World Cup soccer fans turning more to cellphones

DETROIT, (Reuters) – The billions of fans of  soccer’s World Cup, globally the premiere sporting event, will  increasingly turn to mobile phones to track the action,  according to a Nielsen survey released yesterday.

More than half of the 27,000 people surveyed in 55  countries plan to follow the popular soccer tournament, which  is played every four years and begins in South Africa on June  11, Nielsen said in a survey provided to Reuters. Twenty-one  percent said they would get information about the tournament on  their mobile device and 9 percent would download an application  to track the action.

“This event is the biggest in the world of sports by far,”  Roger Entner, Nielsen’s senior vice president for mobile  insights, said in a telephone interview. “In 2010, mobile is  really starting to be a medium for soccer fans worldwide to  connect with the game.”

The popular FIFA soccer tournament drew more than 700  million TV viewers when it was last played in 2006, including  more than 120 million U.S. viewers who watched at least one  minute of World Cup telecasts, Nielsen said.

While this is the first such Nielsen survey, Entner said  the numbers using cellphones to follow the event will be far  higher than 2006.

“The last World Cup, there was no iPhone,” he said of Apple  Inc’s <AAPL.O> popular smartphone introduced in 2007.

U.S. smartphone penetration has surged to 22 percent from  3.8 percent four years ago, he said. In France, Germany, Italy,  Spain and the UK the rate has grown to a range of 21 percent to  36 percent from 4 percent to 10 percent in 2006.

With more powerful, faster devices and networks, those  growth trends will only continue with widespread mobile video  and TV being the next step, Entner said.

Of those surveyed, 51 percent said they intend to follow  the tournament, including 84 percent in Brazil, 83 percent in  Argentina, 76 percent in South Korea, 75 percent in Italy and  Portugal, 69 percent in Zambia and almost two-thirds of the  people in China, Nielsen said.

“It’s mind blowing. It really shows how it is a global  phenomenon,” Entner said. “We see some of the highest intended  usage rates actually coming out of the Middle East, Africa and  the Pacific Rim.”

Countries with high planned cellphone use to access World  Cup information include Venezuela (27 percent), United States  (23 percent) and Brazil (21 percent), Nielsen said. In fact, in  every country in the Middle East and Africa where people were  surveyed, the rate was between 22 percent and 30 percent.

“People intend to use mobile to supplement their hunger for  information about the game,” Entner said. “If you can’t watch  the game live, you’re going to follow it through your mobile  device.”

The rates in Europe were far lower — 3 percent in soccer  powers Germany and Spain — which Entner thought made sense  given most of those countries were in the same time zone as the  World Cup and had a higher penetration of TV sets, meaning fans  could watch the game live more easily.

Finally, 34 percent of those surveyed picked Brazil as the  likely Cup winner, easily outdistancing Argentina, England and  Germany. Entner is rooting for his native Germany but has  picked Brazil.