The New York Mets' recent Sunday Night Baseball showdown with the Philadelphia Phillies attracted an audience of 3.0 million viewers, marking the highest-rated non‑opener game on NBC since the network revived its baseball package in 2026.
A Record‑Breaking Broadcast
The figure represents a sharp rebound for a sport that has struggled to capture prime‑time audiences in recent years, and it eclipses any other regular‑season broadcast game on the network since August 2013.
Mets' Rough Patch
The Mets are currently on a five‑game losing streak, having been outscored 50‑19 across those contests and dropping a doubleheader to the Chicago Cubs that left them 12 games below .500. SNY’s play‑by‑play voice Gary Cohen called the defensive effort “nothing short of ugly.”
NBC's Strategic Play
NBC paid roughly $200 million per year for the Sunday Night Baseball package, less than half of what ESPN had been paying, a cost‑saving move that the network hopes will be offset by strong viewership numbers. NBC Sports president Jon Miller convinced MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred to keep baseball on broadcast television, a decision that appears to be paying dividends in the ratings arena.
Looking Ahead
The upcoming Yankees‑Red Sox matchup scheduled for June 28 will be the next test of the package’s ability to sustain audience interest beyond the Mets‑Phillies highlight, while Mets manager Rob Thomson’s recent experience with the Phillies suggests that managerial changes can quickly alter a team’s trajectory.
For the league, the strategy of pairing marquee matchups with broadcast partners aims to revitalize interest in baseball, a sport that has seen fluctuating popularity over the past decade.