Variable

UK Data Service variable record for:

Northern Ireland Life And Times Survey, 2009

Variable Details

Variablemwatch2
LabelQ20b: second most frequent sport watched on TV
Question text What sport is the SECOND MOST FREQUENT that you watch on TV? I do not watch a second sport on TV.
Responses
101 American football 0
102 Baseball, softball 0
103 Basketball 2
104 Cricket 12
105 Ice hockey 0
106 Field hockey 3
107 Football, soccer 125
108 Handball 0
109 Netball 0
110 Polo, water polo 0
111 Rugby 66
112 Volleyball 1
113 Gaelic football 68
114 Hurling, camogie 3
199 Other team sport 2
201 Badminton 3
202 Squash 1
203 Table tennis 2
204 Tennis 51
299 Other racket or bat sport 4
301 Athletics, marathon 58
302 body training 13
303 Fitness 13
304 Jogging, (non-competitive) running 2
305 Walking, hiking, trekking, climbing 3
399 Other fitness sport 7
401 Adrenaline sports 1
402 Billiards, pool, snooker 15
403 Biathloon, triathon 0
404 Bowling, curling, bocce 0
405 Boat sports (eg sailing, rowing, yachting, canoing, kayaking 0
406 bullfight 0
407 Cockfighting 0
408 Cycling, mountain-biking 11
409 Dancing 14
410 Darts 6
411 Fencing 0
412 Fishing, hunting 4
413 Golf, mini-golf 50
414 Horse riding, horse racing 14
415 Ice skating 2
416 Inline skating, skateboarding, roller skating 0
417 Martial arts (eg boxing, wrestling, judo, karate) 5
418 Motor sports (motor racing, go carting) 31
419 Rodeo 0
420 Shooting (pistols, rifle, archery) 1
421 Swimming, diving, snorkelling 8
422 Surfing, water-skiing 0
423 Snow-sports (skiing, snowboarding, toboggan) 2
499 Other sport 12
-2 Skip, do not watch any sport on TV 508
-1 Skip, no self completion 0
997 I do not watch a second sport on TV 105
DisclaimerPlease note that these frequencies are not weighted.
LocationNorthern Ireland Life And Times Survey, 2009
UniverseNorthern Irish adults;National;Adults aged 18 years or over living in private households in Northern Ireland during autumn 2009
SamplingOne-stage stratified or systematic random sample
Study TypeRepeated cross-sectional study