How many people stuck around to watch the end of Game 3 of the World Series?
The clock read 2:50 a.m. Eastern Time when Freddie Freeman launched the walk-off homer that finally ended the 18-inning, six-hour-and-39-minute epic between the Dodgers and Blue Jays. You might assume most of the nation had long since given up and gone to bed — and yet, a staggering number of viewers were still glued to their screens.
Key takeaways
- 8.5 million viewers in the United States were still watching when the game ended around 2:50 a.m. ET.
- The game averaged roughly 11.4 million U.S. viewers across Fox platforms, with a peak near 13.1 million earlier in the night.
- When you add Canadian audiences, the combined U.S.–Canada audience for Game 3 was around 17.6 million.
- The unusual combination of prolonged drama, star power (Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman) and a strong Canadian audience helped retain viewers deep into the night.
The hook: why that 8.5 million figure matters
Imagine a typical late-night crowd watching TV: by 2:50 a.m., most primetime audiences have evaporated. So when Sports Illustrated and Nielsen reported that roughly 8.5 million Americans were still watching the final swing, it wasn’t just a number — it was proof that a rare live sporting event can hold attention past the point where most programming loses it.
That figure means more people watched the walk-off than watched the first pitch earlier that evening in some viewing windows. It also tells TV executives, advertisers, and leagues that premium live sports — especially when they turn into dramatic, unpredictable marathons — still command huge, engaged audiences even in the unlikeliest time slots.
Context: the marathon that made viewers stay
- The showdown took place on Monday, October 27, 2025 (Game 3).
- The game tied the record for most innings in World Series history (18) and ran nearly 6 hours and 40 minutes.
- Shohei Ohtani put on a historic offensive display, and Freddie Freeman finished it with his dramatic walk-off homer.
- The telecast faced direct competition from Monday Night Football, which drew a larger audience that night; still, the World Series’ retention deep into the night was remarkable.
Long games often bleed viewers as casual fans sign off, but this one retained a surprising share — more than half of its earlier peak audience remained into the early-morning hours. That level of retention is unusual and notable for modern TV where on-demand viewing and multiple live options fragment attention.
Reading the numbers: averages, peaks, and late-night retention
- Average U.S. audience: roughly 11.3–11.4 million viewers for the full telecast.
- Peak audience: about 13.1 million (around the ninth inning earlier in the night).
- Late-night audience at game end: ~8.5 million still watching at ~2:50 a.m. ET.
- Combined U.S. + Canada audience: reported around 17.6 million, highlighting how the Blue Jays’ presence supercharged Canadian viewership.
The slight variations in the averages reported by different outlets (11.31M vs. 11.4M) reflect typical rounding and platform-count differences; the standout, consistent stat is the 8.5M who stayed to the finish.
Why viewers stayed — three quick reasons
- Drama and unpredictability: Extra innings, shifting momentum, and the possibility of history keep viewers invested.
- Star players and storylines: Ohtani’s record-setting night and Freeman’s late heroics gave casual fans reasons to stay.
- National pride and regional interest: A massive Canadian audience for the Blue Jays lifted the combined numbers, and American viewers were willing to stay up for the rare baseball spectacle.
Small reflection
In an era when so much content is bite-sized and time-shiftable, live sports remain one of the clearest reminders that real-time, unscripted drama still has power. That 8.5 million people at 2:50 a.m. were not just watching — they were witnessing a moment together. There’s something ancient and communal about staying up late to see the end of a story not yet written.
Sources
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One Incredible Viewership Stat From the Blue Jays-Dodgers 18-Inning Game — Sports Illustrated.
https://www.si.com/media/blue-jays-dodgers-18-inning-world-series-game-tv-ratings -
Dodgers' 18-inning victory averages 11.31M viewers in US, falls short of "Monday Night Football" — Associated Press (syndicated).
https://apnews.com/article/b875e70c710f024fb31966cf2dacdb46 -
Marathon World Series Game 3 holds most of its audience to very end — Sports Media Watch.
https://www.sportsmediawatch.com/2025/10/world-series-game-3-marathon-audience/ -
World Series Game 3 Draws 17.6 Million Viewers Across U.S., Canada — RealGM (wiretap summary).
https://baseball.realgm.com/wiretap/60376/World-Series-Game-3-Draws-176-Million-Viewers-Across-US-Canada
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Related update: We published a new article that expands on this topic — 18-Inning World Series Drew 17.6M Viewers.