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Jason Grill

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Not Your Older Brother's MLS: Soccer Matters America

Posted: 04/23/2012 11:07 pm

First things first. We're talking about Major League Soccer not Multiple Listing Service here. However, soccer in America is taking up major real estate as it is a league and a sport that is on the rise. A recent report shows that Major League Soccer's attendance is skyrocketing and has passed both the National Hockey League and National Basketball Association in average attendance. CBS News reports that it appears that soccer is well on the road to becoming America's third favorite sport, after American football and baseball.

So why is MLS and the sport of soccer having so much recent success? Many factors contribute to this formula. Soccer is no longer just for "hipsters" or people who like to be different in the America sports culture. I have seen this up close with the growth of Kansas City's soccer franchise Sporting KC. A re-brand from the KC Wizards to Sporting KC, as well as the opening of the state of the art, soccer-specific Livestrong Sporting Park has taking soccer in Kansas City to the next level. This is happening all over the country with the number of soccer-specific stadiums being built. Currently 13 of the 19 MLS franchises have soccer-specific stadiums with one more on the way and one being proposed. This has changed the all-around fan experience and made the in stadium intimacy unlike any other in American sport. Throw in supporter and member sections like the Kansas City Cauldron and you have a recipe for a lively experience at every match. The members section in Kansas City is comparable, if not better than, the bleachers at Wrigley Field or the student section at a major college football or basketball game. Brett Bates, a founding member of Sporting KC's Brookside Elite supporters club believes, "No other sports league in America has the supporters culture that MLS does and that's what sets it apart. The individuals at the top know how important the average Joe is to building a passionate fan base in the city and region." Not only is this happening in the Midwest, it is also happening in the Pacific Northwest. The Seattle Sounders and Portland Timbers have formed a great rivalry very quickly and their supporters sections are incredible. The Seattle Sounders are number one in MLS merchandise sales by a large margin and their attendance is setting records. Have you seen the Portland Timbers Army sing the national anthem on ESPN?

Chilling isn't it?

The MLS has done a great job expanding in recent years and now sits in nine of the ten top television markets in the United States. They are in every region of the United States except the Southeast. Young ownership groups like the ones in Kansas City led by Robb Heineman, in Portland led by Merritt Paulsen, and in Chicago led by Andrew Hauptman are keeping the sport "fresh" and are shying away from the old-world sports mentality through interaction with fans via social media and in the public domain. These guys are the Mark Cuban's of the MLS. They are pushing for more digital initiatives and progressively innovating the fan experience. Seriously, how great is it to be able to tweet, facebook, interact and text inside a stadium. Digital media is allowing soccer and MLS content to be consumed more readily by fans. Mainstream media channels are recognizing the thirst for this and MLS fans are seeing more television coverage on ESPN and the NBC Sports Network, who recently signed a three-year television agreement with MLS. We also are seeing more and more ESPN Sportcenter "Top 10" lists involving a soccer goal or highlight.

So where does Major League Soccer in America go from here? Can it overtake America's "national pastime" baseball? Most observers would agree that the NFL has already passed MLB. The debate between fan attendance at soccer games versus baseball games has already started on Kansas City sports radio with the the early 2012 success of Sporting KC and the continued lack of wins by the Kansas City Royals. Don't get me wrong I love baseball and grew up going to countless Kansas City Royals games with my family and friends, but am I wrong to believe that Major League Soccer will pass Major League Baseball by in the next 25 years? It just might. According to a 2010 New York Times piece, youth soccer participation has doubled since 1990 and high school soccer participation has the fastest growth rate of any major sport. In a recent ESPN study, pro soccer is now the second most popular sport among individuals between the ages of 12 to 24, only behind the NFL. MLB finishes fifth on this list and pro soccer is first in the study with Hispanics in the same age group.

The avid fan of pro soccer was at its highest level ever in 2011. It looks like today's youth enjoy the faster pace of soccer more than baseball. A fluid game with constant movement and action has been embraced by the younger demographic despite its lack of goals in some matches. This generation enjoys a product that they know will last two hours. They don't want to sit through a potentially three to four-hour baseball game. Is it a lack of patience, perhaps, but I see as more of a generation that likes being able to knowingly plan other activities around a sporting event. Baseball needs to find a better way to market its star players to today's youth. With everything mentioned above combined with the growth and performance of Team USA, the World Cup's popularity, more international star players coming to play here, national and local television and radio network's beefed up soccer programming, and the FIFA video game generation, soccer is poised and positioned to potentially overtake baseball in popularity in this country in the future.

Major League Soccer in America: it's time to jump on the bandwagon.

 

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First things first. We're talking about Major League Soccer not Multiple Listing Service here. However, soccer in America is taking up major real estate as it is a league and a sport that is on the ri...
First things first. We're talking about Major League Soccer not Multiple Listing Service here. However, soccer in America is taking up major real estate as it is a league and a sport that is on the ri...
 
 
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04:15 AM on 04/30/2012
The writer lost credibility with me when he writes "the MLS." Come on, it's simply "MLS."
08:49 PM on 04/24/2012
If MLS wants to grow and truly become part of the world soccer scene...each club must begin developing young players in their respective academies. MLS needs to realize it's not the NBA, NFL or MLB - nor should they be. The rest of the world has it right. There is SOOO much more money (long term) in developing talent and selling players' rights...getting a handsome return on their investment. Obviously this means restructuring the whole league - not an easy thing. As things stand, there is no incentive for clubs to develop talent if the player is only going to move on and take that talent to another club. If MLS academies invest in player development, they can reap the rewards when those players eventually move on to other parts of the world. Because the rest of the world pays well for that talent!!

Finally, relegation is a must! :)
10:53 PM on 04/24/2012
Relegation will eventually be forced out of top leagues worldwide. It is one of the things MLS got right from the beginning.

Also, in case you haven't noticed, and by your post I'm guessing you haven't, MLS teams are all developing youth players and are even incentivized by the league to grow them and sell them overseas.
12:12 AM on 04/25/2012
Matt, I agree with you about relegation but even the MLS admits it has a development problem especially with Mexican youth:

http://www.mlssoccer.com/news/article/2011/12/08/postcard-mexico-border-battle-americas-youth
08:41 PM on 04/26/2012
Why does that mean restructuring the whole league? I don't get it. That kind of development (outside of residential academies really) already exists.

Relegation is only a must if you would like the league to flame out worse than the NASL. So many things wrong with imposing that on the current system, not least of which is that those who currently operate the top level will never agree to it. Nor should they - they're the ones whose investments have allowed it to exist in its current state and will see it grow. Why should some 2nd division side see the benefit from that?
02:46 PM on 04/24/2012
The genius of MLS is its cost control structure coupled with long term vision. MLS knows it can't afford the best players who are in their prime. Yet. But MLS also understand that soccer is utlimately very tribal and proletariat, i.e. make the fan experence good, give the fans a platform to have a dialogue with management, and keep a large chunk of seats affordable, and they will show up even if the level of play is quite a drop from EPL or La Liga. The hardcore fans know that it's a matter of time (tv contracts and team academy production) before MLS becomes a top ten, and perhaps even top five league in the world. In the interim the accepted attitude is, "it's not the best league or team in the world, but it's ours." And that's ok. Ask anyone in any of the supporters sections...... As for baseball, it peaked a long time ago. Today's kids simply find it boring to tears. But its roots are deep and it is cemented in American culture. As will be the case with soccer one day in a few generations.
11:16 AM on 04/24/2012
My son has played soccer since the age of 6. He is on his way to college in the fall where he will continue to play. It is a beautiful game and I am glad he picked it as his sport of choice. He used to play baseball until his sophomore year in high school when he gave it up to focus on soccer. He still loves baseball, but soccer is his life. However, he doesn't follow the MLS as much as the English Premier League. He loves the Gunners. I love this sport - and hope it does rise in popularity in America.
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odie1998
House is a feelin...
01:21 PM on 04/24/2012
Your son has good taste, both in the league he follows and the club he follows

C'mon you Gunners!!!
09:55 AM on 04/24/2012
Hey I live in Dallas. Is Huston the closest place, I can attend a MLS game?
11:26 AM on 04/24/2012
FC Dallas plays over in Frisco. Feel free to join us in the supporters' section.
11:48 AM on 04/24/2012
Actually, Dallas has an MLS team: www.fcdallas.com
06:46 AM on 04/24/2012
"The Seattle Sounders and Portland Timbers have formed a great rivalry very quickly"

If by "very quickly" you mean since the 1970s.

These are not bandwagon fans.
09:55 AM on 04/24/2012
Sounders have incredible support yes, but they are bandwagon fans with a mostly artificial rivalry as much as other teams in the league.

Its simple, would you suggest that all the rabid sounders fans are the same fans that would often get only roughly 2000 people in attendance for USL matches from 1994-2008?

The only way they would have had any part in that rivalry is if they are one of the few that watched from 94-08 or from the 70-80s. And that's very very few of the remaining fan-base. Have Seattle and Portland been tremendously successful? Undoubtedly, but lets not pretend that the rivalry is anymore authentic than something like the Rocky Mountain Cup..

Its mostly a recent bandwagon fans who want a rivalry to attach themselves to, and that's fine, but to claim otherwise is a bit disingenuous.
12:04 PM on 04/24/2012
I have to give credit where credit is due. Portland had great attendance in the USL averaging over 8000 fans a game for an average USL side. They were far ahead of most teams and only behind one (the Montreal Impact averaged 13,000 fans and they were usually championship contenders). I do agree about the Sounders, though. They won a few USL titles and still couldn't average above 3000 fans a game.
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JerseyHooligan
Facts have a liberal bias
12:10 PM on 04/24/2012
Seattle are 95 percent bandwagon fans.. they averaged less than 3k up until they joined mls... Portland always had a boisterous fanbase.
FoundersFan
right = correct
02:08 AM on 04/24/2012
Gee, this couldn't possibly be because an NBA ticket costs more than twice that of an MLS ticket, could it? lol lol
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JerseyHooligan
Facts have a liberal bias
12:11 PM on 04/24/2012
no, it is the nature of the sport.. much more interesting, fast paced, and emotional.
FoundersFan
right = correct
12:28 PM on 04/24/2012
And, by the way, NASCAR is much more popular among Americans than is soccer.
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Lenin Fierro
12:01 AM on 04/24/2012
I love MLS not only because of the beautiful game but because of its potential. MLS has taken many lesson that other leagues around the world had to learn the hard way.
12:01 AM on 04/24/2012
The rivalry between Seattle and Portland (and Vancouver) has been in place for years. They were all NASL/USL teams at one point and played against each other then.
12:13 AM on 04/24/2012
Yep...since the mid-70's.
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Jason Grill
12:41 AM on 04/24/2012
Soccer is alive and well in the Pacific Northwest. Kudos to MLS for recent expansions into that area of the country.