“…Testing Rottenberg's (1956) much-debated uncertainty of outcome hypothesis (UOH), Forrest et al (2005) were among the first authors to model such tv audience demand in English Premier League (EPL) football, arguing that analyzing such data was potentially superior to exploiting publicly available attendance data, among others. Since then, many other authors have explored not only the English (e.g., Alavy et al, 2010;Buraimo, 2008;Cox, 2015) but also competing European football markets (e.g., Denmark: Johnson & Solvoll, 2007; Germany: Schreyer et al, 2018a;Italy: Caruso et al, 2019; Norway: Solberg & Hammervold, 2004;Spain: Buraimo & Simmons, 2009), increasingly attempting to model the tv demand for mega sports events such as the Union des associations européennes de football (UEFA) European Championship (e.g., Nüesch & Franck, 2009) and the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) World cup (e.g., Schreyer et al, 2017;Uribe et al, 2021;van Reeth & Osokin, 2020) as well. It is, therefore, perhaps, not surprising that today, there already exist somewhat more than 50 empirical studies, a fair share of which have modeled the tv demand for US sports (e.g., American football: Paul & Weinbach, 2007;Major League Baseball: Mills et al, 2016;National Basketball Association: Mongeon & Winfree, 2012), and, to a lesser degree, individual sports, including boxing (Meier et al, 2018), cycling (e.g., van Reeth, 2019), mixed martial arts (e.g., Tainsky et al, 2013), tennis (e.g., Konjer et al, 2017), and stock car racing (Berkowitz et al, 2011).…”