Super Bowl LI made history a few times on Sunday night — biggest deficit ever overcome, most Super Bowls won by any quarterback for the New England Patriots’ Tom Brady, first Super Bowl to ever go into overtime and second-largest audience to ever view the big game on a single broadcast network.

Including streaming and Fox Deportes, the game averaged 113.7 million viewers on Sunday night, although an apples-to-apples comparison to CBS’ broadcast of the Super Bowl in 2016 has the game averaging 111.3 million people, according to Nielsen’s fast national ratings. Counting all viewers who tuned in to the game at some point, a total of 172 million people watched, according to Fox.

Super Bowl 50 — when the Denver Broncos, with Peyton Manning playing his last game, defeated the Carolina Panthers — averaged 111.9 million viewers on CBS. The network doesn’t offer a Spanish-language network so ESPN carried the game on ESPN Deportes. It also didn’t yet have NFL rights for CBS All Access so it streamed the game on CBSSports.com, including all of the national commercials.

The biggest audience in history, 114.4 million viewers, watched Super Bowl XLIX on NBC in 2015. That game again saw the New England Patriots prevail, beating the previous year’s victors, the Seattle Seahawks, 28-24.

The top-five local markets for the game were Pittsburgh with a 57.9 household rating; Buffalo with a 57.2; Atlanta with a 57; Norfolk with a 55.9 and Richmond with a 55.7. Note that the Patriots’ hometown of Boston didn’t enter the nation’s top-five viewing markets.

Fox’s post-game preview of 24: Legacy, which aired later than planned due to the overtime, averaged 17.6 million viewers and a 6.1 among adults 18-49, the second-lowest post-Super Bowl rating after ABC’s Alias in 2003, which premiered to 17.4 million viewers, according to Variety. The game overrun meant that 24: Legacy didn’t premiere until 11 p.m. ET on the East Coast, which very likely dampened its viewership.

On Monday night, 24: Legacy debuts in its regular 8 p.m. time slot, followed by the premiere of APB, starring Justin Kirk.

Before the game, President Trump’s interview with Fox News’ Bill O’Reilly averaged 12.2 million viewers, down from all of President Obama’s pre-game interviews. In 2009, Obama’s pre-Super Bowl interview with NBC’s Matt Lauer averaged 21.9 million viewers, according to Nielsen. In 2011, O’Reilly interviewed Obama and that drew 17.3 million viewers. Obama also did pre-game interviews in 2014, 2015 and 2016, which averaged 18 million, 16.4 million and 14.9 million viewers, respectively.

READ MORE: Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, Adweek

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