|
Voting systems
| |
The
most used voting system has been the system that's currently used: the
top 10
from each country obtains 1 to 8, 10 and 12 points. This system is in
use since
1975 and has always been used since then.
Before 1975 several other
voting systems were in use: ten times the system was used in which each
country
had 10 jury members who all could award a point to their favourite
song. The outcome
per country was presented by a spokesperson, so a set of votes could
look like
e.g. "Belgium 6 points, France 2 points and Spain 2 points". In this
system it has never happened that one country gave all its 10 points to
another
one, but two countries once awarded a 9: Denmark in 1958 to France, and
Belgium
in 1970 to Ireland. Neither did any country give just one point to 10
different
countries, but Portugal came close giving one points to eight different
countries
and giving Spain one more in 1967.
In the sixties a few times a few systems
comparable to the current one were in charge: each country gave either
1, 2 and
3 or 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 or 1, 3 and 5 points. The latter system, only
used once
in 1966 had an oddity: it was allowed to vote for one or two countries
only by
giving them respectively 9 points or 6 and 3 points. Only Belgium
really attributed
its points in the latter way though in 1965.
From 1971 to 1973 a totally different
system to either of these was used: each country had two jury members
sent to
the host country, who all awarded a mark from 1 to 5 to each song. This
way all
countries were at least guaranteed 2 votes from each country!
Since it's
very difficult to compare results before the system change in 1975 to
those after,
most records below are focused on the years 1975-now only.
Before
1997 all votes were given by national juries (varying from 2 to 16
persons). In
1997 televoting was introduced for five countries: people could vote at
home by
telephone. This system has become the standard from 1998 on, with some
exceptions
for countries that couldn't or didn't want to hold a televoting. In
2001 and 2002
countries could choose between delivering a full-televote result or a
mixed jury
and televote-result. Since 2004 televoting has become obligatory as the
only way
of voting for each country. There still is a backing jury though, in
case the
televoting fails, or can't be held as was the case in 2000 for the
Netherlands,
when a disaster on national scale made the contest wasn't broadcasted
entirely
in that country.
Since 2004 the Eurovision Song Contest featured a semifinal. This
implied for the voting that all non-qualifying countries still had the
right to vote in the final. This also influenced the order in which the
countries were called: in 2004 this was alphabetically (based on the
2-letter ISO codes), in 2005 first the non-qualifying countries were
called in the order they had appeared in the semifinal, followed by the
finalists in their final running order, and in 2006 a separate draw was
made. Since an increase of about 50% in the number of juries, meant a
very long voting sequence, in 2006 it was decided that only the points
8, 10 and 12 were directly announced by the spokespeople. All lower
points appeared on screen, but weren't mentioned.
|
Points
score (absolute)

 |
FINLAND
won the 2006 contest in Athens with 292 points. This
score was gathered
from 37 voting countries. The
record with the 'traditional' twenty-something countries voting was 227
for the United Kingdom in 1997, closely followed by Ireland's 226 in
1994. SERBIA managed to score even 298 points in the 2007 semifinal.
|
Points
score (relative)
 |
UNITED
KINGDOM -
Since the current voting system (1 to 8, 10 and 12 points per jury) was
introduced
the highest average score for a song was 9.647 per jury (164 points
from 17 juries)
for the UK enrty Save your kisses for me by Brotherhood
of Man in
1976. Germany 1982 and UK 1997 complete the top 3 with respectively
9.470 and
9.457 votes per jury.
|
Biggest
winning margin



|
UNITED
KINGDOM won by the biggest absolute margin of points in
1997, getting 70
points more than runner up Ireland. The biggest relative
winning margin was the Italian victory in 1964 with Gigliola Cinquetti's Non ho l'età . Gigliola scored 2.88 times the amount
of points of the runner up
Matt Monro for the UK: 49 against 17 points.
In the 2007 semifinal though, Serbia beated runner up Hungary with even 74 points (298 vs. 224).
The biggest relative margin under the current
voting system wasthe 61 points lead from Germany over Israel in 1982:
Germany
had obtained 1.61 times the votes of number two,
Israel, where the UK in
1997 only came to 1.44 times.
Thanks
to Smeckghi from Spain for his correction concerning the biggest
relative winning margin, and to Achim from Germany concerning the UK
artist coming 2nd in 1964
|
Smallest
winning margin
 |
SWEDEN won by the smallest
margin ever in 1991. In fact there even wasn't a real
margin. Carola's Fångad av en stormvind received
as many points
as Amina's C'est le dernier qui a parlé qui a
raison, but won on
tie-break rules. The smallest 'real' margin has been one point: in 1988
for Switzerland
and in 1968 (under a different voting system) for Spain. Both times the
country
coming second being the United Kingdom.
In 2003 Turkey won with a margin
of two points with Belgium, but there was a difference with number 3 of
only three
points as well!
Not taken into account but worth noting is 1969 when
four countries won with the same amount of points. Since there were no
tie-break
rules back then all four countries were officially winner. Coming fifth
was Switzerland,
but with a reasonable margin
|
Lowest
average score for a winner
 |
GREECE
- Greece in 2005 broke the old
record, set by
Yugoslavia in 1989. My number one scored
an average of only 6.05
points per jury.
|
Zero
points / Worst score
|
|
NORWAY/FINLAND - Thirty-three
entries have achieved to score 0 points in an ESC final, a record four
of
them coming from Norway (1963, 1978, 1981, 1997).
Spain, Austria, Finland
and Switzerland scored the dot on three occasions. Portugal and
Lithuania both
had the dubious honour to start off their ESC carreer with a zero
result in respectively
1964 and 1994. Netherlands and Germany are the only countries having
scored zero
twice in two consecutive years.
In 1982 Kojo form Finland
failed to impress 17 juries, that all ranked him among the 7 worst
songs out of
17. So mathematically this one was the worst rated ESC song in an ESC
final, at
least since the current voting system was introduced in 1975.
Even more
impressive was the 0 points scored by Switzerland's Piero Esteriore and
The Music
Stars in the 2004 semifinal. They failed to score any point from 32
countries
voting, meaning all these countries ranked the song 11th or lower out
of 21 or
22 which is, is votes were given out at random, even more unlikely than
what Kojo
achieved in 1982.
Thanks
to Timoteus from
Finland for pointing out Piero's result was in fact even worse than
Kojo's
|
Average
points for a runner up
 |
FRANCE - The best runner up,
when it comes to average votes per jury voting,
was Cathérine Ferrey in 1976. She scored
an average of 8.647.
Runner up in this category are Denmark's Rollo og King in 2001 with
8.045.
|
Votes
from every country
|
Sixteen songs have managed to get votes from every
single country voting. Surprisingly
only half of these songs were the actual winners of their respective
years. The
UK managed to score a vote from everyone four times, France three
times. France
even did so in three consecutive years (1976 to 1978), the UK once did
in two
consecutive years (1997, 1998). The full list of sixteen songs, with
their final
ranking position:
Ding dinge dong (Netherlands 1975,
1st), Save
your kisses for me (UK 1976, 1st), Un deux trois (France
1976, 2nd), L'oiseau et l'enfant (France 1977,
1st), Il y aura toujours des violons (France
1978, 3rd), Making your mind up (UK 1981, 1st), Si
tu aimes ma
musique (Belgium 1982, 4th), Diggey-loo diggey-ley
(Sweden 1984, 1st), Det lige det (Denmark
1984, 4th), J'aime la vie (Belgium 1986, 1st), In
your eyes (Ireland 1993, 1st), Love shine a light (UK
1997, 1st),
Where are you? (UK 1998, 2nd), Die for you (Greece
2001, 3rd), Lane
moje (Serbia & Montenegro 2004, 2nd) and Shake
it (Greece 2004,
3rd).
NOTE - not taken into account are the 53 songs that participated
in either 1971, 1972 and 1973. In those years, due to a different
voting system
(see top of the page) every country got votes from everyone!
|
12
points (most, total)
 |
IRELAND
-Since the current voting system was introduced in 1975, 772 times "twelve
points, douze points" have been awarded. With its record of
seven victories
(of which six in this era) it comes as no surprised that Ireland have
received
the most of these twelve-pointers, namely 63. The United Kingdom, as the eternal
runner up,
has received 12 points 60 times. France (43), Germany (both 41) and
Sweden (39)
complete the top 5. Getting one third of its 12-pointers in 2005 and
more than
another third from Cyprus in several other years, Greece comes on the
6th place
getting 36 twelves.
All countries ever participating in an ESC final have received a 12 at least once, bar Morocco, taking part only in 1980. Andorra never participated in a final yet but received a 12 three times from Spain in the semifinal. The Czech Republic only got one point on its only time taking part in the semifinal.
There
were some small errors concerning the numbers; these have been
corrected on 3
May 2005.
|
12
points (most in one contest, absolute)
|
UNITED
KINGDOM/GREECE - Katrina and The Waves
received 12 points from 10
different countries back in 1997 for their entry Love
shine a light.
Greece did the same in 2005 with Elena Paparizou singing My
number one.
|
12
points (most in one contest, relative)
 |
GERMANY
- Nicole from Germany received 12 points from 9
different countries in
1982, which means that the song Ein
Bißchen Frieden was the favourite
song of more than the half of the 17 juries. Only
Italy in 1964 did this
before getting the maximum of 5 points from 8 of the 15 juries.
|
12
points (most countries to obtain the maximum in one year)
| |
Usually
between one third and the half
of the contestants each year got at least once 12 points. In 2005
however, an
incredible record of 17 out of 24 countries got the
maximum at least once,
the only countries not to get a 12 in the final were Hungary, United
Kingdom,
Sweden, Germany, Bosnia & Herzegovina, France and Macedonia.
The old record
was 13 out of 24 in 2002.
|
Least
12 points for a winner
 |
UNITED
KINGDOM - The 1981 winner Buck's Fizz from
the United Kingdom received
the maximum only from 2 juries (Netherlands and
Israel). Several other
winners were awarded 12 three times: France 1977, Switzerland 1988,
Italy 1990
and Ireland 1992. In 1981 both Germany and Switzerland got more twelves
than the
eventual winners. It has happened more often that a non-winner got more
twelves
than the winner, e.g. United Kingdom 1977, France 1990, Russia 2003.
|
Highest score/position without any 12s

 |
SWEDEN's Carola obtained 170 points for Invincible in 2006 without getting any 12-pointer and reached the 5th place
NORWAY's I evighet by Elisabeth Andreassen in 1996 is the only runner up receiving no 12's.
Curiously the Swedish title of Invincible was Evighet.
|
12
points (first ever)
 |
LUXEMBOURG
- The first set of votes under the current voting system was
given out by
the Dutch jury in 1975. The twelve points went to Luxembourg for the
song Toi by Géraldine. This singer
wasn't really a luxembourgeoise, but she was
from Ireland, and thus she was the first of many Irish ESC artists to
obtain a
twelve!
|
12
points (longest wait for first one, country)
 |
AUSTRIA - Austria
had to wait the longest until they were finally awarded
the magic maximum amount of points. After taking part 13
times under the
12-points voting system in 1989 they finally received a few 12's for Nur
ein
Lied, notably from the first jury to vote: Italy. Later that
evening Belgium
and Greece gave them the top mark too.
The Finnish had been
waiting since 1977 for their fourth twelve. In 2006 finally they achieved one again, or in fact they did 8 times!
|
12
points (longest wait for first one, winner)
|
UKRAINE/ISRAEL - Most usually
(on all but two occasions) the winner obtained twelve points
from one of the first five juries. In 2004 Ukraine had to wait for a 12
until
Estonia, the 12th country voting! Since in 2004 36
countries were voting
this was over one third of the voting. In 1978 though Israel had to
wait until
almost the half of the voting when the 9th jury from Switzerland
finally gave
them a 12. When the 12s started to come in though, it hardly seemd to end for them!
|
12
points (shortest wait for first one, country)
 |
HUNGARY - Hungary
is the only country that managed to get 12 points from the first jury
on its first participation in 1994, for the song Kinek mondjam el vetkeimet.
Bosnia & Herzgovina came
close by recieving 12
from the second jury in 1993, Serbia & Montenegro got their
first
12 from the third jury in 2004.
Other countries that obtained at least one 12 on their debut were
Cyprus, Poland, Slovakia, Latvia, Albania, Moldova, Georgia and Armenia (and of course Serbia, the first time without Montenegro) .
|
12
points (most consecutive)
|
UNITED
KINGDOM/ISRAEL - The most consecutive
12-points were received by the
United Kingdom in 1997 and Israel in 1978: both got five in
a row.
|
12
points ... and nothing more
|
GREECE/PORTUGAL
- Greece and Portugal both managed to end up with 12 points
at the end of
the voting, having received them all from one single country. In 1998
the group
Thalassa from Greece got the (usual) 12 points from Cyprus, but was
ignored by
the rest. Same fate for Rui Bandeira in 1999, who got his 12 from
France.
Andorra took part in the 2004 semifinal and got its only points from
Spain:
12. |
Longest
wait for any points (country)
|
LITHUANIA - On their debut in
1994 Ovidijus Visniauskas remained pointless for Lithuania. It took
after that 5 years were
Lithuania to receive their first 2 points from the Croatian televoters
in 1999. Possibly the Lithuanians were so disappointed after 1994 that
they decided not to enter until that year.
|
Most
points for a last place
 |
FINLAND/BELGIUM
- The highest score for a song coming last under the
current voting system
has been 9 points for Finland in 1996.
Should we take into account semifinals too then Lithuania came last
with the highest number of points in the 2005 semi, with 17
points.
In the years 1971 to 1973 due to
a different voting system, each country was guaranteed at least 2
points per jury.
Belgium came last in 1973 with 58 points.
Thanks
to
Neil from the United Kingdom for the remark about Lithuania
|
First
vote given out publicly
 |
NETHERLANDS
was the first country to recieve a point in ESC, given out by a
spokesperson of
a jury. This was the Swiss jury in Basel, who gave Net als
toen seven points.
Netherlands were in the lead and didn't give it away that year.
|
In
the lead from start to end
|
NETHERLANDS/ITALY/LUXEMBOURG/IRELAND/SWEDEN/DENMARK
- Seven
winners so far have managed to be in the lead from after the first set
of votes,
until the end of the voting without any interruption: Netherlands 1957 (Net
als toen), Italy 1964 (Non ho l'età),
Luxembourg 1965 (Poupee
de cire poupee de son), Ireland 1970 (All
kinds of everything), Luxembourg
1972 (Après toi), Sweden 1974 (Waterloo)
and Denmark 2000
(Fly on the wings of love). Luxembourg though was
level after a few sets
of votes with Monaco in 1965.
Denmark is the only country to have managed
being in the lead all the time under the current voting system.
Had only finalists been voting in 2005, then Greece would have been leading all the way through too.
In 2006 Finland took the lead after two countries voting and never gave
it away, making it the longest lead ever, through 36 consecutive sets
of votes.
|
Slowest
lead (winner)
|
LUXEMBOURG
- During the 1961 after a few sets of votes everything
looked like it was
going to be a British victory. The UK remained in the lead until there
were only three countries left to vote, then
Luxembourg having grown strongly in
the end of the voting passed them by and eventually won.
In 1968 Spain
took the lead with just one jury to vote, although they had been in a
small lead
right in the begining, to be overtaken by the UK after the second vote.
Since
that first country to vote was Portugal and they usually gave high
votes to Spain
in those years, probably nobody saw it as a real sign that Spain were
going to
do well.
In more recent years in 1991 it took Sweden until the 17th jury
(out of 22) to get in the lead. In 2005 it took Greece until the 19th
jury to
get in the lead for the first time, shared with Latvia, and until the
21st to
get in the lead alone, but then the voting was only about halfway.
|
Votings undecided until the last vote
|
Since
1975 it has happened four times that the winner of the contest was only
decided on the very last vote (that is the 12 of the last jury). These
years were:
1988
- Yugoslavia eventually gave its 12 to France, and nothing to the
United Kingdom and thus Switzerland won as they were already one point
ahead of the UK.
1991 - Italy gave
no points to contenders Israel and Sweden, but 12 to France, bringing
them level with Sweden at first place. Had Israel gotten the 12 then
they would have been the winners.
1993 - The Maltese
jury (that was voting last because it could not be reached earlier)
gave no points to the United Kingdom but 12 to Ireland. Had they given
their 12 to the United Kingdom instead, the Brits would have won by 1
point.
1998 - The
Macedonian televote awarded 12 points to Croatia, and nothing to Malta,
meaning that not Malta but Israel won the contest.
In 2002 Lithuania gave their 12 point (as expectable) to Latvia.
Had they for
some reason ignored Latvia though, there would have been a tie between
Malta and Latvia. But based on tie-break rules Latvia would still have
won then anyway since it got votes from as much countries as Malta, but
one more twelve (of course excluding the one from Lithuania).
In several other years though the excitement lasted to nearly the end
of the voting, e.g. in 1979 Spain decided the final outcome by giving
10 to Israel (but since the voting was done in performance order back
then this wasn't the penultimate vote), in 1981 the 8 Swedish points to
the United Kingdom were decisive and in 2003 the 10 Slovenian points
for Turkey were.
In all other years after 1975 the winner was already known before the last country to vote was called.
|
Never
been in the lead
 |
PORTUGAL has the dubious record
of having been never in the lead after any round of
voting, in 41 participations. It is also the only country among those
who already
participated before 1993 (when countries from Eastern Europe started
entering
the contest) that has never been leading. The other countries never
having been
in the lead are Lithuania, Macedonia,,
Albania, Poland, Georgia, Armenia, Montenegro, Morocco, Czech Republic, Belarus
and Russia (although Russia was pretty close several
times!). Slovenia was
in the lead in 1999 after four countries voting, though shared with
Iceland. Cyprus
was in the lead in 1996 after two countries voting, but shared with
Ireland and
Croatia, and Romania was in the lead in 2005 after five countries voting
shared
with their neighbour Moldova.
If the 2004 semifinal voting would have been
done publicly, with the countries voting in ISO order (just like in the
2004 final),
then Portugal would have been leading for a moment, since Andorra gave
their 12
points to Portugal!
Thanks
to Pedro Miguel
from Portugal for the comment about Cyprus, and Pedro Sá
from Portugal
for the trivia about the 2004 semifinal.
|
Biggest
fall down after early lead
 |
IRELAND in 1999 opened the
voting getting 12 points from the 1st televoting jury in
Lithuania. Not many points were to follow though: only 6, meaning
Ireland eventually
landed on the 17th place. Greece ended up at that
same position in 2002
after getting the first 12 of the evening from Cyprus. But this time
with a total
of 27 points.
|
Best
start sprint
 |
HUNGARY is the only country who
achieved getting 12 points from the first three
juries to vote in 1994. The champagne was opened but it was
way too early.
Ireland took over the lead after 7 juries and never gave it away.
Hungary ended
up at a fourth place. Hungary is nevertheless the only debuting country
ever taking
the lead in the start of the voting.
|
Best/worst
head-to-head result between two countries
|
UK/FINLAND
- In
the 37 contest finals before 2006 in which both the UK
and Finland took part,
the UK entry was always ranked higher than the
Finnish entry from 1961 to 2003 . The closest
Finland came to beating the UK in those years was in 1966, when they scored just
one point
less.
The 51th contest and Finland's first victory of course put an end to this 'tradition'.. In 2007 Finland even outscored the UK again.
Among the countries
participating for over 10 years now, Cyprus never beat Italy either in
10 years
of participating together. The closest they came in 1989 when there was
a difference
of 5 points, although the margins have often been much smaller than
between the
UK and Finnish entries. For Cyprus it seems
unlikely they'll
beat Italy for the first time in the near future, since Italy doesn't
show any
sign of interest in returning to the ESC.
Less dramatically, after 26 years of being beaten by the UK every
year, Portugal
finally outscored them in 1991, and repeated that on three occasions
until now.
Thanks
to
Timoteus from Finland for this info.
|
Truest
friends
|
CYPRUS/GREECE
- The countries exchanging
relatively the
most votes over the years have been Greece and Cyprus. Since televoting
was introduced
in 1998 they exchanged on average .. 12 points! In total they've
exchanged on
average more than 10 since Cyprus' first participation in 1981. Greece has
given its
12 to Cyprus 11 times out of 18 possible, 9 of them in the last 9
contests both
countries took part in. Cyprus has even given its 12 to Greece on 13
occasions.
Before 1998 a mutual 12 went from Athens to Nicosia and back in 1987
for the first
time, and this was repeated in 1994 and 1997. The minimum points from
Cyprus to
Greece has been 6 in 1990, the minimum from Greece to Cyprus ... zero,
in 1983.
|
Least
mutual points
|
CYPRUS/TURKEY - Cyprus and Turkey had
ignored each
other for 20 contests when in 2003 Cyprus gave not less than 8 points
to Turkey,
who eventually won. In 2004 Turkey gave its first single point back to
Cyprus.
Greece was the penultimate country to give Turkey the first points in
1997, but
only a few minutes after Portugal had done so.
In 2006 Cyprus gave its first two points to Bosnia & Herzegovina too, while the Bosnians never voted for Cyprus yet.
There are some more countries
that in at least 5 participations didn't vote for a particular other
country,
although all of these were voted for by those other countries at least
once. Some
examples: Poland still didn't get any vote from Israel, neither did
Croatia ever
get a vote from Denmark. There are more of these couples.
|
Least
common score
| |
The
least common score has been the ammount of 43 points.
In 51 years of ESC
not a single contestant had gone home with a score of exactly 43 points, but in 2007 D'Nash from Spain put an end to this with I love you mi vida
The lowest ammount of points that has never been one's total score is now 99. Above 100 points of course there are
a lot
more of these scores, the lowest of
them being
102 and 108.
Thanks
to Timoteus from Finland for this info!
|
|