The NFL ratings swoon ended in 2018 as each major network partner reported gains for the regular season that concluded Sunday.

NBC, CBS and ESPN each had 8% improvements and Fox was up 4%, according to data provided by the networks. Though the final audience totals will not be announced until later this week, it’s clear that there won’t be viewership declines like the league’s broadcasts have had in each of the past two seasons.

The NFL broadcast audience declined 10 percent in 2017 and 8 percent in 2016, a topic that President Donald Trump and others liked to attribute players protests to call attention to racial inequality and police brutality. A USA TODAY investigation showed Trump’s attacks on Twitter and elsewhere had little impact — if any — on ratings.

Data from the NFL Network and Amazon — which made its debut as the NFL’s streaming partner for Thursday night games this season— is expected to be released by week’s end.

NFL ratings trended upward from the start of the season, but the pace quickened as the season continued. CBS, NBC and ESPN had ratings improvements of 1-6 percent and Fox was flat through the first eight weeks of the season.

“I think there’s a number of reasons,” CBS Sports Chairman Sean McManus told USA TODAY Sports in October. “There have been a lot of really good story lines: young quarterbacks like Patrick Mahomes playing well, the Los Angeles Rams have driven a lot of interest and there have been several overtime games. The NFL has and for the foreseeable future will be the strongest programming on television.”

The ratings gain comes as many other segments of broadcast television have continued to decline in recent years as streaming services like Netflix and Hulu have gained traction.