Expanding TV revenues, smart entrepreneurs in the MLS and a Millennial-fueled supporter culture: soccer is the fastest growing spectator sport in the country.
Five Reasons Soccer Will Surpass Football - #3: Supporter Culture And TV Deals
Credit: The Oregonian
June 5, 2014

Part three in a series.

There was a good bit of talk over what pro soccer in the US would do once Becks departed the Galaxy. It is a little hard to fathom how much he did for the visibility of MLS, but there's no question they got good value for their $250 million (or whatever insane sum of money they invested in him). Overnight it went from being a third-tier league to respectability. No, MLS can't yet attract top world stars in their prime, but it can attract outstanding developing talent and established world stars who aren't yet ready for the glue factory. Beckham, as we saw, still had some good years when he came over (and is now making noises about unretiring).

Thierry Henry is playing the back nine of his career, but again, has a few more miles on his tread. Robbie Keane is a right Spurs bastard, but there are a lot of teams in Europe that would love to have him right now. The rumor mill has suggested that the likes of Kaka, just a few years removed from being the most terrifying attacking midfielder on the planet, might land in MLS at some point, and now Zlatan Ibrahimovic allows that he might like to finish out his playing days here. David Villa has signed with NYC FC and Chelsea legend Super Frank Lampard is rumored to be right behind him.

In other words, while MLS isn't yet a top league, it has certainly become a credible league in a nation not driven by a long, deeply entrenched culture of proper football. Considering that it's not yet 20 years old, that's significant, if not outright remarkable.

While nobody is yet doling out NFL-type dollars, the major TV networks are clearly interested. Just last month MLS signed an eight-year deal with ESPN, FOX and Univision for a sum in the range of $90M per year - roughly triple the size of the league's current deal. This pales next to NBC's $250M deal with the English Premier League. Whereas previous packages have offered American viewers a game or three each week (on one channel, for the most part), NBC now shows all the Prem games (those not on live TV are streamed online) and the new MLS deal promises to broadcast at least two games a week, maybe more.

Give this piece from ESPN FC a read, and as you do, pay attention to something. The jewels of MLS are obviously the two biggest clubs in the two biggest cities: Galaxy in LA and the perennially underperforming Red Bulls in New York (although we might expect the new NYC FC, co-owned by Manchester City and the NY Yankees, to quickly insinuate itself into this conversation). But that's not where the backbone of the league's future necessarily lies. It will avail nothing to build a couple of rich sides if everybody else is the Washington Generals, and it's the emerging entrepreneurship in places like Portland and Kansas City that are shining the light forward.

But in towns like Portland and Kansas City, soccer has become a cacophonous totem of local pride. Young fans attracted by an intoxicating supporter culture and intimate soccer-specific stadiums have themselves become symbols of the self-confidence and momentum surging behind the game in the United States.

Whereas pioneering owners Lamar Hunt and Anschutz Entertainment gamely propped up a gaggle of teams in the league's early days, the new energy in MLS has been catalyzed by the arrival of a new breed of young entrepreneurial investors -- hands-on leaders who fuse strategy and vision with a passion that reflects their teams' rabid supporter cultures.

Soccer Attendance in US is Thriving
(Source)

Would you like to go see a Portland Timbers game? Good luck. They seem to be permanently sold out, and that supporters club - the Timbers Army - is the equal of anything in Europe for enthusiasm. (Sit next to one of them on a cross-country flight sometime, like I did a couple years ago, and make sure he knows you like soccer. Report back on what you learn.) Pan around the crowd on game day - you'd be hard pressed to tell much difference between them and all but the largest clubs across the pond.

In July 2012, several of us from the Rocky Mountain Blues Chelsea FC Supporters Club tripped up to Seattle to see our beloved Blues take on the Sounders as part of their pre-season tour. It was quite an event. Wherever we went the day before the match, the locals were clearly clued in: "are you here for the Chelsea match?" Everyone in town knew, not just the diehards. And we were well represented. I'm not sure how many of us Chelsea interlopers there were in the north stands, but we acquitted ourselves pretty nicely.

Still, the total attendance at the game was in excess of 53,000, mostly Seattle loyalists. The game was held in CenturyLink Field, where the Seahawks play, a remarkable showing for an exhibition match. The Sounders feature some of the best organized fans in MLS, and it's worth noting that very few stadia in England are large enough to hold that many attendees.

Sporting Kansas City's Robb Heineman is ambitious: "Our business plan will allow us to be one of the world's four or five best leagues within the course of the next eight years." Hmmm. Well, based on current realities, that means behind England, Spain, Germany, Italy and France, but ahead of Holland and Portugal. Seriously ambitious. But maybe not out of the question, depending on what criteria you use to define "best."

Next: The children are the future...

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