like Twitch, is a win.
And it’s clear that ESPN now wants to get in on that action. The network has for years, but with no other sports to counter-program against, this is esports’ time to shine. The full schedule for ESPN2’s esports marathon can be seen on the network’s website.
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