I used to laugh at such a comment but now I do see the possibility due to all the people playing the sport in their youth. The concussion issue in football is also a factor. I do think that as a spectator or TV sport it will have a challenge due to it being such a low scoring sport. Lacrosse may actually give soccer a run for popularity as well. On a worldwide basis, basketball is actually one of the sports gaining in popularity.
The only way soccer becomes the #1 sport in America is if the Left succeeds in destroying the NFL and colleges disband football programs.
Do you honestly see that happening?
Look. I love watching the Premiership. It's awesome TV. I might have watched 10 minutes of the MLS. It's the passion that is missing here. This is why Americans will never truly embrace soccer over all other sports. It's just not in our DNA, man.
The only sporting event that garners the same level of passion as non-American soccer is American football. It's in our blood.
The only thing I see is the NFL slowly destroying itself. They are alienating viewers at an alarming rate.
The whole CTE, kneeing, fixing kickoffs.. All this along with the lack of younger generations fixated on classic television is making the NFL less and less of a force.
Houston has a 40,000 seat stadium, not 50,000, that is a $128M erector set. Many universities in major cities have attendance issues. Look at Miami who also barely averages 30,000 and New Orleans with Tulane with a 20,000 seat stadium that they can't fill. Then there are schools in small towns no bigger than Lafayette like Starkville and Oxford, MS, Stillwater, OK, Auburn, AL, or Clemson, SC that average 60,000 to 80,000 a game. Of course they are P5 conferences, but so is Miami. We need to play a much better home schedule, we have to win, and we have to beat some name schools to really peak fan interest and build a program resume.
Look at E. Carolina in Greenville, NC (population 91,000) with a stadium seating 50,000. Over the past 3 years, ECU averaged 44,000 a game, despite going 5-7, 3-9, and 3-9. And, they are in a state with UNC, NC State, Duke and Wake Forest. Why can't that be accomplished in Lafayette?
We have to build to the future, to where college football will be in the next 5-10 years +. There will likely be a consortium of teams playing each other rather than conferences as we know them now. It is imperative that we be a part of a consortium or really be left out. We will need to have the facilities and resume to be included. IMO, we will need a 35,000 - 40,000 seat stadium that can be expanded to be comparable to the top G5 schools. With the new leadership and commitment at UL, we can achieve that.
NM
Soccer dwarfs every other sport in the world by any measure you want to use. Estimated fans worldwide is 3.5 to 4 billion. U.S. football is estimated at 400 million and doesn't make the top 10 list in sports worldwide. TV already isn't an issue for soccer. It has the largest market worldwide by far. You are right about basketball as well but doesn't come close to soccer with only one billion fans.
U.S. football is definitely on the decline while soccer is rapidly climbing at every level. What does that mean a decade or two from now? Who knows? I think American football will be around for a long time but it may already be past its prime.
"A Gallup poll released last week found that 7% of Americans named soccer as their favorite sport to watch in a survey completed during December. While that may not sound like much, the figure represents a significant, three-percentage-point gain from just four years ago. Soccer is the only sport to post such a large increase. Football (37%, down from 39%), basketball (11%, down from 12%) and baseball (9%, down from 13%) all showed declining numbers. Hockey was at 4%, up from 3%.
The arrows are clearly pointing in definitive directions, and it is very likely that soccer will surpass baseball in this survey the next time such a poll is taken. Even more telling are the demographics behind those numbers: Only 1% of those polled by Gallup aged 55 or over named soccer as their favorite. But among adults aged 18-34, soccer was the favorite sport of 11%, tying basketball; only 6% of younger adults chose baseball as their favorite sport."
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