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Monterey 10, FC KC 2 on aggregate

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    Monterey 10, FC KC 2 on aggregate

    I was going to write something really snarky, but will quote MLS website: "Improved SKC still fade late".

    Improved? You lost 5-2 at home and 10-2 on aggregate.

    #2
    Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
    I was going to write something really snarky, but will quote MLS website: "Improved SKC still fade late".

    Improved? You lost 5-2 at home and 10-2 on aggregate.
    Last year MLS did reasonably well in CCL.

    This year they stank.

    Go figure.

    Comment


      #3
      DA will make Amerikka great again. Go US Soccer!!!!!

      Comment


        #4
        MLS may not be good soccer, but at least they are winning over hearts and minds. Wait what?

        http://worldsoccertalk.com/2019/04/1...eague-liga-mx/
        As the popularity of Liga MX and the Premier League continue to grow in the United States based on the way both leagues monopolize the most-watched games on US TV each week, MLS is getting left behind.
        At World Soccer Talk, we analyzed all of the TV ratings data for 2018 to see how the three most popular soccer leagues performed. We went ahead and made it a direct comparison by only including the TV viewing numbers for the length of the MLS season to see how they did head-to-head.
        Let’s look at the total TV audience numbers:
        link above
        Based on the above data, the growth of each respective league from 2016 to 2018 is as follows:
        Premier League – 69% increase
        Liga MX – 46% increase
        MLS – 8% increase
        There are a lot of observations that can be made from the data. First, the total TV audience metric shows that MLS is dwarfed by both Liga MX and Premier League. In fact, Liga MX still continues to be the most-watched soccer league in the United States with a total TV audience delivery that had 194 million more tuning in than MLS had during the 2018 MLS season (Liga MX normally runs from January to May, and July to December). The total TV audience delivery for the Premier League is almost double that of MLS during the 2018 MLS season (March to December). However, it’s important to note that Liga MX is on national TV far more often than MLS, hence the disparity between the two different leagues. See below for the number of games televised nationally:
        link above
        Looking at the average viewership per league on national TV, here’s where the data gets even more interesting:
        link above
        Looking at the above average viewing audiences, here’s how each league did from 2016 to 2018:
        Premier League – 8.5% increase from 394,452 to 428,503
        MLS – 6% increase from 273,321 to 290,278
        Liga MX – 21% decrease (largely due to DISH dropping all of the Univision channels as well as showing more games featuring less popular teams)
        The numbers for the Premier League would be greater during the course of the entire season, but the above metrics are based on viewing numbers during the same timeframe as the 2018 MLS season (the Premier League runs from August to May).
        By limiting the number of games that are televised nationally each year, the TV metrics for Major League Soccer look better than what they would be otherwise. Increasing the number of games on national television would have an adverse result for MLS where viewing numbers overall would be dragged down by showing less popular games. At the same time, you only have to look at the total TV audience delivery at the very beginning of this article to see how Liga MX and the Premier League reach more viewers on a regular basis while retaining a decent viewing average per game.
        The challenge that MLS faces when the current TV deal expires in 2022 is how they’ll be able to increase the revenue from the last deal. TV ratings on ESPN and FS1 were down last year compared to 2017. And TV ratings for the first three game weeks of the 2019 season were down 27%. At the same time, MLS has expanded the league into several new TV markets, but the league has still not been able to convert that growth into impressive TV ratings. Major League Soccer needs to increase its reach into more homes, but the demand for the league on TV is not there yet. MLS still remains the third most popular soccer league in its own country.
        So while the popularity of soccer on television is growing in the United States, Liga MX and the Premier League are profiting the most while Major League Soccer’s growth is relatively static.

        Comment


          #5
          Time for promotion-relegation.

          TV ratings will go up!
          Attendance will go up!

          Teams at the bottom of the tables will be fighting for something just like the teams at the top are. Everyone wins.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
            MLS may not be good soccer, but at least they are winning over hearts and minds. Wait what?

            http://worldsoccertalk.com/2019/04/1...eague-liga-mx/
            As the popularity of Liga MX and the Premier League continue to grow in the United States based on the way both leagues monopolize the most-watched games on US TV each week, MLS is getting left behind.
            At World Soccer Talk, we analyzed all of the TV ratings data for 2018 to see how the three most popular soccer leagues performed. We went ahead and made it a direct comparison by only including the TV viewing numbers for the length of the MLS season to see how they did head-to-head.
            Let’s look at the total TV audience numbers:
            link above
            Based on the above data, the growth of each respective league from 2016 to 2018 is as follows:
            Premier League – 69% increase
            Liga MX – 46% increase
            MLS – 8% increase
            There are a lot of observations that can be made from the data. First, the total TV audience metric shows that MLS is dwarfed by both Liga MX and Premier League. In fact, Liga MX still continues to be the most-watched soccer league in the United States with a total TV audience delivery that had 194 million more tuning in than MLS had during the 2018 MLS season (Liga MX normally runs from January to May, and July to December). The total TV audience delivery for the Premier League is almost double that of MLS during the 2018 MLS season (March to December). However, it’s important to note that Liga MX is on national TV far more often than MLS, hence the disparity between the two different leagues. See below for the number of games televised nationally:
            link above
            Looking at the average viewership per league on national TV, here’s where the data gets even more interesting:
            link above
            Looking at the above average viewing audiences, here’s how each league did from 2016 to 2018:
            Premier League – 8.5% increase from 394,452 to 428,503
            MLS – 6% increase from 273,321 to 290,278
            Liga MX – 21% decrease (largely due to DISH dropping all of the Univision channels as well as showing more games featuring less popular teams)
            The numbers for the Premier League would be greater during the course of the entire season, but the above metrics are based on viewing numbers during the same timeframe as the 2018 MLS season (the Premier League runs from August to May).
            By limiting the number of games that are televised nationally each year, the TV metrics for Major League Soccer look better than what they would be otherwise. Increasing the number of games on national television would have an adverse result for MLS where viewing numbers overall would be dragged down by showing less popular games. At the same time, you only have to look at the total TV audience delivery at the very beginning of this article to see how Liga MX and the Premier League reach more viewers on a regular basis while retaining a decent viewing average per game.
            The challenge that MLS faces when the current TV deal expires in 2022 is how they’ll be able to increase the revenue from the last deal. TV ratings on ESPN and FS1 were down last year compared to 2017. And TV ratings for the first three game weeks of the 2019 season were down 27%. At the same time, MLS has expanded the league into several new TV markets, but the league has still not been able to convert that growth into impressive TV ratings. Major League Soccer needs to increase its reach into more homes, but the demand for the league on TV is not there yet. MLS still remains the third most popular soccer league in its own country.
            So while the popularity of soccer on television is growing in the United States, Liga MX and the Premier League are profiting the most while Major League Soccer’s growth is relatively static.
            This isn't terribly surprising--European soccer (specifically the big five leagues, or big six, or whatever) are the "majors" of global soccer, and are likely to have the best TV audience (and a global one at that).

            MLS, being a "minor" league, is going to have a far smaller TV audience--generally attracting fans of the specific team(s) involved in a specific match. People around the world aren't going to tune in to watch RSL vs SKC, but fans of those teams will. Just like baseball fans worldwide will tune in to watch Yankees vs Red Sox, but aren't going to watch the Tacoma Rainiers vs the Sacramento River Cats.

            Liga MX is a bit in the middle--it's stronger than MLS, and weaker than the top European leagues. But the US has a large population of Mexicans and those with Mexican ancestry, and I suspect that most of the Liga MX television market in the US is from these fans watching their favorite teams, not from gringos. (I'll gladly watch a Liga MX game if it's on and I've nothing else to do; I don't follow the league though).

            If the MLS wants to become first tier, it needs first-tier players and thus has to pay first-tier salaries. Of course, to pay those first-tier salaries it needs a TV deal that pays it ten times or more what it gets now for broadcast rights. But the broadcasters won't pay that unless there's a global audience, and for that it needs to be a first-tier league.

            The way past that--and even then it is a longshot, as there can only be so many first-tier leagues in the world, and there is a lot of inertia that must be overcome--is to become a selling league. But for that to happen, a) training compensation and solidarity payments need to be enforced in the US, so talented MLS prospects can't simply sign with foreign clubs on their 18th birthday and leave the MLS team with nothing, and b) teams have to invest in developing players in their academies for sale. And probably c) the territorial division of MLS has to end, so clubs like the Timbers aren't screwed over by being in a relative soccer backwater.

            MLS seems to be starting to figure this out--rumors abound that homegrown players are going to go away; and there seems to be far more support for TC/SP these days than in the past (the main opponents seem to be the players' union, which views this as a "tax" on players).

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
              Time for promotion-relegation.

              TV ratings will go up!
              Attendance will go up!

              Teams at the bottom of the tables will be fighting for something just like the teams at the top are. Everyone wins.
              Nah we need more of the closed system - it has done wonders for NFL, will do wonders for Soccer.

              Remember, soccer in america is always the sport of tomorrow.

              Comment

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